Wednesday, April 26, 2006
Yasmin Banu, Abu Dhabi
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Sir, A wise man once said, "A healthy society is known by how it treats its less fortunate." Did the Union Budget take this thought into account (PC keeps status quo, March 1)? There is no question that for three successive years Indian economy has seen more than 7 per cent growth. It is also a fact that the Indian elite and the middle classes have made huge strides. But, lest we forget, India is essentially an agrarian economy. We still have millions of farmers who are completely dependent on the monsoons. Many parts of the country are yet to see proper irrigation systems. Though the money allocated for rural infrastructure development has increased significantly over the years, the allocated funds often fail to reach the grass roots and help the people who need that money the most. The developed countries have huge subsidies lined up for their farmers, and, therefore, their products are cheaper, whereas our farmers get a negligible subsidy and are unable to compete with outsiders. If India considers itself a growing economy at par with the developed economies, it cannot marginalise its rural population.
Yasmin Banu
Abu Dhabi, UAE
Ethical dwarf
Ethical dwarf - Asianage
Sir, Suhel Seth in his article Silliness is in fashion (April 3) forgot that we are living in an instant world. It is the world of instant food, instant drinks and instant success. The reverberations generated by a Fashion Week should not come as a surprise as the younger generation is all geared to catch the limelight. It was not long ago when one television channel was garnering votes for the retrial of Jessica Lal’s case to present it to the President; hardly 200,000 people voted. But another channel while airing a popular talent search contest got around five million votes. After all, in beauty pageants the contestants always claim Mother Teresa as their role model. Then they use these pageants as a launch pad for a lucrative career in films. We may have become a nuclear giant, but we have also become an ethical dwarf.
- Yasmin Banu Abu Dhabi, UAE
Wednesday, April 05, 2006
A Sacrilege
Abu Dhabi, UAE