HomeNewsOpinionCAA Debate | India needs to expand its engagement with European parliament

CAA Debate | India needs to expand its engagement with European parliament

The government earlier brought a few selected Right-wing MEPs to Kashmir and tried to project their opinion as the EU position. This could also be one reason why so many political groups in the EU parliament have reacted strongly against the CAA.

May 11, 2020 / 18:20 IST
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For the time being, voting on the joint resolution on India’s Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) in the European parliament has been differed for the next session beginning March 2. Although it is likely to come back after a few weeks, the Indian policy-makers have now got an opportunity to explain their side of the story to EU policy makers. The timing has been useful for New Delhi as Prime Minister Narendra Modi is slated to visit Brussels for the 15th India-EU summit scheduled on March 13.

EU policy-makers obviously did not want to jeopardise the summit for the sake of a resolution. Reports indicate that foreign minister S Jaishankar will be travelling to Brussels in mid-February. This will be an opportunity to engage EU stakeholders. The MEA’s position is that “CAA is an internal matter of India” and “it has been adopted through a due process and by democratic means”.

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Many in the Indian media have declared the deferment as a ‘major diplomatic victory’ for India. Some reports quoting unknown official sources assert that “the Indian lobbyists prevailed over Pakistani lobbyists in the European Parliament”. The joint resolution moved by five major political groups represented 560 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) from Centre-Right to Far-Left groups in a 751 member house. Still, the mainstream Indian media tried to project it as a handiwork of a Pakistan-origin British MEP Shaffaq Mohammed. In the wake widespread anti-CAA protests in India, these assertions may fit in a certain kind of domestic political narrative, but they fail to capture intricacies of the EU institutional machinery.

The EU is India’s valued strategic partner. Instead of criticising it as an interference in India’s internal affairs or work of Pakistani lobbyists, serious engagement with EU stakeholders, including the MEPs, may dispel some of their concerns. As the joint resolution suggests, a large number of MEPs feel that EU-India “strategic partnership is based on shared values of democracy, the rule of law and respect for human rights”. They feel that the CAA is “discriminatory in nature and dangerously divisive” and there has been “an increased crackdown on the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly, including the jailing of peaceful critics on charges of sedition, criminal defamation or terrorism”.