Remarks at Taj Palace Hotel
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateMumbai, IndiaJuly 18, 2009
SECRETARY CLINTON: Good morning. It is a great honor and personal delight for me to be back in India. It’s a country that I admire greatly and that I have had an extraordinary set of experiences in. It’s a country that’s had a deep impact on my thinking about the most serious issues confronting our world today. And so it is a real privilege to return as Secretary of State.Over the next few days, I will be working on behalf of President Obama and the American people to strengthen the important strategic relationship between the United States and India for the 21st century. I will be meeting with government officials in New Delhi to broaden and deepen our efforts to work more effectively together on issues ranging from economic growth and development, to climate change, to education and healthcare, to nonproliferation and counterterrorism.
The alleviation of poverty, which I know is a central goal of the Indian Government and the Indian people is one that we will offer to help with in any way that we could be. President Obama and I believe we are entering a new and even more promising era of relations with India, and we are looking forward to working to broaden and deepen our partnership.
Expanded dialogue between our governments is essential and exciting. But the strength of this partnership ultimately rests on the deep and enduring ties between the Indian and the American people. In a speech this week in Washington, I said the problems of the 21st century demand a new mindset and a willingness to create partnerships with government, but also beyond government, with NGOs, with businesses, with the people themselves. The world’s problems are too complex for anything less.
I just finished an exciting meeting with India business leaders to discuss how we can tap into Indian and American innovations and entrepreneurship, to spread prosperity more broadly across our societies, and to work together to solve common problems. After this press conference, I will go to a gathering of women from SEWA, the Self Employed Women’s Association, an organization that I have been privileged to work with for about 15 years now. It’s an organization that has helped to transform lives and communities in India and it provides a model for bringing women from the margins of society to the center of their communities and (inaudible).
I will then join (inaudible) Khan for a discussion with students about education and service, and I’m sure he will be the main attraction for that. And tomorrow, I will be meeting scientists and innovators involved in green energy and agricultural production to talk about how the United States and India can work together to lead an effective fight against global hunger, and to move to a clean energy future.
Let me also say that on a personal note, I was deeply touched to visit with the staff of both the Taj and the (inaudible) hotels earlier this morning, and to pay my respects at the memorial to last November’s attack. As you know, this hotel and this city suffered grievously and endured painful losses because of the extremism and violence visited (inaudible). The great men and women who work in this hotel and elsewhere in the city courageously stood in the face of senseless violence and helped to stay by and prevent greater damage and harm to others. They deserve our gratitude.
As the events of 26/11 unfolded, the American people stood in solidarity with the Indian people, just as India supported America after 9/11. These events are seared in our collective memory. Yesterday’s bombings in Jakarta, Indonesia provide a painful reminder that the threat of such violent extremism is still very real. It is global, it is ruthless, it is nihilistic, and it must be stopped.
The United States will work with the Indian Government, the Indonesian Government, and other nations and people who seek peace and security to confront and defeat these violent extremists. And we will do our utmost to create a world of opportunity where there is more space for progress, peace and prosperity, and less space for intolerance, violence and hate.
Being here in India today to talk about democracy, defense and development issues is critical to the future that we seek not only for India and America, but for the world. We’re delighted that you will soon get to know our new ambassador. Tim Roemer, former congressman, a leader on issues having to do with terrorism in our country, and a very committed advocate of development, will be serving our nation here and yours.
We face a lot of challenges, but I am convinced that together, we are more than ready to meet those challenges, sharing our common interests, our common values, and a common stake in the 21st century. If we are now prepared to turn our common interests and cooperative actions, and I believe we are, then we will succeed not only for the Indian and American people, but for the world that we hope to create for our children. Thank you all very much.
MR. KELLY: The Secretary will take some questions. The first question from Lachlan Carmichael (inaudible).
SECRETARY CLINTON: He will call on people. Okay.
QUESTION: Madame Secretary —
SECRETARY CLINTON: Would you stand up?
QUESTION: Yeah. Madame Secretary, there is uproar in India over apparent concessions that the Indians made to Pakistan, providing peace for India even though the perpetrators have not been brought to justice who also committed the Mumbai attacks. Do you fear that this will – you will (inaudible) the United States adding to the pressure on India to make these concessions?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I would not speak for the Indian Government. I think that India is a sovereign nation fully capable and prepared to protect her own interests, to stand up for the rights and security of her own people. And we are very supportive of the steps that India has taken to try to stand against terrorism.
Clearly, any decision that is made between the governments of India and Pakistan to begin talking together to explore the very difficult issues between them is up to those governments. And I think that the United States, as you know, is very supportive of steps that the governments take, but we are not in any way involved in it or promoting any particular position. We respect the sovereignty of the decisions that lie in the hands of the Indian Government.
MR. KELLY: The next question, (inaudible). Wait for the microphone.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you.
QUESTION: (Inaudible) Indian (inaudible), and with regards to this meeting with (inaudible) and especially in India (inaudible)?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I am very impressed by Indian women, and I have, as you said, been involved with a number of worthy agents that have worked in India over the years to promote economic opportunity and greater choices in the lives of women here in India. I think an enormous amount of progress has been made. I’m looking forward to seeing old friends when I go to SEWA to be brought up to date about the expansion of their work.
But clearly, for me, it is absolutely undeniable that the progress of women is directly linked to the progress of any country. The more women have the same rights, the education, the healthcare, to employment and access to credit, a role in making decisions in their families and their communities, the more quickly development for all people will proceed.
And so the progress that has been made is extraordinary, and I know there is still much more to be done. It is a priority of your government to create more literacy among women, more opportunities for the women of India. And I personally, as well as in my position as Secretary of State, will do whatever I can to support and promote that development.
MR. KELLY: The next question to Arshad Mohammed, Reuters.
QUESTION: Secretary Clinton, I understand that in your meeting with the executives this morning, the issue of climate change came up. Two things: One, how is it that you envisage creating (inaudible) control carbon emissions that will allow countries like India and China to continue to grow and create jobs for their populations?
Secondly, one of the executives, who is the head of Reliance, which I understand is one of the companies involved in exporting (inaudible) petroleum products to Iran – as you know, there’s (inaudible) on Capitol Hill in the possibility of using those exports as a lever against the Iranians if they don’t come back to the talks.
Do you expect to raise that, where – what kind of pushback do you expect to get, given that that’s an important piece of business for this country?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Arshad, first, let me say that the discussion we had about climate change and clean energy was extremely productive. And the point that was made, which we underscore and believe in completely, is that there is no inherent contradiction between poverty eradication and moving toward a low-carbon economy. The United States wants to see India continue to progress in its development in lifting millions and millions of more people out of poverty and providing greater opportunity for people to pursue their own dreams. And that is something that they would not expect any country to turn away from.
Our point is very simple: That we acknowledge, now with President Obama, that we have made mistakes – the United States – and we, along with other developed countries, have contributed most significantly to the problems that we face with climate change. We are hoping that a great country like India will not make the same mistakes. And just as India went, from a few years ago, having very few telephones to now having more than 500 million mostly cell phones by leapfrogging over the infrastructure that we built for telephone service, we believe India is innovative and entrepreneurial enough to figure out how to deal with climate change while continuing to lift people out of poverty and develop at a rapid rate.
Obviously, these decisions are up to the people of India, but the private sector, based on our conversations, is looking for economic opportunities in clean energy and looking for ways to figure out how to move toward low-carbon energy production. So we’re going to be engaged in these conversations. Todd Stern, as you know, our Climate Change Envoy, is here with me. He’ll be having a number of in-depth discussions with people in both the private and the public sector in the next several days. So we are well aware of the challenges that India faces, but we think that there are some very creative approaches to this that we’re sharing.
And we did not discuss your second matter, and that’s something that we will look at later.
MR. KELLY: (Inaudible.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Oh, you may be walking with cameras, I’m not sure. Is he walking with cameras?
MR. KELLY: Yeah.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Oh, you have to sit down, (inaudible.)
QUESTION: Madame Secretary, (inaudible) when you said that you weren’t happy and satisfied with what – the action that Pakistan is taking against terror. But (inaudible) with the Taliban, because there is a lot of sense going on the visit – there hasn’t been too much done (inaudible) the Lashkar, neither of the Jaish. And also, do you really feel that Pakistan (inaudible) perpetrators of 26/11 to India?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I believe based on what we have seen in the last six months, which is what I’m speaking – based upon, there has been a much greater effort and commitment that is not only at the governmental level, but much more free society to take on the terrorists. And I believe that there is a concerted effort that we can look to and see the results from.
It is too early to tell the outcome of this commitment that we see coming from Pakistan. I also believe that in the next few days, there will be a greater awareness of whether or not there will be a commitment to bring the Mumbai terrorists to heal and hopefully to justice.
You raised the questions about other terrorist organizations that are focused on India. Clearly, we believe that they have to be rooted out, that they must be defeated and dismantled, and we have made that very clear and we will continue to do so.
MR. KELLY: The next question goes to (inaudible).
QUESTION: Thanks, Madame Secretary. We wanted to ask you about any certainty that on Monday, there will be an agreement for the so-called end user monitoring agreement that would allow major U.S. defense contracts to go through and other related agreements that will be necessary in order for more U.S. defense contractors to do more business here.
And also, could you tell us a little about the strategic economic dialogue that you’re planning and how that would differ from the SED that already exists with China?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, first, we are working very hard to finalize a number of agreements. I am optimistic that we will get such agreements resolved and announced, but I don’t want to step on the news from that. We are working very hard. I think that’s the bottom line.
Secondly, we see the dialogue that we are going to be embarking on with India to be extremely important. It will have five pillars. It is – it’s comprehensive, it goes across the areas of strategic cooperation, agriculture, education, healthcare, science and technology. It is just as broad a dialogue as you can imagine. And we’re very much looking forward to not just announcing it, but to getting to work on it. We came out of the meeting with the business and industrial executives this morning with a long list of tasks that we’re going to be following up on.
We talked about increasing agricultural productivity, about trying to provide micronutrients to infants so that they would not have any lapses in nutrition that might undermine their physical and mental development. We talked about the need for clean energy, for better cooperation between our universities, for working with – between our pharmaceutical industries to enhance the production of life-saving drugs.
I mean, we had such a broad discussion, it was just a snapshot of what we think our organized dialogue will be. We are looking to enhance our relationship with India at a time when I think it is so important to focus on problem solving. We’re beyond just talking about problems; now we want to link up in ways that will help us solve those problems. And I think there’s a great willingness on the part of not just the Indian Government, but the Indian private sector, NGOs, and others to work with us, and we’re looking forward to that.
MR. KELLY: And the last question (inaudible) from (inaudible) news.
QUESTION: (Inaudible) United States going to persuade Pakistan in its fight against terror to hand over particularly (inaudible) and terrorists right now (inaudible) India? And is there any – the United States deciding India – who is (inaudible) fight Pakistan (inaudible)?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, again, the discussion between India and Pakistan is between India and Pakistan. There has to be a very clear understanding that we respect the right of India to make decisions that India decides are in the best interests of the Indian people. I’m focused on the India-West relationship. That is the relationship that we can influence and that we are looking forward to working on. And clearly, we will be speaking with our Indian counterparts over the next several days about how better to tackle the threat of terrorism.
