Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
India

13th Pravasi Bharatiya Divas Ends, 15 Diaspora Members Honoured

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Jan, 2015 02:51 PM
    The three-day Pravasi Bharatiya Divas, attended by around 4,000 diaspora members, came to an end with the conferment of the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman awards by Vice President Hamid Ansari to 15 prominent diaspora members.
     
    Those recipients of the Samman, the highest honour conferred on overseas Indians, were Guyanese President Donald Rabindernauth Ramaotar; Mala Mehta from Australia; Kamaljeet Bakshi from New Zealand; Ashraf Palarakunnummal and Bharatkumar Jayantilal Shah from UAE; Essop Esoop Goolam from South Africa; Rajmal M. Parakh from Oman; Justice Doraikannu Karunakaran from Seychelles; Sanjaya Rajaram from Mexico; Lord Raj Loomba and Nathu Ram Puri from Britain; Mahendra Nanji Mehta from Uganda and Nandini Tandon and Kamlesh Lulla from the US.
     
    Lisa Singh from Australia, who could not receive the award last year, received the Samman, while A. Satyanarayana Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, who was named for the award was not present.
     
    Ansari congratulated the awardees and said India is grateful for their contributions to society. 
     
    Terming then "deserving recipients of this recognition", he said: "Through their exemplary work, they have also proved to be outstanding envoys of peace, friendship and cooperation between India and countries of their residence."
     
    Ansari said that overseas Indians are "in virtually every country and region of the world", and recited an Urdu phrase to describe their ubiquitous presence: "Jidhar dekhta hoon faqat tu hi tu hai (wherever I look I see only you)".
     
    He said the overseas Indians, ranging from blue collars workers to doctors, engineers, IT professionals and business persons, have multiple identities but "a common denominator is their emotional bond to India, and to its cultural legacy. 
     
    "They cherish it, individually and collectively, and so do we here. The institution of the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas is an occasion of bonding," he said.
     
    Ansari said that the NRI remittances comprise an important element in India's balance of payments and the "continuing liberalisation of the Indian economy, and the most recent policy initiatives taken or proposed by the government are expected to galvanise the involvement of the overseas Indians in the many fields of economic activity".
     
    Noting that relationships "are not a one-way street", the vice president said that "the Overseas Indians have expectations aimed at facilitating and intensifying their involvement with India".
     
     
    "The government of India, and the state governments, have acknowledged the validity of these sentiments and taken or initiated steps to attract, assist and promote a deeper and multifaceted relationship, which is mutually beneficial and long lasting. We in India attach highest importance to issues of interest and concern to the overseas Indians," he said.
     
    He said that the diaspora can play an important role in the development of India with their knowledge and resources and their experience of other lands where similar efforts were pursued successfully.
     
    Minister for Overseas Indian Affairs Sushma Swaraj, in her speech, said that the Narendra Modi government "has been specially proactive in nurturing the bonds" with the diaspora. 
     
    "The diaspora is close to Prime Minister Modi's heart. Wherever he has gone, he has made a passionate appeal to NRIs and PIOs to be partners in India's ongoing journey of development and national resurgence. We believe in infusing a new energy and vitality into this lasting relationship between India and its diaspora," she said.
     
    She said that the Modi government "has only one mission: to re-make India into a great nation, a mission in which every Indian and equally every overseas Indian has a vital stake. It will be a perfect fit, a confluence of dreams and interests, and I have no doubt that with such interlinking and intermeshing, both India and the adopted countries of overseas Indians will benefit enormously".

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Nikki Haley arrives in Amritsar

    Nikki Haley arrives in Amritsar
    Haley, whose father Ajit Singh Randhawa is a Sikh, will pray Saturday at the Harmandar Sahib, popularly known as Golden Temple, the holiest of all Sikh shrines....

    Nikki Haley arrives in Amritsar

    Badal warns Punjab Police over indiscipline

    Badal warns Punjab Police over indiscipline
    Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal Friday warned police officials in the state that any kind of indiscipline in the police department would not be tolerated....

    Badal warns Punjab Police over indiscipline

    Punjab, Lockheed Martin tie up for solar power

    Punjab, Lockheed Martin tie up for solar power
      To augment solar power generation in the state and overcome the power crisis, the Punjab government Friday announced a tie up with US global security and aerospace ...

    Punjab, Lockheed Martin tie up for solar power

    Surprise checks conducted in 737 Punjab schools

    Surprise checks conducted in 737 Punjab schools
    Surprise checks were conducted in 737 government schools in Punjab Friday to ensure attendance of teachers....

    Surprise checks conducted in 737 Punjab schools

    Two militants, civilian killed in Kashmir

    Two militants, civilian killed in Kashmir
    Two separatist guerrillas and a civilian were killed in Jammu and Kashmir in overnight violence that erupted again Friday, police said....

    Two militants, civilian killed in Kashmir

    Ratan Tata appointed on Interpol Foundation board

    Ratan Tata appointed on Interpol Foundation board
    Tata Sons' Chairman Emeritus Ratan Tata has been appointed to the board of Interpol Foundation to contribute to its two global initiatives....

    Ratan Tata appointed on Interpol Foundation board