HomeNewsBusinessEconomyChanging image: Why India is not keen on taking foreign assistance for Kerala floods

Changing image: Why India is not keen on taking foreign assistance for Kerala floods

By not taking help from other countries, India is sending out a message that its economy grows at a healthy clip and it can manage to handle rehabilitation after natural disasters.

August 24, 2018 / 13:36 IST
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Flood victims carry relief material as they walk through a damaged area after floods, at Nelliyampathy Village. (Image: Reuters)
Flood victims carry relief material as they walk through a damaged area after floods, at Nelliyampathy Village. (Image: Reuters)

Moneycontrol News

While India’s decision to not take foreign aid for Kerala has led to an outrage in many quarters on social media against the government, it is important to understand why India has been politely but firmly declining international help in a state of crisis.

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Changing India’s image for the world has been an ongoing national project for a while now. The move perhaps is way of saying that India is no longer a ‘poor country’ and is also telling the world that it is perfectly capable of providing for its citizens.

India has managed on its own rebuilding and rehabilitation work after successive disasters such as 2013 Uttarakhand floods, and the 2014 Kashmir floods, according to a report in The Economic Times. Even in 2004, when tsunami had hit the country, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had politely told all potential donors that India would dial them if it needed financial aid.