So we have a great sense of solidarity and sympathy, having gone through what we did on 9/11. We know how important – we are fighting wars to end the threat of terrorism against us, our friends and allies around the world. So we are very committed to working with India to make sure that together, we are effective. There are different ways of doing that. Some, we will do together. Some, India will decide how best to do on their own.
But the bottom line for me is that our government is committed in the fight against terrorism. And we expect everyone with whom we have relations and who we see as being part of a future world that we take in what we’re building together to take strong action to prevent terrorism from taking root on their soil, to making sure that terrorists are not trained and deployed. And we believe that around the world, not with any one particular country, but every one. And that’s what we are working toward, and we will work in whatever way is determined to be useful from an Indian perspective to be of service.
Thank you all very much.
Posts Tagged ‘India’
Hillary Clinton at Taj Mahal Palace Hotel
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, India, Mumbai, Secretary of State, State Department, Taj Mahal Palace Hotel on July 19, 2009| 1 Comment »
Hillary Clinton Visits SEWA Store in Mumbai
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, Women Entrpreneurs, tagged Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, India, Mumbai, Secretary of State, SEWA, State Department on July 19, 2009| Leave a Comment »
Remarks at SEWA Store for SEWA Hansiba Tour
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateMumbai, IndiaJuly 18, 2009
SECRETARY CLINTON: I am so happy to be here with longtime friends and members of SEWA [Self-Employed Women’s Association], 1.2 million strong throughout India. And I want to thank the leaders who have joined me here – Reema Nanavaty, who is SEWA’s general secretary, and Mona Dave, SEWA’s CEO, and my longtime friend, Ella Bhatt, the founder of SEWA, who many years ago came up with what seemed at the time to be a simple idea that has become a model for women, economic progress, and empowerment.
These three women and the others who are here, who have been active in SEWA for many years, have guided this organization so that it is truly a world leader in the empowerment of women. And it’s such an honor to be here with them, and I particularly appreciate Ella, who is a member of the Global Elders group, that consists of people like Nelson Mandela, for coming and traveling here to be with me.
I first visited SEWA in 1995 in Gujarat, and it was an extraordinary experience. From the moment that I stepped into the headquarters, I knew that I was witnessing a transformational undertaking. There are some pictures of us looking somewhat younger, and I have a different hairstyle, as was the usual case.
QUESTION: Some right there (inaudible.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Oh, it’s over there, right. And I think that people probably have the same experience coming here to Hensiba. To the casual passersby, this may look like any other shop, but it is so much more than that. It is a lifeline for thousands of women across India with valuable skills, but too few opportunities to use them and to realize income from them.
Every link in Hensiba’s supply chain from the raw materials, to the dyes, to the fabrics, to the finished products, is managed by rural women, some of whom are right here before you. The craft they make represents artistic techniques that have been practiced across India for generations, passed on from mothers and daughters to granddaughters, often in the face of extreme poverty and want.
And at this time of global economic turmoil, we can see a disproportionate impact on women. And SEWA represents an innovative and successful approach to sustainable, inclusive development. Upstairs, we saw beautiful embroidery, we saw organic fabrics, we saw vegetable dyes, we saw the cereals and other agricultural products that are being produced, and so much more. I have long argued that women are key to economic progress and social stability, and that is as true here as it is anywhere in the world.
And in a speech I gave last week, I talked about the efforts to build partnerships, and those partnerships are not only with governments. They’re also with the private sector and with NGOs and citizens. And we’ve had a partnership with SEWA. SEWA has come to the United States – I know at least one of the women here who has been to Washington – and to demonstrate not just the products, but the idea behind SEWA. We simply will not make progress in our world if we leave women behind.
And if you look – (applause) – at what SEWA has accomplished, the most vulnerable women can work their way towards self-sufficiency and to more secure and healthy lives. And then it’s not just women who benefit; it’s their families and their communities. There are a number of posters with messages that SEWA stands for. One of them – Reema, what was it, that’s about the self that –
MS. NANAVATY: It’s about the —
SECRETARY CLINTON: Come stand.
MS. NANAVATY: It’s about the self-respect and the dignity and how – becoming more self-reliant together as sisters, and the more markets we access, that we bring stability and peace into our —
SECRETARY CLINTON: Right. The most reliable forum of economic and social progress is the self. And I remember when I was with Ella back in 1995, and women had come from everywhere. Some had walked for 24 hours to be there to talk about what SEWA meant to them. And they are – they found such confidence to stand up for themselves. And Ella, do you want to say a few words about the vision behind SEWA?
MS. BHATT: I think for the stated purpose of SEWA, whether it’s local or global, is how to bring – how to democratize, how to bring the women, and particularly, you know, women, girls and (inaudible) into the mainstream of economy, and have the best benefits of it because they are the future of the world, and then we have – receive them as leaders of peace and – in this world, and then you have been, you know, one of inspiration. We always look up to you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, the United States, particularly in the Obama Administration, will support and promote organizations like SEWA, which strive for what it calls full employment. And what has been so remarkable, and it’s something Ella just said – it teaches democracy. And India is such a vibrant democracy, it is so dynamic, but there are so many other countries that would benefit from the SEWA model. And I was told that – I have three strands of yarn here, and one strand was woven in —
PARTICIPANT: Pakistan.
SECRETARY CLINTON: — Pakistan.
PARTICIPANT: And the other in Nepal.
SECRETARY CLINTON: And the other in Nepal.
PARTICIPANT: And Bangladesh.
SECRETARY CLINTON: And Bangladesh. So the SEWA model is expanding across borders and giving rural women everywhere the opportunity to not only earn an income, but to really understand the role that women can play. I love this saying that I was given. One of the artisans and shareholders – because that’s what they are, they’re shareholders in SEWA – put it this way: The life of my family hangs by the thread I embroider. Without SEWA, there would be no safety net. So this is an incredibly important visit for me personally, but it’s also significant because it represents everything we are trying to do to help promote women and women’s opportunities.
So I guess I would just end by saying that I met the new president. Is she down here? Where’s the new – oh, the new president of SEWA, elected after 1.1 million votes were cast. (Applause.) I was not successful becoming a president. (Laughter.) So I especially congratulate you for what you have done and for what you represent to women everywhere. Thank you. Bless you. Thank you all. (Applause.)
We did a press conference earlier, so I don’t want to go into all of the issues that were raised there, but does anybody have any questions about SEWA and about its model and about the role that these women are playing?
Yes, yes.
QUESTION: Hi.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Hi, how are you?
QUESTION: Good, thank you. I read in the paper this morning that the model that SEWA represents is going to be used in Afghanistan. I was wondering if anybody could tell us a little bit more about that. It’s very interesting. Do you want to talk about that?
SECRETARY CLINTON: The question is, she – the reporter had the read in the paper today that the model that SEWA represents is going to be used in Afghanistan. Does someone want to talk about that?
MS. NANAVATY: It’s already there.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yes, Reema.
MS. NANAVATY: Yes, I think since last two and a half years, the Government of India and SEWA has been working in Afghanistan, especially with the war-affected women. Most of them are (inaudible) as well, and up to – and we will be – work on identifying what would be the most appropriate skills and, using those skills, how to ensure life, liberty, security to our sisters in Afghanistan. So it’s a sister-to-sisterhood. You know, women-to-women, how do we transfer knowledge, how do we access markets.
We’ve trained up till now about 1,000 master trainers in Afghanistan, and —
PARTICIPANT: Snacks we have –
MS. NANAVATY: Yeah, and the snacks that we offered to Secretary Clinton, those nuts were all brought from Afghanistan, all the way graded, processed, 35. And they are setting up their own business association like the trade facilitation center we have. It’s called Baagy Khazana. So that’s what we are trying to set up or, you know, use the same approach in Afghanistan. (Applause.)
QUESTION: I wonder what the – you said that women who participate in SEWA are married. What do their husbands do? This is a question – supplementing the family income or, in many cases (inaudible)?
PARTICIPANT: (In Indian.)
MS. MACWAN: I am Jyoti Macwan. I am a tobacco worker, got organized by SEWA before 25 years. And within those 25 years, I was elected to be the general secretary of SEWA now.
The husbands who are fellow members, they are also workers, and in the initial state, they always would fear that all these women are getting more organized, and what they are going to do for the family or get back in the family. But when they see ultimately that women get organized at SEWA as a worker, and when the benefits of getting organized comes to the family through her, then they respect of getting her organized at SEWA. So that is how the husband reacts on total organizing.
Sometimes even at the end, the men then come out of the (inaudible) and say that even they would like to get organized while (inaudible). But as far as the unique of work is family, and it is true, under the leadership of the women, we do a sustainable development of the family.
QUESTION: (Inaudible) from PTI. I just wanted to ask you, who takes care of these workers in SEWA and what is women otherwise in the world? I mean, is the U.S. referring some kind of (inaudible) including your regime?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Let me say something, and then I want one of the SEWA women to respond. A few months ago, we announced that we’re going to have a very large commitment to global health. We already, as you may know, contribute a lot of money from our government for HIV/AIDS. But we want to add to that commitment a commitment to maternal and child health, which is especially important here in India, to the eradication of infectious diseases like tuberculosis and polio, which are still problems here in India.
And we’re going to work very hard with our counterparts in India as part of our new comprehensive dialogue to figure out ways that the United States to be of help in solving some of India’s health challenges. But I want someone from SEWA to talk about healthcare as well.
PARTICIPANT: (inaudible) I am the secretary of SEWA. Just – healthcare is quite important for our members, because they are out working daily and (inaudible) daily. So we are closely working with the government and with the local partnership with the women, and we are training – we are providing training to the local women worker as a health worker, and then they are providing services door to door as for the (inaudible) member. And we have integrated health program (inaudible) livelihood, microfinances, and other services also.
And also, just government has made lot of policy about the mother and child and other (inaudible) health program, where SEWA has contributed from their own experiences. And now, we – as a union, we are trying (inaudible), we are assuring that each program should be reached to the members, and also be able to pass the social security bill in our council, just in this year, and for the organized sector, and further, they will get pension, maternity benefit and other coverage, for the illness – major illness, also they will get the coverage.
So after a lot of interaction and dialogue, be able to get some policies on social security from the government also. So it’s a great achievement reaping, because each unorganized settled worker will get the benefits. And the policy is there so we can tell for the implementation.
QUESTION: I’m (inaudible), from Bloomberg News. I just wanted to ask the ladies from SEWA if you have any partnerships with similar organizations to yours in Pakistan? Or if not, are you trying to establish something like that? And what about women’s cooperative in Pakistan? How do they work differently from the ones in India?
PARTICIPANT: As SEWA started organizing trade-wise for the – then we built up the networks – a network of home workers, network of state workers, network of (inaudible) – I mean, also network of domestic workers.
So trade-wise, we have gone beyond India now, and particularly India, in the South Asia – you know, South countries. And so far as the craft is concerned and so far as every culture is concerned, we have tried to link the farmers of the South countries and India. And similarly, we have tried to link the artisans of India along with other South countries. So particularly, as I said, Pakistan – yes, Pakistan and (inaudible) from Pakistan, and there, we have come up with a brand, (inaudible) Hensiba, so that is the brand called (inaudible). And so that is linked to the other countries as well. So that is our (inaudible), you know, (inaudible) of the crafts.
