A few weeks after Abbott's swing through India, I
bumped into an Australian intelligence official who was in Delhi to get the
inside word on how things were going. He wouldn't have had to knock on too many
doors. India treats Australia with such irreverence that the person responsible
for Australia at the Ministry of External Affairs in Delhi has 25 other
countries on his desk.
So what do the Indians really think of Australia
then? I asked him, at the end of his weeklong stay.
"Like old Uncle Bob, drunk again and sitting
in the corner with no one to talk to and nobody knows what to do with
him." It's time Australian officials left the cricket bats in the dressing
room and talked seriously about what Australia can do for India.
Narendra Modi is about to become
the first Indian Prime Minister to visit Australia in 28 years. That, and the
fact that Tony Abbott was the first foreign leader to be granted an official
bilateral meeting on Indian soil with the newly elected Modi, has generated
some buzz about the relationship between the two countries.
In addition to attending the G20
conference in Brisbane, Modi will address the Australian parliament, and, to
the delight of Australia's Indian community, appear at a mass rally at Sydney's
Allphones Arena.
The Australian government is also
hosting a 1000-plate banquet for Modi at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, where he
will no doubt receive a solemn tour of the famous stadium's inner sanctum.
Indians love cricket, as everyone knows, so what better place to organise a
state dinner for an Indian Prime Minister than the hallowed halls of the MCG?
It's certainly true that Indians
love cricket. What they hate is the way Australia plays the game. Whenever an
Australian official gets up before an Indian audience and emphasises the mighty
cricket bond our nations share, the Indians smile and nod their heads.
Inwardly, though, the cricket
talk serves to remind them of the countless tales of ugly sledging by
Australian players who make a show of rubbing Indians' noses in the dirt. As
for Modi himself, he couldn't care less about cricket.
Instead, he is interested in is
business, and what he would love to hear is how much extra money Australian
companies are planning to invest in India next year.
After recent meetings with the
Chinese, American and Japanese leaders, Modi received investment pledges worth
over $100 billion. Unfortunately, Modi won't hear anything like that in
Australia. When Julia Gillard came to India as Prime Minister in 2012, she set
a goal of $40 billion in two-way trade by 2015. How is that going?
Trade between Australia and India
has plummeted, last year falling below $15 billion. This year it's likely to be
even less. Australian companies actively dislike India. No sooner have firms
such as the ANZ, Woolworths, AMP and Leightons set up in India, than
they are packing up and heading back to Australia. It's too hot, too polluted
and way too much hassle.
It's not as if the Indians
haven't noticed. Before Tony Abbott addressed an Indian Chamber of Commerce
lunch in New Delhi in September, India's Trade Minister Nirmala Sitharaman
lectured him about corporate Australia's lack of interest in India.
Abbott appeared to get the
message - briefly - sternly telling the Australian business leaders present to
lift their game. "More investment please," Abbott told them.
"That is the message that is coming." He then added: "The
less said about Australian investment in India the better."
Actually, the more said the
better. India is a country desperate for foreign investment and foreign
know-how, the kind which many Australian companies are well placed to offer.
Australia can sell more to India than just coal, copper, and gold.
Not that you would know that
watching Tony Abbott. He was only in the country for two days and he spent half
of one of those days in Mumbai hugging Sachin Tendulkar and droning on about
Sir Donald Bradman. He spent the rest of his time reminding the Indians
how backward their country was when he passed through it the first time
on his way to Oxford.
"I can remember on my first
day in Mumbai watching a bullock cart take material into a nuclear power
station," Abbott told one business audience. If he wasn't reminiscing
about his backpacking days, he was talking about another relic from the past,
coal. Queensland coal, mainly, because Abbott fervently hopes two Indian
companies will borrow $16 billion to develop Australia's biggest coal mine.
As Macquarie Bank's head of
research in India, Rakesh Arora, told me recently, the two companies in
question are so stretched financially that "none on the street are
assuming that these projects will make any progress."
A few weeks after Abbott's swing
through India, I bumped into an Australian intelligence official who was in
Delhi to get the inside word on how things were going. He wouldn't have had to
knock on too many doors. India treats Australia with such irreverence that the
person responsible for Australia at the Ministry of External Affairs in Delhi
has 25 other countries on his desk.
So what do the Indians really
think of Australia then? I asked him, at the end of his weeklong stay.
"Like old Uncle Bob, drunk
again and sitting in the corner with no one to talk to and nobody knows what to
do with him." It's time Australian officials left the cricket bats in the
dressing room and talked seriously about what Australia can do for India.
Jason Koutsoukis is Fairfax Media's South Asia
Correspondent
Pleasant article sir. I generally accept not many individuals comprehended India all things considered, and you are one among them. I feel terrible that Indians (the majority of them) generally see awful first in each message, I wish one day individuals comprehend the estimation of the fundamental standards of country like Democracy, Secularism, and Fraternity.
ReplyDeletebest cricket bat