THE passing
away of Mr. K
Natwar Singh,
f o r m e r
E x t e r n a l
Affairs Minister of India,
marks an end to the long
innings of a prominent
witness to, and participant in, foreign policy
thinking of the country.
A career diplomat, he
contributed to India’s
diplomacy and foreign
affairs in official capacity. He worked closely with
the offices of a few Indian
Prime Ministers including Mrs. Indira Gandhi,
Mr. Rajiv Gandhi, and
with Dr. Manmohan
Singh. All through working in official capacity as
a diplomat, as an MP, and
as External Affairs
Minister, he was an active
participant when India’s
foreign policy shifted
gears especially vis-a-vis
Pakistan. The insight he
had gained in the capacity of India’s Ambassador
to Pakistan enriched the
process of recalibration
of Indian diplomatic
thought with reference
to Pakistan. But, his contribution was not restricted to Pakistan alone. He
knew the dynamics of
international relations
well and his wisdom was
put to good use by successive governments to
further Indian interests
on the platforms of different international institutions. That he was a
Congress MP in later
years does not affect the
importance of his enriching the thought process
of India reaching out to
other nations towards
multipolarity and multilateralism.
SREE’S LEGACY
A
FTER the historic back-toback bronze
medals in
Tokyo and
Paris Olympics, Indian
hockey is looking at a new
dawn. India’s showing in
Paris has instilled big
hopes from the men’s
team which boasts of an
incredible talent pool.
Under captain
Harmanpreet Singh and
coach Craig Fulton the
Indian hockey team has
gelled into a well-oiled
unit which is ready to take
on powerhouses without
fear. A major credit of the
change in thinking also
goes to just-retired goalkeeper P R Sreejesh who
was the hero of Indian
triumph for the bronze
medal. Not for nothing he
is bestowed with the
sobriquet of ‘The Wall’ as
the Kerala goalie has
guarded the Indian
citadel with tremendous
grit. His saves against
Great Britain in the quarter-final and then the solid showing against
Germany in the bronze
medal game firmed his
place in the top-notch
category of bartenders.
Finding a replacement
for Sreejesh would be a
challenging task for
Indian hockey Though
Sreejesh has said that
India possess enough talent to replace him, the
fact remains that Sreejesh
has created such a legacy guarding which would
prove to be an onerous
task for his replacement.
Those are really big shoes
to fill for the incumbent.