So it is being done, and then more and more training is happening. In Aminabad, we have these, you know, several trade facilitation center so that trains other craftswomen from the South countries into – so helping them to link with the market infrastructure, helping them to link with the capital, (inaudible) capital, and then particularly part of designs. So a regular training is going on.
QUESTION: (Inaudible.)
PARTICIPANT: Yes, we were just last week, (inaudible) came from Sri Lanka also, and then also from Pakistan were here for training.
So ongoing training is going on in (inaudible), so that is our way of regional cooperation, you know, in the form of sisterhood. And it works. It works very, very well.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you all very much.
QUESTION: Thank you.
PARTICIPANT: May I take this opportunity to thank and say a few words of thanks, as the tradition goes? We are very much honored, you know, for you – for your visit, and of course, you have been our old friend and that is already said. We have grown, you know, older and (inaudible). So our daughter also have grown, the SEWA has grown, and so we are very grateful that you opted to come and visit us and spend so much time.
But I also want to thank our colleagues and our ambassador. Welcome and thanks both to Ambassador of India, Timothy Roemer, and (inaudible), and our friend, kind friend and supporter, counsel general (inaudible).
I just want to make another statement (inaudible) please, that though SEWA has begun in a small way and it has grown, it has been – as I said, it has been (inaudible) to democratize the informal economy. And while doing this, we have learned. And what we have learned is that the neighborhood as – is domestic economy. What we have also learned is that local community has to face – you know, had to face the nation and the globe, and (inaudible) wider, you know, experience getting wider into other countries.
So I learned that still, this virtually requires a community (inaudible) international organizations. We had to answer women’s experience in subsistence, women’s experience in survival, the – and security issues. And that could relate, you know, to peace and war as visualized by nations and states.
So SEWA’s first – our first work in terms of rearticulating in terms of trade, that is linking through the (inaudible) the markets. And in an attempt to go beyond the (inaudible), you know, you and millennium development roles, which are remote and abstract. These are thick description of the lives. We tried to create a livelihood index (inaudible) trade, so a livelihood index – a livelihood index would include (inaudible), one, access to capital and control of the sources by women, especially in an informal economy; two, women’s control of the body and the health; three, access, participation, envoys in all issues relating to health and social security; and lastly, four, the incorporation of women’s vision of minimizing (inaudible) countries.
So by bringing global to local through women’s leadership, the world can come out of poverty and will bring prosperity and cement peace. So we look up to your leadership, you know, worldwide, in connecting women, work, and peace at the global level. Thank you again, everybody. (Applause.)
Hillary Clinton’s Education Townterview at Xavier College in Mumbai
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Aamir Khan, Arnab Goswami, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, India, Mumbai, Secretary of State, State Department, Xavier College on July 19, 2009| Leave a Comment »
Townterview Hosted by Arnab Goswami of Frankly Speaking on Times Now at St. Xavier College
Interview
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateMumbai, IndiaJuly 18, 2009
QUESTION: Secretary Clinton, first of all, it’s a pleasure to have you on Frankly Speaking.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you. Thank you so much.
QUESTION: Secretary Clinton, you’ve come at a time when there are lots of challenges in this region, and I just want to take up some of the main points with you. Today, as you were here, and you were asked a lot of questions about terrorism, about Pakistan’s role. And it’s also interesting that in the masterminds of 26/11, we’re actually (inaudible) in Pakistan. But that doesn’t amount to very much, Secretary Clinton, because the trial is yet to start. The real action has not happened. Americans have died in 26/11, people from all nationalities. Are you concerned that the trial, the real punishment, hasn’t really started at all?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, of course, I am concerned if there is not a trial and if there is not justice for those who planned the attacks of 26/11. I do have some understanding of how difficult these cases are because, as you know, we are still holding people that we haven’t tried who we believe were involved with the 9/11 attacks.
So what I’m looking for is a commitment and one that is carried through. The timing, I am understanding of, but there must be an eventual reckoning of justice.
QUESTION: So you would say that there must be a trial, that Pakistan must have a trial?
SECRETARY CLINTON: I believe that there has to be justice, that there has to be a full vetting and a thorough analysis of what happened and who was behind it, just as I think with any terrorist attack.
QUESTION: Absolutely.
SECRETARY CLINTON: I think what countries are now understanding, wherever they are located, is that terrorism anywhere is a threat everywhere. And I hope that we will see the eventual full cooperation of every government against these non-state actors who train and equip the terrorists who wreak havoc. As you know, in this area, there have been – there has been terrorism in nearly every country, and therefore, there should be a joint effort in sharing of intelligence, sharing of counterterrorism techniques, law enforcement against this common threat.
QUESTION: Yes, absolutely. I think your reference to non-state actors takes me to my next question: Secretary Clinton, you have also been asked questions about the Lashkar e-Tayyiba, the Jaish e-Mohammed, and these are organizations which have, for a long period of time, believed to have been bleeding India to a thousand cuts. Would you put pressure – I know you’ve said that your focus is Indo-U.S. relations and not Pakistan-India relations. But you have that influence over Pakistan. Would you use some of your influence or offices or would you advise the Government of Pakistan to be – seem to be acting against groups like the Lashkar e-Tayyiba or Jaish e-Mohammed, which eventually don’t just target India; they target the world.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, we have, in our dialogue with Pakistan, over the last six months, been very clear that we think it’s imperative that Pakistan go after all the terrorist groups because, if for no other reason, any one of them is actually a threat to Pakistan. Because even if they were at one time focused elsewhere, now they are part of a criminal terrorist syndicate. They reinforce one another, they plan together, they give safe haven to one another.
And therefore, no terrorist group can be left alone or forgotten about. Every one of them must be the target of intense law enforcement and justice efforts.
QUESTION: You have focused, and you’ve spoken of it in Congress and Senate and global forums – Secretary Clinton, would you, at any point of time, your Administration, consider linking the large amounts of military, civilian, other aid that you’re giving Pakistan to tangible action against terrorism, against these terror groups, so that there’s some visible sign which also assures countries like India, which are also your partners —
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yes.
QUESTION: — at a global level, that Pakistan is acting not just in one area, but also towards these groups?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, as —
QUESTION: Would you link that (inaudible)?
SECRETARY CLINTON: As you say, I mean, I’m very proud to be in India to deepen and strengthen our relationship. But I do want you and I want your viewers to know that we are always stressing the importance of counterterrorism efforts in every country that we do anything with, including aid programs.
QUESTION: Right. There is also concern about Af-Pak. When there were visits sometime back, there were worries that India has been (inaudible) with the Af-Pak countries, but there also is, at the same time – my question to you would be, Secretary Clinton, would you – do you see India’s role anywhere as a major regional power —
SECRETARY CLINTON: Absolutely.
QUESTION: — in the problems in the Af-Pak region? Could you elaborate on those, please?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I consider India a not just regional, but global power. I said that in the speech that I gave last week in Washington. I think India has a tremendous opportunity to work to resolve problems regionally and to work with other nations, including the United States, on some of the global challenges we face. Now how India decides to do that is up to India. India is a sovereign nation, a democracy. India has to make the decisions that are right for her.
But certainly, trying to bring some understanding, which India has, to the table in dealing with the problems in Afghanistan and the extremist threats in Pakistan would be very helpful. And I think that the cooperation that we’re building between the United States and India that I am very personally committed to on counterterrorism, on intelligence sharing, on everything that we can do to help protect India from terrorism and to enlist India’s help in our fight against the extremists in Afghanistan and in support of what Pakistan is now doing will be very welcome and important.
QUESTION: And do you see any resistance to that from, say, Pakistan? Would you be worried of any resistance to that from Pakistan?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, I must say that over the last six months, we have seen an evolving attitude in Pakistan – the army’s efforts that are ongoing now in Swat and Vaneer and elsewhere have only recently begun, but they have been judged by our military leaders as being sincere, effective, and committed. So I think that there’s an attitude within Pakistan today, not just at the governmental levels, but within the society, that the terrorists pose a threat to them, that you cannot unleash terrorism or turn a blind eye to it anywhere any longer, and that’s what I am encouraged by.
QUESTION: Recently – in fact, just three days back – two days back, in fact, Secretary Clinton, there were meetings between the Indian and Pakistani prime ministers in Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt. And the general consensus was that India showed great maturity by dealing clean action against terror from talks. So they were in total disagreement about how wise do you think this is to do, you should have a more hardline approach. Having said that, would you also believe that even though these three matters are delinked, that Pakistan should not stop the continued efforts that it needs to take as actively as it was telling the world in December or January about fighting against these terror groups?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Absolutely. I think that should be a given. I think it should be expected. And as I say, I think I see some very positive steps in that direction. But India is a great country. It is a country that is mature and is able to make decisions for herself. It is also a very powerful country with an enormous military capacity if necessary. But what I see the Government of India doing is to try to be able to find the space to focus on what you and I were talking about, which is eradication of poverty, increasing educational opportunities, improved health outcomes, more jobs, better agricultural productivity, the bread and butter issues that will enable India to not only grow, but broadly spread the prosperity that is being developed. So I have a great deal of admiration for the difficult decisions that the Indian Government is trying to make.
QUESTION: All right. Secretary Clinton, on Kashmir, you know there has been a history of long conflict and difference between India and Pakistan on it. India believes it’s a bilateral issue, and from what I heard you earlier in the day today, you always said we don’t want to get into India-Pakistan issues at all. But Pakistan would like to see the issue internationalize. It’s been trying to internationalize the issue over a long period of time. Do you see – if I were to ask you, Secretary Clinton, do you see any role as a broker at all, directly, indirectly for America on this issue between India and Pakistan so that the matter can be settled, once and for – where do you stand on it?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, the decision has to be between India and Pakistan, and of course, taking into account the feelings of the people of Kashmir. I think there is no resolution without India and Pakistan deciding what is in the best interests of the future. So our role is not to be involved other than to support the process that India and Pakistan may decide to enter into.
QUESTION: But I think that’s absolutely (inaudible), but there were also concerns – you’ve been asked this before – about the nuclear deal. What (inaudible) creating, despite some domestic opposition. Secretary Clinton, is the nuclear deal conditionally anywhere, anywhere at all (inaudible) India signing the nuclear deal (inaudible)? Is it at all conditional?
SECRETARY CLINTON: No.
QUESTION: No?
SECRETARY CLINTON: No. The civil nuclear deal stands on its own merits. There are provisions within it that we are still working on to fulfill. But what I’m hoping, in my conversations with the leaders with whom I’ll be meeting over the next several days, is that India can help us determine how to keep nuclear material and knowledge out of the hands of rogue states and non-state actors.
What is the appropriate nonproliferation program for the future? Again, India has a tremendous capacity to determine what direction it wants to go. In this particular area, I was heartened by a speech that the prime minister’s special envoy for nonproliferation delivered in Washington some days ago, where in effect, he said we may not go the route that others have gone in the past, but we want to be contributing to solving a problem which could endanger all of us. So I’m interested in knowing what are some of the ideas that India would put on the table.
QUESTION: What condition are (inaudible)?
SECRETARY CLINTON: No.
QUESTION: Would you (inaudible) —
SECRETARY CLINTON: No.
QUESTION: — (inaudible) —
SECRETARY CLINTON: No. I was the co-chair of the India Caucus in the United States Senate. I worked very hard for the passage of the India-U.S. civil nuclear deal. I am very committed to it, and committed to its full implementation. But I do worry about what we see as proliferation in places like North Korea and Iran, the continuing efforts by terrorist groups to try to get a hold of nuclear weapons or material that could be used in a terrorist act. So I want, as part of our ongoing discussion, to explore with Indian leaders what can we do to make sure we prevent that.
QUESTION: But that’s (inaudible)?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Absolutely.
QUESTION: A more positive question. You keep coming back to India as (inaudible). We always want to know, on Frankly Speaking, what’s your takeaway? There seems to be something, if I’m not mistaken, which draws you, which is drawing (inaudible) to this country? What’s your takeaway this time when you’re gone, which is not tomorrow but – you’re staying at the Taj.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yes, I am, and I chose to stay at the Taj for a very specific reason: I wanted to send a message that I personally, and our country, is in sympathy and solidarity with the employees and the guests of the Taj who lost their lives, were injured, with the people of Mumbai and others who were impacted by the horrific attacks, and really, as a rebuke to the terrorists who may have tragically taken lives, but did not destroy the spirit and the resilience of the people of this city or nation.
I am attracted to India. This is my fourth trip with – my husband has been here many times. There’s something about the dynamism of the people, the dedication to democracy that I see, the commitment to doing better all the time and making a better future. It’s inspiring to me. And I can’t really express it; it’s just a feeling in my heart that makes me very happy to be here. It’s both a privilege and an honor, I think, and I love the food. (Laughter.) I have friends. I mean, it’s just – it’s a place that I feel very comfortable in.
QUESTION: We wish you (inaudible).
SECRETARY CLINTON: We will work that out, I am sure, in the future, perhaps when it’s not so official and we can actually just walk the streets and spend time with people instead of the schedule that one keeps as an official visitor.
QUESTION: Can I ask you one last question, a very personal question? We’ve seen you in many roles over three, four, five, six years. Now you’ve talked about it – very difficult First Lady, and now Secretary of State, (inaudible).
SECRETARY CLINTON: (Laughter.)
QUESTION: What’s next? What do you see your roles (inaudible)?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Retirement. (Laughter.) Probably it will be along the lines of what we just did. I started out as an activist and an advocate for children and families and women.
QUESTION: Yes.
SECRETARY CLINTON: I worked very hard to create organizations and to promote the ideals of equality and opportunity. And I would go back to that. I would go back to being a voice for the voiceless, standing up against conditions that just leech the life out of children and oppress women and prevent people from fulfilling their God-given potential.
I think it’s a great tragedy that walking around New York City or walking around Mumbai, there are probably people who could have found a cure for cancer, but they never got educated.
QUESTION: Absolutely.
SECRETARY CLINTON: There are probably women who could have been great teachers, but they never were given the chance. And so for me, this is a life’s work to try to expand the opportunities for people to make decisions for themselves in ways that will not only fulfill their own life purposes, but contribute to their families, communities and nations.
QUESTION: And I think what you’ve said today is going to move a lot of people, actually. Thank you so much. It’s been greatly a pleasure and privilege having you on Frankly Speaking.
SECRETARY CLINTON: It’s been our pleasure too.
QUESTION: Thank you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you so much.Remarks With Aamir Khan and Arnab Goswami, Moderator
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateTeach India Media Event at St. Xavier CollegeMumbai, IndiaJuly 18, 2009
MR. GOSWAMI: Thank you all so much for being here. It’s truly a pleasure to have all of you, and especially to have in our midst two icons at this wonderful academic institution of technical excellence, two icons who represent the whole concept of taking a challenge and turning it into an opportunity. Their involvement in education is deep. It goes over a long period of time. And I’m so glad, let me say, (inaudible) Secretary Clinton, and to you, Aamir Khan, that you have given time to come to this institution and spend some time with all the volunteers of Teach India and Teach For India.
And let me also say that the volunteers who are in the audience today are the real stars, because they are the ones who take time out from what they do to share the vision that one has for this. So I’d like to thank you very much, and maybe we can begin with a round of applause for my two guests this evening. (Applause.)
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you so much. Secretary Clinton and Aamir, I’d like to keep this as interactive as possible, but I am also sure that many in the audience have questions for you today about your vision of education. And we would also like you to share your wisdom and compare it to the Indian experience.
So may I begin, Secretary Clinton, by asking you to share your wisdom of education. And by way of a first question, let me ask you, Secretary Clinton, that when there are inequities, there are ways in which programs like Teach For India, Teach For America, Teach India help bridge those inequities. How about the larger net? If you say parents are the best teachers, how does one install teaching, then, among those who are underprivileged?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, let me begin by thanking you very much for giving me this opportunity to be here at St. Xaiver’s and to have this chance to talk about an issue that is very near and dear to my heart. It’s also, I have to confess, a great delight to be here with Aamir Khan, a Bollywood icon, but more than that, a dedicated, committed advocate for education, as we’re going to hear more about as we move forward in the program.
I wanted to make two points just to start it off and to respond to your question, Arnam. First, I believe every child can learn. I do not believe that children, regardless of their backgrounds, have limited or no capacity. But I believe they don’t have equal opportunity. I think that talent is distributed universally, but opportunity is limited. And that is true in every country, to a greater or lesser degree. And secondly, it is truly up to all of us – families, governments, businesses, educational institutions – to do everything we can to narrow the gap between talent and opportunity, and to give every child a chance to grow up and fulfill his or her God-given potential.
Now, children have different potentials. There are some who will be Nobel Prize winning physicists, and there will be others who will earn an honest living doing the hard work that keeps us all going. But every child deserves that chance to be able to chart his or her own future. And so for me, education is the great equalizer and the gateway to opportunity. It does start in the family. The family is the child’s first school, and parents are children’s first teachers. And some of us are fortunate to have families and parents who understand the value of education and encourage us and challenge us, and others are not.
So we have to do more to convince all families that education is partly their responsibility, and then we have to join forces with the government and the schools that are funded by the government with the private schools, with the private sector, and with groups and organizations like Teach India and Teach For India.
So I am committed and have been for many years to equality of opportunity for all children, and I’m thrilled to have this chance to talk with you about the programs that are represented here, the challenge that India faces to increase education to people who do not have the opportunity right now, and to look to see how the United States and India can work together on the common cause of educational opportunity.
MR. GOSWAMI: Thank you very much. Aamir, you get with this – you’re upset and you feel strongly about inequities. What really, in your view, is – is that the biggest stumbling block that one has?
MR. KHAN: Well, let me start by saying it’s a real honor to be here with Secretary Clinton today and I’m very happy to have met her and looking forward to hearing her thoughts.
I really have one extremely important thing that I would like to convey and – you know, in today. And that is that I have, you know, the highest respect and regard for organizations like Teach For India and Teach India, and hundreds of such organizations all over the country who are going out of their way and doing things for education. But what I would really like to see is that we as a people give top priority and the kind of value that education and teaching deserves.
I think we are still a little away from that. And by that, I mean that I would like to see one day in India that the top jobs that people are vying for are the teaching jobs. You see – did anyone happen to have met – why there are a lot of people who are really interested in teaching and are really doing a lot in this field?
But by and large, the majority of people getting into teaching today in the country, in our country, are those who are not able to make, you know, a job for themselves in other places. So people who want to be engineers, doctors, and management students, but they can’t make it and they go into teaching as a result of not making it as far.
So by and large, the majority of teachers are people who are not really interested in teaching to begin with, and probably are not entirely fit for it and are not the brightest minds either. And the reason for that —
MR. GOSWAMI: (Inaudible.)
MR. KHAN: No. I think, as I said, there are a lot of teachers who are doing a great job, so (inaudible), and there are a lot of people who are genuinely interested in teaching who are doing a great job. But I think that’s a minority. By and large in India, the people getting into education are because they can’t find a place for themselves anywhere else. And that is not why they should be in teaching.
What happens is that the brightest – I mean, we, as a country, as a society, should be giving so much importance and so much value to teaching, that every kid coming out of college should feel like “I want to be a teacher.” It should be the highest-paying job. It should be the job that we all vie for. You know, young students, do they want to be doctors, they want to be engineers, they want to make a better life for themselves.
Teaching should be one of the most successful lives for the youth today, and it should be such that the youth vie for it, they want to become teachers. And that will begin with us, Arnab. I think we as a society have to give that importance to teaching and education as, you know, our government, our administration should give it that kind of value. And that is when we will give that value and I think that will dramatically change our system, and education is, in fact, ultimately, the very foundation of any society.
If tomorrow, we as India want to be world leaders – and I don’t mean that in a very narrow point of view – of competing as (inaudible) leadership, but – no, but taking responsibility and contributing towards mankind. Then, we have to make a strong base on that and only to education.
MR. GOSWAMI: Absolutely.
MR. KHAN: And one of the key things in education for me is not, you know, whether you know the answer to of A+B or the root square, but are you encouraging children to question, are you encouraging children to have minds which are wanting to learn and are thirsty and hungry, and not merely people who have a good memory? You know, kids are told that you have to learn this by heart and they learn it all by heart, but you’re not creating individuals who will have minds which can take our – you know, which can (inaudible) dramatically forward in ways that we can’t even imagine today. That will only happen if you have minds which are encouraged to question, to disagree, to challenge, to search, discover. And I don’t think that is the kind of education we follow in India today. It’s mostly, you know, focusing on how well you can memorize things.
The last thing that I would like to say here is that one of the things that disturbs me most about our education in India, and I don’t know how it is in the West, in U.S., but so much of emphasis is given on competition – did you come first in your class, what did you score, how is your math, how is your – I would like to see teachers actually telling students, “Hey, your partner is weak in something. Are you helping him?”
So psychologically, and very, very subconsciously, we give importance not to competing, but to caring. We teach our kids to be caring human beings, and that, in my opinion – I’ve been saying the last year for here – everywhere I go. But we have to teach our kids to be caring. We have to put a premium on love and care. And in my opinion, we do that, you know, from the age of toddlers, when today we go to a school recent – parents are “My son should come first.” Unimportant; let him be happy, let him be caring about his friends, teach him that is important.
MR. GOSWAMI: But I find that —
MR. KHAN: That will make a huge difference 20 years from now.
MR. GOSWAMI: Just a small contradiction on that, Secretary Clinton, that if one sees, for example, the most recent statements that have come out of your Administration in the U.S. since it took over, and the last two or three statements of President Obama, whenever he speaks about the education system of it – and I am told Secretary Clinton knows this – he always takes the example of good education systems being in countries like India and China.
You know, there is – there are positive references to the – and he’s always – President Obama’s recent statements have been in the light of “We must be able – our education system must be able to compete with the education systems in India and China.” So I wanted to understand from you what really are the handicaps in the present American system, and what would your Administration seek to change? Also, if you’d like to respond to some of what Aamir said.
SECRETARY CLINTON: No, I think that he’s made some excellent points about what is going to be required to be successful in the world in the future. Obviously, competition is part of the human genome; that’s how we’re made. But cooperation and collaboration is more and more important. It’s important among people and it’s important among countries.
I think you can look and see our education system and realize that we have some of the greatest schools and universities in the world. But we don’t have them for everyone, and we don’t take care of students who fall behind as well as we should. So part of our challenge is to lift up the students who don’t always have the easiest time of it in life, whose families are not able or willing to assist them and support them, who comes from groups that are perhaps more marginalized than the majority. And we’ve made a lot of progress, but we are very candid in saying we have much to do in order to fulfill the promise of equal education.
Certainly, in India – so when you hear President Obama or another American talk about India, you can look at the very best in Indian education, and it’s the best in the world. You can look at the technical education and it is to be envied. It is so effective. But then there are hundreds of levels down where millions and millions of children don’t have an adequate primary education or a secondary education or, certainly, college education.
So I look at our country and I see that we’re providing an education to everyone, but it’s very unequal. India faces the challenge of so many more people to serve in very rural areas, often without adequate infrastructure, so you have to come to grips with how you actually produce the schools that are needed, the teachers who will be dedicated, the curriculum and materials that are required.
So in one way, we have a similar problem, that we leave people behind in greater or lesser numbers; and the other way, we have a different problem, which is that we have the infrastructure and we spend a lot of money on education, but we often don’t get what we consider to be the best return for the children.
Now we have another issue which I don’t really know whether it’s a problem here, and that is that there is a lot of competition for children’s attention. There is so much else going on in the culture that the idea of school seems less important than it did when I went to school. When I went to school all those years ago, the family structure was more intact, the teacher was a more authoritative figure, there really wasn’t a lot of other temptation and competition in the air. We didn’t have hundreds and hundreds of TV stations and internet sites and everything that children are attracted to now.
So part of our challenge is how do we keep a child’s attention, and how do we use technology in a way to assist the learning of children? But as I think about it, that may be an opportunity for India; rather than building the infrastructure for thousands and thousands of schools, how is technology used to communicate and educate? I met this morning with a group of some of the leading business and industrial leaders in India, and they’re moving toward using cell phones for banking. And one of them said that eight, nine years ago, there were not very many cell phones in India; now there are 500 million.
So having that technology can be a learning experience. It’s not the traditional one we think of, but it’s an opportunity to reach so many more people. So I think in a way – and you have a dynamic new education minister, I am told – so in a way, for India to think creatively, to go exactly to your point, that rather than “Okay, we – this is the way we do it, this is the way we always have done it, this is what we’ve memorized and this is what we’ll tell you,” let’s be creative, and how do we get beyond it. And we’re looking at some of the same ideas in our country.
MR. GOSWAMI: Secretary Clinton, I have one question to ask you before I take more questions from the audience, and that question takes me to a really vicarious pleasure that I have got when I read one of your statements, where you apparently said – and I am sure many of us who have been students at any stage, and all of us have been, would really get a sense of vicarious pleasure at your statement that there must be a one-time test for teachers as well. You said that there should be a one-time test for teachers. And if I am not mistaken – correct me if I am wrong – you said if they don’t pass the test, then fire them.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yes.
MR. GOSWAMI: We don’t have one-time tests for teachers in India, Secretary Clinton. Did you manage to get that done —
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yes.
MR. GOSWAMI: — in America and —
SECRETARY CLINTON: Not in America, but many years ago, when my husband was the governor of one of our states, Arkansas, which on the map is by Texas, we were very concerned about the low level of education in our state. My husband came from a family where he was the first to go to college, and yet his family believed in education, so they encouraged him and they made him study. And so he became academically successful and could follow his own path in life.
So my husband asked me to work on what we could do to make our education system better. And one of the concerns that I heard from people across our state was that there was such a disparity in the quality of teaching. There were some of the great teachers who were dedicated, who were there because they loved their work, and there were teachers who should not have been teaching because they didn’t know the subject matter, they didn’t seem to really be devoted to the task of teaching.
So I proposed a – what we called a teacher test. Now these teachers remember; they had gone to college and they had been given their certificates. But there were so many complaints about their teaching and their understanding of subject matter that we said we’re going to have a test. It was so controversial.
MR. GOSWAMI: It must have been.
SECRETARY CLINTON: It was extremely difficult. But we really stuck to our guns.
MR. GOSWAMI: Did they resist?
SECRETARY CLINTON: There was great resistance and great concern about it. We stuck to our guns. There was a test designed. And about 10 percent of the teachers failed it.
MR. GOSWAMI: Ten percent is a lot.
SECRETARY CLINTON: It’s a lot. And oftentimes, they were concentrated in the areas of the poorest children who needed the best teachers. I often think about my own daughter. I mean, we read to her from the time she was born, we took her to museums, we took her to libraries, we talked all the time to her, so she has an amazing vocabulary. And I kept thinking she could actually survive going to a bad school. She didn’t. I mean, we made sure she didn’t, but she could, whereas a child without that kind of background and encouragement really can’t.
And the final thing I would say, because I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about how we help parents to become better teachers of their own children, there is very solid research in the United States, and I think it’s universal, that if you divide parents into wealthy and educated, middle class, lower middle class, working class, somewhat educated but certainly not college or post-graduate, and then poor people and poorly educated, if at all, what you find is that people from this higher educated class, like my husband and I, we talk to our children all the time. And we do exactly what you are saying, which is to ask them to solve problems – “Well, what do you think about that,” or “What would you do,” or “See that? How would you respond?”
So there’s a constant learning going on. As you move down the income scale into more working class environments, there is not as much talking, and it’s very utilitarian. It’s like “This is what you have to do,” and “Please pass the salt,” and “Please go do this,” and “Don’t do that.” It’s very utilitarian, but there is talking going on. But when you get into the lower socioeconomics, there is very little talking. Now, in part, because life is very hard; there’s not a lot of time to talk. You are trying to keep, as we would say, body and soul together – put food on the table and a roof over one’s head. And talking is just not part of the daily routine.
So by the time a child is five, that child has acquired 50 percent of the entire vocabulary the child will ever have. And so if you have been filled up with words so that you have a very active vocabulary, think of how much more it will be. And I don’t believe that a child can read above the level of that child’s vocabulary. So starting in the home and starting with an understanding that you need good nutrition for children to learn, a child who is malnourished is likely to be behind, both physically and mentally, and you need an atmosphere that encourages thinking and problem solving. All of that goes hand in hand before the child ever gets to the school.
MR. GOSWAMI: Secretary Clinton, I’m totally taken with what you said. You’re obviously an exceptional parent, and I think people have missed a wonderful teacher in you. But I saw Aamir drawn into that conversation, because Aamir’s movie, which I hope you see sometime, Taare Zameen Par, which was a hit all over India, was exactly about that, was (inaudible). It was about that special touch, that extra caring, that you don’t teach a – treat a child like someone who has to come out with a product at the end of so many years of education.
MR. KHAN: I mean, I think – I mean, education should ultimately, you know, contribute to how you turn out as a person and educate. For – and the fact is that reading and writing are only two intelligences that we as humans possess. There are so many intelligences, and each one of us can learn so much in different aspects of life and what impresses, what doesn’t. So I actually have very – I mean, I don’t have conventional views on education. I mean, a kid may not be interested in math, and that may not be something he’s interested at all in doing, but he might be really interested in singing. So we should encourage him and teach him singing.
So, I mean, when I, for example – I was only 12 when I decided to start learning about cinema and filmmaking, and for that, I wanted to drop out of college. It was conventional education. And my parents said to me that, you know, you have to be graduate, you know, don’t stop your studies. I said, “No, I’m not stopping my studies. I’m starting them. My education begins now, because this is what I want to learn about. I want to learn about cinema. I want to learn about filmmaking. So I’m not stopping my education. I am, I think, starting it.”
So like, you know, I don’t remember who said this, but don’t let schooling ever get in the way of education. This is what I absolutely believe. So I think that, you know, like TZP, the film that I made, I mean, we are trying to talk about inclusion. Every child has a right to education. And we shouldn’t judge children and assume that a child is dumb or doesn’t deserve our —
MR. GOSWAMI: Or the fear of rejection early on in education.
MR. KHAN: Certainly, certainly. I mean, you know, inclusion is such an important part, which again, is an area where, in India, we need to really soul-search and improve on, because we still have special schools for children. They should be in regular schools. All children should be in regular schools. I mean, every child has a right to be with children his age, and we don’t have a right to pick him up and put him somewhere else.
So, you know, inclusion is another very important aspect of education and growing up.
SECRETARY CLINTON: I just wanted to echo what Aamir said because there is a wonderful researcher at Harvard University named Howard Gardner, who has proven what you have just described, and that is that there are several different kinds of intelligence and ways of learning. Some people are very good at sitting in a classroom and absorbing the teacher’s lecture through their ears and through their eyes. They watch what’s written or they read what they’re given or they listen to the lectures.
But that is not the only way to learn. And it is not the – it is not better or worse than any other way of learning, but it is the way that our schools are structured, so that children who learn by doing and children who learn by a kind of kinesthetic —
MR. KHAN: Ability.
SECRETARY CLINTON: — ability, right, which goes with performing arts and goes with the visual arts. And very often, they’re not given any outlet for their intelligence. And we keep learning these lessons in America, but then we don’t apply them in our schools. Like, for example, if you keep children just sitting in that classroom with very little opportunity to experience other forms of education, you’re going to lose the attention of a significant percentage of them. Whereas if you have a better way of identifying who would be the good singer – because it’s not only that this person might grow up to be a singer – not everyone will, by any means – but they might begin to feel confident about themselves, which will then enable them to pursue a different form of learning that will actually lead to a job and income.
I mean, part of – and I think what you said before is so important – part of what happens to kids in every education system right now that I know of in the world, is that a lot of the creativity and energy is channeled so narrowly.
MR. KHAN: Absolutely.
SECRETARY CLINTON: And then children who don’t fit into that channel feel like outsiders, and some of them have enough confidence that they’re able to survive. They —
MR. KHAN: But a lot of them don’t.
MR. GOSWAMI: But a lot of them don’t.
SECRETARY CLINTON: But a lot of them don’t. And then – see, what happens is that that child who doesn’t have the confidence and gets discouraged becomes a parent who wants to stay away from education. So, instead of encouraging his or her child, you are finding a parent who doesn’t want to go talk to the teachers, doesn’t want to be involved in the educational experience because they had such a bad time of it. So you then perpetuate the kind of generational resistance and rejection of education.
So, I mean, there’s so much more we could do, which is why programs like Teach India and Teach For America are important, because your interacting with children can light the spark that nobody else has lit. I’ve seen it happen over and over again, where some kind of interaction between a caring adult and a child who is looking for direction, inspiration, whatever, makes the difference. And that’s what we need more of and we just don’t have enough of it.
MR. GOSWAMI: Also because it opens up the eyes of those who – advantage —
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yes.
MR. GOSWAMI: — who have the opportunities to those who don’t have the same opportunities.
SECRETARY CLINTON: That’s right. That’s right.
MR. GOSWAMI: Yes.
MR. KHAN: You know, I think this program, Teach For India, which is similar for Teach For America, which has begun this year – I think a very important program. And when I was approached to endorse it and to support it, I was, you know, quite excited, actually, because it’s an idea – I don’t know how many people in our country know about it, but let me just briefly tell you.
MR. GOSWAMI: Yes.
MR. KHAN: It’s a program where students coming out of the leading colleges in India are invited to commit two years of their lives in becoming part of the education system in India, and teaching children from primary schools and municipal schools in our country. So this is the first year – and there are batches of, I think, 90 or so students who have signed in and who have been through a training program.
Now these are the brightest minds of our country, mind you. So imagine, you know, 90 of our students who are really bright going into municipal schools and teaching children, you know, at the age of eight or nine. And that’s the age where your basics are formed, you know, really. But this is just 90 students. I imagine 9,000 or 90,000 or nine lat students coming out could only mean – not only will it dramatically change and contribute to the education of our children, but it will significantly change that person as well, because when I – maybe I want to be a doctor. Maybe that’s what I want to be.
But after finishing my education and before getting into medicine, if I spend two years with little children, interacting with them, teaching with – teaching them, that experience is something money can’t buy. If I want to be a CEO of a company or I want to get into business, again, this experience that I have of two years with children is going to be something that will – you know, that’ll stand by me all through my life.
So I think it contributes to society in both ways: Children benefit and so do adults.
MR. GOSWAMI: Of course.
SECRETARY CLINTON: And I wanted to add a word too about Teach India, which I have learned about from both of you. The idea that people from all walks of life would spend some time in the schools will help to raise the visibility of the challenges that you face. And every school can use more caring adults.
I mean, I remember when my daughter was in the first grade and her first grade teacher said, “I don’t feel comfortable teaching about science, but I would really like it if some of the mothers would come in and do the science lessons,” and one of the mothers of Chelsea’s classmates was actually a scientist who had decided to take some time off to raise her children. So I’m not a scientist, but she asked me if I would help, and I said, “Well, if you tell me what I’m supposed to do, I will.” And so four of us went into the first grade and just taught these little science programs. And it got us into the classroom in a way that you never can if you’re just a mother showing up to bring cupcakes for a birthday or some other kind of special event.
And then I’ve seen, over the years, more programs like this start in the United States, where a business might adopt a school. They would take one school and then the people in the business would sign up to help in whatever way they thought they could, or other programs of service would be established so that if a school didn’t have enough reading tutors, people would come in and help. I did that also later – not in my daughter’s school, but working with a group of kids who needed help with reading, and there were 25 kids in the classroom and the teacher couldn’t possibly give them all the attention they needed during the day. So several of us would come in and work with them.
So the Teach India program gives people a chance – not to have a full-time commitment like Teach For India will do for a year or two, but to have enough of a commitment that you can see what the needs are and then become advocates for the children and the schools.
MR. GOSWAMI: Absolutely. And it will have a trickle-down effect.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yes, it will.
MR. GOSWAMI: You’ll start with 19, but I’m sure it’s going to go down. It’s got to come from the hardbone.
Let’s take some questions simply because (inaudible) would be very unpopular if I held the limelight. We have some (inaudible) out there, okay. Let me start. I’ll try to be as well-distributed as possible. The lady right there in the front, second row, please. Wait for the mike to come through, please. Thank you. And who are you – who is your question?
QUESTION: Good evening. I – since I am working with (inaudible) and I was a part of the Teach India program, I vouch for it that kids must have learned something from me. But what I got from the program was tremendous. Keeping those same kids entertained for an hour was a task by itself, and those kids get kids so they can tell you (inaudible), “Maybe I’m bored, this is not interesting me anymore, do something different.” So you have to think on your feet and keep them entertained all the time.
My question to you, ma’am, is about the thing you were talking about, vocabulary. In India, what happens is I was teaching these kids English. No – they were brilliant in terms of the regional language that they were studying in, but they just speak no English and they felt inadequate. Their parents speak no English, so they could not give them the vocabulary that’s needed to go out in the real world. I’m standing here today because I speak English.
Now how do we address it? Yes, it’s very true that parents need to teach their kids. My parents taught me; I’m here today. But how do we address this whole issue of English being so important to people who seem well-educated?
SECRETARY CLINTON: That’s an excellent question. We have the same issue to a lesser degree. We don’t have many languages spoken by as many people as you do in India, but as you might know, we have a number of students in our schools – I know New York best because I was a senator from New York and I live in New York. And in the New York City public schools, there are something like a hundred different languages. Now the most prominent are languages like Spanish, languages like Chinese and Russian. So part of the challenge is how do you teach a child who doesn’t speak English without breaking their spirit and making them feel that they’re so ignorant because they may know a lot in their own language, they may express themselves well in their own language. But speaking English in our country and, frankly, now in India and most places in the world is such a precondition.
We’ve done a lot of work on what we call bilingual education, and there are two different schools of thought. One is that as soon as the children come into school as early as possible, start teaching them in English and make them learn English quickly when they’re young and they can absorb it. The other school of thought is: Teach the children in their own language and gradually transition them to English. There are arguments on both sides.
Here’s the problem: We don’t have enough teachers, let alone bilingual teachers. So the difficulty of trying to take, in one classroom, say in New York City, kids who speak Spanish, Chinese and Russian, and try to work with them in their own language is – it’s just hard for the system to absorb.
So it’s – we don’t have any answers. We are working hard to come up with the best approaches, but a lot of people believe the best approach, especially when you’re young, it is to immerse you in English and help you learn English before you’re self-conscious about not knowing it. I think that part of what India should do is experiment to see what works in India, because there are different approaches.
MR. KHAN: Absolutely. You know, what I feel about that is that English is a language like Marathi or Hindi or Gujarati or any language. The education is not really about languages. I think when you’re teaching a child something, I think each society and each culture has a language, and that is extremely important for that culture and society.
So when you’re talking about education, I think we should retain what is our own and what is the child’s own culture. So if a child is comfortable in Marathi, he should be – he or she should be taught in Marathi. If he ever feels like communicating with a person who knows English or wants to communicate in a field which requires him to learn English, he will if he needs to.
But I think that’s not important if you don’t (inaudible). Education is not about languages. There are so many languages in the world and all of them are beautiful. And we should not assume that – let us move towards any one language. I don’t, you know, buy into that.
MR. GOSWAMI: You have to think of it, Aamir. English is never the primary language in India. It’s the link language and that’s also our advantage, that it’s —
MR. KHAN: No, I mean, it’s a great language. I mean, I think in English. I mean, I grew up in India, I – my mother tongue is Urdu and my mom tried to teach me Urdu. Unfortunately, I never learned it. I regret it today. I really do. And I think in English and I’m – English is a great language. I don’t have any issues with it. But I think that it’s also important for me to be tied to my own roots, in a way, emotionally, and that’s important as well.
MR. GOSWAMI: Well, absolutely. The next question, okay. The gentleman right at the corner there. Yeah, please go ahead, yes.
QUESTION: Hello, everyone. It’s an honor standing here in front of you, both of you. My name is Rahool Vengent, Teach For India Fellow 2009, and the class teacher of second standard (inaudible) high school.
Actually, the question is that on any rainy day in Bombay, we enter a class that is – I mean, that is quite a lot, but it has very, very eager students who are there to learn. Also, we have students who are in second standard, but they don’t even know the basic alphabets. We – I’ll teach (inaudible) that challenge almost on a daily basis.
So as the leader that you have been and you are, how do you think that resolving such education challenges makes you a good leader?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, could I ask you a question? How long have you been teaching?
QUESTION: Three months in total.
SECRETARY CLINTON: And what age children are you teaching?
QUESTION: The children are six and seven, six years and seven years.
SECRETARY CLINTON: What have you learned in three months that helps you feel like you’re teaching them?
QUESTION: First and foremost, I cannot enter my classroom unplanned. I have to plan before I enter my classroom because I get only five hours, and those five hours are very, very precious for those kids.
SECRETARY CLINTON: That’s right.
QUESTION: So I need to plan very well, every second of it, so that I’m able to give them what I’m here for.
SECRETARY CLINTON: I really appreciate what you said because it goes back to Aamir’s – one of his first points, the amount of time it takes to be a good teacher – to really plan, to be prepared, to get into the classroom and keep the children’s attention and try to figure out who’s learning and who is not.
I really believe that what you’re doing is so important because there needs to be an understanding of how important teaching is in order for the public to support paying teachers better, to convince people to go into teaching so you can recruit better teachers. And there is no substitute for experience. I mean, you could be in a classroom and say that, but it wouldn’t have the same credibility as what you’ve just said, because you’ve now been doing it.
And I think from my own experience, what I remember most over the many years that I’ve been advocating for better education are the times when I was interacting with teachers and students. And very often, teachers want to do a good job, but they’re given no support. They’re basically – just said, “Here are your students, go teach them.” There is not the kind of teacher training, continuing education; there is not the materials that a good teacher needs. In our country, teachers spend up to $400 a year out of their own pocket buying supplies that are not given to them by the schools because they want to do a good job.
So I hope that this program, which – both of these programs, which are really good in and of themselves spur a debate about education more broadly so that people who won’t go into the classrooms for Teach For America or Teach India will be aware of what you’re doing. And I think you’ll have some real credibility, and it’s through that credibility that perhaps there can be a real movement for change.
MR. GOSWAMI: Thank you so much and thank you for helping spur that debate by being here today. Look, there are a lot of hands going up for you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: (Laughter.)
MR. GOSWAMI: More than we can accommodate, perhaps. Okay, let me take the lady there. Yes, right there, you – the fourth row, the lady in the fourth row, please. Thank you.
QUESTION: Good evening. My name is Diachi. My question is really first a statement and then a question. I have been really recently quite shocked to hear that a lot of children are – rather, all children in school have to go for extra tuition not because they can’t handle the pressure of school, but because it’s expected out of them. And the teachers that they’re learning – to whom they go to for extra tuition are the same teachers at these (inaudible) schools. So it’s not that the teachers are not capable. It’s probably out of what Aamir (inaudible) said, that they’re not paying enough in school to pay them extra money for the tuition, and then they give them more attention.
So what happens to those children who can’t afford that extra tuition week? And how do we solve it? Is it just by paying them more, or is it a systemic problem that’s much worse than now?
MR. KHAN: The thing is that, you know, in India, there are so many issues and so many problems. And certainly, the population is huge. There is a lot of poverty. I think that as people, as Indians, we have to give high priority to education and also our government and administration. I’m saying in the long run, suppose we want great scientists, we want great doctors, we want great businessmen, we want great leaders, we want great politicians; where are they going to come from? They’re going to come from a good education.
So I think that if we invest in that and give that a lot of value, you know, like – I don’t know, I’m not a politician, I’m not into running a country. But I would imagine that the kind of – starting from the annual budget that you have, the kind of money that we should keep aside for education should be much higher, I think, than what we have, especially considering the fact that we are a poor country, that there is so much poverty in the country.
And I think that this is – you know, the fact is that this is going to be the base for anything that we hope positive to happen in our country. It would depend on how our children are educated.
MR. GOSWAMI: It stems to the point that Secretary Clinton also made – you can’t buy good teachers. You can’t buy good teachers, (inaudible).
MR. KHAN: Well, the thing is that you can give emphasis and value to teaching.
MR. GOSWAMI: But it has to come – it’s a calling, also. It’s a kind of calling. It has to come from within.
SECRETARY CLINTON: But I think – but it’s a kind of combination. You want to attract and keep quality teachers, but if teachers’ status and pay are so below other professionals, a lot of people who might want to teach will feel that they can’t afford to teach. And one of the challenges in our country and elsewhere is how you pay teachers appropriately. We have some places in our – in America where teachers are paid a lot, but it doesn’t seem to reflect in the increase in enrollment. So it’s not either/or. It’s both ends, exactly.
MR. GOSWAMI: But change will not come overnight.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Yes.
MR. GOSWAMI: It’s going to take investment over a long period of time. I see more hands going up each time I look at the audience. I have limited time, so – but I will take a few more questions. It’ll be two or three more questions.
Okay. The gentleman in the fourth row there, yes, you. Yeah, go ahead. The mike (inaudible).
QUESTION: Okay. Good afternoon. So, the reality that we face in our classrooms every day are extremely different. I mean, some of them are universal – children go through a lot of abuse in different forms from the societies they come from and the backgrounds that they come from. And these same challenges that I, as a first-time teacher, I’m facing is how do I make society aware of these incredibly gaping insecurities? You know, the child’s rights are not defined. They are so ambiguous. A teacher slaps a child and goes away scot-free. A child is abused in the house and he’s afraid to come out and talk about it.
How, as a nation, how, as an educational entity which we’re sitting here and talking about – you know, equal opportunities and all of that, how do we address an issue like this? And as a leader, how would you address an issue like this?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, the whole issue of children’s rights has been something I’ve worked on for many years. I wrote an article, one of the first articles that was written in our country, called Children’s Rights Under The Law. And I talked about exactly what you’re describing. I mean, what happens when the adults who are supposed to care for children abuse them, ignore and neglect them, whether it’s in the family or it’s in the classroom? And how you balance parental rights with children’s rights?
Because obviously, adults need to take responsibility and they need to have authority over children, but if they abuse it, who steps in? And I think that part of the answer lies in what you just did, which is to stand up and talk about this, and to organize around this so that people become more aware of the consequences of their actions. Many people, particularly parents, just don’t know any better. I mean, that’s the way they were raised and the way their parents were raised and – corporal punishment of the most severe kind, discrimination between boy and girl children, I mean, that’s just how people were raised.
So part of the challenge is to change the culture, and it, again, doesn’t happen overnight. But you make things less acceptable. And having a movement around the rights of children, as defined appropriately within Indian society, is one that I think will come from a lot of the work that is being done now, because you are seeing it, more and more people will see it, and it will begin to take on a reality for the society.
So there is no perfect answer and we certainly still have child abuse, and we have all kinds of other problems, but it’s no longer acceptable. When I first started working on child abuse after I was in law school, we had just recognized child abuse as a serious problem, and this was probably 1973. And before, people just didn’t pay attention. If a child came to a hospital with burns or a broken arm and the parents said, “Oh, he fell under the radiator,” or “She fell down the stairs,” nobody said anything.
But then starting in the mid ‘70s, people started saying, “Wait a minute, we know children are being physically abused. We have to start paying attention.” So now, we have a whole system for reporting and responding. It’s just – but that’s not a very long time that this has been part of our law and part of our cultural mindset.
MR. GOSWAMI: I’ll take one last question, only because of want of time, and there is a lady right in the very end. She seems very (inaudible) to ask a question.
QUESTION: Good evening to one and all. I am (inaudible) and I’m a student of St. Xavier College. I’m extremely glad that my colleagues are giving me this opportunity. I’m not a part of any of these organizations, but I saved time, which is very close to (inaudible), which is like a (inaudible). I tried teaching, like, a group of five children, just like a school under the tree without much of infrastructure. But a huge problem that I faced was that the parents wouldn’t allow them to come. After like, one or two days, they would be like, “No, but they need to go.” They wouldn’t say (inaudible), but I did understand, or they needed to go to (inaudible). And after some point of time, I found myself handicapped because I start going to their places too, but they weren’t there at home.
So at that point, I thought that, you know, like, all my dream of – you know, at least bringing up these five kids when – you know, trying to teach them something were just shattered. So I don’t know what – then what to do exactly.
MR. KHAN: You know, in India there’s so many problems, and certainly, poverty is one huge issue, and I just think you shouldn’t give up. You know, I just think that yes, these problems are there, and I think that what you’re doing is beautiful. I think that the emotion with which you are coming forward to contribute to the lives of those children and to your own life is a very important thing, and you should just continue that.
Find five other children or, you know, try and convince one of them to come and learn with you, you know? It’s a very important thing, what you’re doing. Don’t be disappointed.
SECRETARY CLINTON: I would echo that completely because, I mean, really, we’re not just talking about education here. We’re talking about service, and we’re talking about an ethic of service. And I think it’s important to remember Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who of course learned so much from Gandhi, and carried the message that he picked up from studying Gandhi back in the United States, he said one time, “Everyone can be great because everyone can serve.”
And it is often discouraging and sometimes it feels futile, but you never know when the magic will strike, when you convince some mother or father that you can actually give their child a better life, when a child will say, “No, I want to stay here under the tree because I’m learning something.” You just will never know that unless you try. And you cannot give up. I mean, you clearly have the heart for it, which did come through so passionately, so you just have to keep working at it and be smart about trying to find the situations that will enable you to help children who can benefit from your intervention.
We have a program in the United States called Big Brothers Big Sisters. And people sign up to sponsor a child, and they spend just one afternoon or one evening a week with a child, and it’s usually a poor child. It’s often a child who has lost a parent, and so the mother has left or the father has left; they want the child to have another adult in the life. And it’s amazing what those kind of personal relationships can actually produce if they click, if they’re worthwhile, if the adults enter into it with good faith and a good heart.
So I just think there are so many ways to serve, and you are exemplifying that and it’s the most powerful message that you could send.
MR. GOSWAMI: I don’t have the heart to wrap this up, but I know I have to for want of time. I’m just going to wrap up by just saying one thing, and I’m sure I represent the feelings of everyone here today: Secretary Clinton, and to you, Aamir, thank you for giving your time. Your passion is obvious, your commitment is deep, more power to you, and you’re always very popular in India, as your husband was and continues to be. And I’m sure that after this event when people approach you, people will – the admiration for you will even grow further. Thank you very much, Secretary Clinton.
A round of applause for both our guests. (Applause.) Thank you so much. Thank you.Vodpod videos no longer available.
India Day One
Posted in Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, Secretary of State Travel, state department, U.S. Department of State, Uncategorized, tagged Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, India, Secretary of State, State Department on July 18, 2009| Leave a Comment »
Well, it seems, despite all the talk of Hillary not being the face of foreign policy in the world, that perception is limited to one corner of the world: The U.S.A.
When I saw her in Bilaterals and the Trilateral this past week, it seemed clear that those FM’s know her to be their go-to person. Now I see her with the Indian businessmen and entrepreneurial women – it seems pretty clear that she is recognized and loved. Back in February I said she was our Valentine to the world. Look at her! I was right!
Hillary Clinton at U.S.-India Business Council’s 34th Anniversary “Synergies Summit”
Posted in Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State, state department, U.S. Department of State, tagged Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, India, Secretary of State, State Department, US-India Synergies Summit on June 17, 2009| Leave a Comment »
Remarks at U.S.-India Business Council’s 34th Anniversary “Synergies Summit”
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of StateU.S. Chamber of CommerceWashington, DCJune 17, 2009
Thank you. Thank you all so much. It is a great pleasure for me to be back here at the Chamber for such an important occasion. I want to thank David for that introduction, and I want to thank my friend, Indra, for those very kind words. It gives you an idea of how much we admire each other and her leadership of a great American company with obviously international reach.
To Ron Summers and to the U.S.-India Business Council Board, thank you so much for this important dialogue. This could not be better timed. It is early in our new Administration, and we are clearly committed to furthering and deepening our relationship with India in every way possible. I’m also pleased to welcome India’s new Minister of Commerce and Industry. Anand Sharma is here with us, and newly arrived ambassador Meera Shankar.
It is exciting to see the election results in India as well, as the Congress Party and the people of India made such a strong statement about the future that they hope to make together. And I look forward to working with Minister Sharma and the ambassador and others on our common agenda and goals.
I will be visiting India next month, which I’m looking forward to. It is exciting for me to have an opportunity to return again, and it is also a great privilege and honor to be doing so representing the United States.
I think also somewhere in this very large lunchtime audience are two members of our new team. And if they are, I’d love for them just to stand up, and you could get a look at our new U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk and Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke. Are Ron and Gary here with us? Well, they’re off working. That’s why they’re not. (Laughter.)
And I want also to just thank some of the other people who have been so instrumental in this Council whom I have worked with over the years: Sy Sternberg, the former chair and CEO of New York Life; William Cohen, a former Secretary of Defense and now chair and CEO of the Cohen Group; obviously Bal Das, who is a great friend of mine, an investor and very actively involved on behalf of India and Asia from New York; Ambassador Susan Esserman, another friend who has a lot of work through her legal career that involves the India-U.S. relationship. These are all members of the Council, and I am grateful for everyone who has committed to this work.
The broad range of talents in this room is an indicator of how important the relationship is. Now, when I first had the great delight of visiting India in 1995, I was just overwhelmed by not just the hospitality and the warmth of the people with whom I met, from the very highest to women in villages who were working for better lives for themselves and their families, but how easy it was, even back in ’95, for India’s many accomplishments to be overlooked in other places in the world. Here was a country defined by democracy, diversity, and dynamic growth, a country that had over 1.1 billion opportunities to enhance not only individual potential, but the nation’s. And when I was elected to the Senate, I co-founded and co-chaired the Senate’s India Caucus, the first time we had done that. And I have returned to India to talk about this partnership which I think is critical not only to both of our countries, but literally to the future of the world, the kind of world we want to shape together.
And it is great for me to be standing in front of this significant crowd and to say that the word about India has obviously spread. People know what kind of business and investment opportunities are there. India’s growing role in the global economy is accepted the way we accept the law of gravity. And the partnerships that are blooming at all levels of our societies are indeed exciting.
Now, I tell you this because I want you to place me and where I stand as Secretary of State. It is in a position of deep commitment to building stronger ties with India, a commitment based on mutual respect and mutual interests. And I know that President Obama feels the same way. We see India as one of a few key partners worldwide who will help us shape the 21st century. The forces of positive change versus those of destruction, the forces that move people forward rather than holding them back. We are both eager to build on this relationship, and of course, we’re not alone. We build on the past.
It is now three successive United States administrations from different parties that have identified the U.S.-India relationship as a foreign policy priority. For the United States, this is a project that transcends partnership and personalities, and I believe the same is true in India. When the U.S.-India nuclear deal passed the United States Congress, it had strong bipartisan support, including backing from two former senators named Barack Obama and Joe Biden, as well as a senator from New York.
But the agreement also received support from across the political spectrum in India. The formation of India’s new government is an opportunity to strengthen our ties and launch new initiatives. Now that the government is in place, we are moving quickly to strengthen our ties. Our senior career diplomat, Under Secretary of State Bill Burns, and his newly minted Assistant Secretary of State Bob Blake have returned from India this weekend to tell me of the enormous potential for progress in our relationship with New Delhi.
In a world where, let’s admit it, frankly, the headlines can get depressing, our relationship with India is a good news story. And I think it’s going to get even better. But it’s important to place this in history and to remember that the United States and India haven’t always had such a promising partnership. We need to acknowledge the road we have traveled together. We have already come through two distinct eras in U.S.-India relations on our way to this new beginning.
The first era opened with India’s founding and lasted through the end of the Cold War. It was colored by uncertainty about each other’s motives and ambivalence about whether to pursue closer cooperation. The relationship between our countries was never hostile. But the missed opportunities for closer partnership during this period were casualties of old conflicts between East and West, and North and South.
After the Cold War ended, President Clinton opened a new chapter of engagement with India. I love saying that, and it has the benefit of being true. (Laughter.) Talks between former Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott and his Indian counterpart helped to establish a new foundation for our relationship. And of course, my husband and daughter had an extraordinary visit toward the end of his term in office.
This second stage in our history continued through the last U.S. and Indian administrations and culminated in completion of the Indo-U.S. civilian nuclear agreement this past October under the Bush Administration. This landmark accord, which the Obama Administration is fully committed to implementing, provides a framework for economic and technical cooperation between our two countries and allows us to move beyond our concerns about the status of India’s nuclear program, an issue that dominated our relationship for much of the last decade.
The nuclear deal, which was completed through the efforts of former President Bush, removed the final barrier to broader cooperation between us. And that brings us to today. We find ourselves at the beginning of a third era. I’ll call it U.S.-India 3.0. The new governments in Washington and New Delhi will build this future together, and we will be discussing the details of that partnership when I visit India next month.
But today, I can tell you my hope and President Obama’s hope that the next stage in our country’s relationship will see a dramatic expansion in our common agenda, and a greater role for India in solving global challenges. We recognize the extraordinary progress that India has made already, and we know that many of these advances have not come easily, and we don’t take them for granted. As we pursue an enhanced bilateral partnership, we should recognize that compared to other metrics of our cooperation, our official ties are past due for an upgrade.
You see, a funny thing happened on the way to this third era of U.S.-India relations. Our scientists and business people, our universities and movie studios, and vibrant Indian-American personal familial connections accepted the truth that cooperation between our countries can be a driver of progress long before our policymakers did.
Today our trade between our nations has doubled since 2004 and now exceeds $43 billion; there are over 90,000 Indian students studying in the United States; and the new Fulbright-Nehru program strengthens educational exchanges between India and the United States with both countries acting as full partners in governance and funding.
We find ourselves in an unusual position. We need the bilateral cooperation between our governments to catch up with our people-to-people and economic ties. We need to make sure that the partnership between Washington and New Delhi, our capitals, will be as advanced and fruitful as the linkages that already exist between Manhattan and Mumbai, or Boston and Bangalore.
Now, that’s not to say that our governments have not made significant progress in our cooperation over the past several years. Top officials see each other more often, and I think we speak more candidly with each other, which is a true sign of friendship. And we have found more common ground of late. But this is a relationship that has largely grown from the ground up. And I think our governments are ready to start following the examples of partnership established by our citizens, our companies, and our colleges.
I hope that an expanded partnership between the U.S. and India will be one of the signature accomplishments of both new governments in both countries, and I do plan to make that a personal priority. To achieve the goal of stronger ties between our countries, we will have to confront and transcend the mistrust that has hampered our cooperation in the past, and address the lingering uncertainties in our relationship still today.
Each of us have our own perspectives, as you would expect, about the challenges we face as individual countries and as partners in the world. Some Americans fear that greater prosperity and partnership with India will mean lost jobs or falling wages here in the United States. Some Indians believe that closer cooperation with us runs counter to their nation’s very strong tradition of independence.
But as friendly democracies, in fact, as the oldest and largest democracies in the world, we should work through any issues in our relationship and differences in our perspective by focusing on shared objectives and concrete results. I want to put us into the solutions business.
In order to achieve that and realize the benefits of this 3.0 relationship, we need to build on several natural platforms. The first is global security. India and the United States share an overriding interest in making the world more secure. The tragic attacks of 26/11 were a global event. They played out in slow motion on television screens across India, the United States, and the world. The violence inflicted on the people of Mumbai, and the loss of six American citizens in those attacks, was a reminder that terrorism represents a common threat to our nations and our people, and we must meet it with a common strategy.
As part of that strategy, we should expand our broader security relationship and increase cooperation on counterterrorism and intelligence sharing. As you know, America faced an extraordinary challenge ourselves after 9/11 – how to organize as a government and a people to better prevent and prepare for future attacks. India faces that same terrible challenge. And the President and I are committed to working with India in whatever way is appropriate to enhance India’s ability to protect itself.
Our own post-9/11 process had its strengths and its faults. And I think we can learn from India, too, as it develops new mechanisms for cooperation between federal and state security forces.
We should also work to realize a vision articulated by generations of Indians, Americans, and recently by President Obama, of a nuclear-free world. The Civil Nuclear Agreement helped us get over our defining disagreement, and I believe it can and should also serve as the foundation of a productive partnership on nonproliferation.
We have a common interest in creating a stable, peaceful Afghanistan, where India is already providing $1.2 billion in assistance to facilitate reconstruction efforts. The United States is committed to the task ahead in Afghanistan, and I hope India will continue its efforts there as well. And of course, we believe that India and Pakistan actually face a number of common challenges, and we welcome a dialogue between them.
As we have said before, the pace, scope, and character of that dialogue is something that Indian and Pakistani leaders will decide on their own terms and in their own time. But as Pakistan now works to take on the challenge of terrorists in its own country, I am confident that India, as well as the United States, will support those efforts.
As India and other nations play an expanded role in resolving international security challenges, we should be prepared to adapt the architecture of international institutions to reflect their new responsibilities. India’s moral stature and its long tradition of leadership among developing countries means that it is particularly well-suited to take on the challenges that multinational institutions face. I have always believed states should be awarded enhanced roles in international bodies not only on the basis of their power, but whether they use that power constructively to advance the common good and address global problems. India already is a major player on the world stage, and we will look to cooperate with New Delhi as it shoulders the responsibilities that accompany its new position of global leadership.
Human development – particularly in the fields of education, women’s empowerment, and health – is another platform for cooperation. In both India and the United States, the most important national asset we possess is the energy and creativity of our citizens. In Prime Minister Singh, we have a partner who is determined to leverage India’s progress to improve the lives of his people. We need to work together to ensure that every child, girl or boy, born in our countries can live up to their God-given potential.
As part of that commitment, we should build on the goals articulated by India’s leadership to boost literacy, expand vocational training, and improve access to higher education. I hope we can partner with India to improve outcomes at all levels of education. Our countries should continue the tradition of intellectual exchange by increasing opportunities for interaction by American institutions of higher learning and their Indian counterparts as well.
India’s women have made great strides. The country has a woman president, a woman leader of the nation’s largest political party, more women in parliament than ever before. In many areas, the United States can learn from India. (Applause.) But there is more work to be done in both of our countries. (Laughter.) We should continue working together to promote initiatives like micro-lending and provide training programs for rural women as tools to help lift them and their families out of poverty.
We can also work together to address health challenges including nutrition, maternal and child health, HIV/AIDS, and other infectious diseases, as well as the growing problem of chronic disease in both of our nations. We need to share knowledge and best practices to improve human development at home and around the world. And I appreciate all that is being done by this group and certainly this Council to promote economic and trade cooperation. We should begin negotiations on a bilateral investment treaty soon. And I’m confident that our Trade Representative and Minister Sharma will bring a fresh perspective and new ideas to help move the Doha Round negotiations to a successful conclusion.
President Obama has been clear that the United States has learned the lessons of the past. We will not use the global financial crisis as an excuse to fall back on protectionism. We hope India will work with us to create a more open, equitable set of opportunities for trade between our nations.
Encouraging greater agricultural cooperation should be a major focus of our economic agenda. India is ripe for a second green revolution. A significant expansion of India’s agricultural sector would have dramatic benefits for Indians, but also could help to spur agricultural revolutions in Africa and other parts of the globe where food security remains a persistent problem.
All of you in this room will be critical partners as we work to expand economic cooperation. Our commitment to work with the business community means that in September we will re-launch the CEO Forum on the margins of the United Nations General Assembly. We hope that effort, along with other initiatives, will channel the power of the private sector and entrepreneurs to build and improve the lives of both Indians and Americans.
Finally, we should bring together the best of our technological and scientific brains to encourage breakthroughs in both science and technology. This is particularly important on issues related to energy and climate. We are committed to working with India to see India’s economy continue to prosper, to create more economic opportunity, rising incomes. We want Indians to have a higher standard of living. And we hope our countries can work together to achieve that overriding goal, while avoiding the mistakes that were made by everyone in creating the climate crisis we face today. We think there is great promise in a clean energy cooperation strategy focused on adopting low carbon technologies, improving energy efficiency, forestation, and water management. And these efforts should be supported by new and existing high-level dialogues between representatives of our governments.
We can also learn from Indian doctors and companies that are pioneering low-cost solutions to many of the health challenges we face today. The Serum Institute’s groundbreaking work to reduce the cost of vaccine manufacturing is one example of this phenomenon. There are many others. Applying their discoveries to global health initiatives will help us save resources and lives.
Public-private partnerships between governments, industry, civil society will be vital to everyone of these platforms. Yes, we can use all of you to help us drive economic cooperation, but also to improve human development and technological advances as well. And I think that the security cooperation is not just government-to-government, but can operate much more broadly and deeply.
So four platforms of cooperation – global security, human development, economic activity, science and technology – can support us in launching this third phase of the U.S.-India relationship. I think our successes and our futures are intertwined. Obviously, we want India to do well on its own for its own sake, but we also have a stake in that outcome, because we want India to succeed as a model of democratic development. We want India to succeed as an anchor for regional and global security. And we want India to succeed so that the world’s two largest democracies can work together as strong partners.
This is a relationship with deep roots. Both of our countries emerged from struggles against colonialism to become proud, independent democracies. And both are living proof that people espousing espoused different faiths, speaking different languages, and travelling different paths can unite and form nations that are greater than the sum of their parts.
Sixty years ago this October, then-Prime Minister Nehru told a joint session of the United States Congress that, quote, “Progress cannot go far or last long unless it has its foundations in moral principles and high ideals.” The United States and India share an allegiance to what Nehru called the “fundamental human rights to which all [those] who love liberty, equality and progress aspire.”
So let us build on those timeless principles, and let us create a new era in our relationship that will produce so much progress for our people, so much more peace for the world, and live up to those high ideals that both of our nations and our peoples represent and aspire to.
Thank you very much. (Applause.)

















































