The Indian way with sporting events



India survived the 19th Commonwealth Games without major mishap. No one should claim it went off brilliantly. I attended a mind-numbing two hour rhythmic gymnastics qualifying round with my eight-year-old daughter. She liked it, I was left wondering who decided this could be defined as a sport.

But more telling were the piles of rubble, uncut weedy grass, confusing signage and malfunctioning music system in and around the stadium. It worked in the end, but no one should think India put its best foot forward. What impressed me the most was to find India actually had three rhythmic gymnasts. They didn’t do well, but at least they existed.

But as I have been telling foreign media when interviewed, expect mess and corruption (the Commonwealth Games were 6000 per cent more expensive than originally estimated) when the Indian government is involved. Tech Mahindra handled the logistics, contracting, ticketing and back office ops for the World Cup in South Africa flawlessly for 40 million dollars – and are doing the same next World Cup. Needless to say they had no role in the Commonwealth Games. Even his detractors are in awe of how Lalit Modi took just days to move the India Premier League to Africa.

Everyone contrasts what India does with China. The best way to look at it is understand that in China the state is efficient, the private sector stunted. In India it is the opposite.

Because the Indian state depends on votes for its legitimacy it focuses on doing things that its leaders believe earn votes – sporting events don’t cut ice in elections.

Chinese state legitimacy is based on economic accomplishment and, increasingly, nationalist spectacle. Putting together flawless games are a political necessity for Beijing, not just a manifestation of good governance. As Victor Cha’s excellent book on sports politics in Asia points out, China and other East Asian states have modeled the milestones of their rise as nations on what Japan did in the Sixties and Seventies. A model that has barely registered in India and, in any case, the Indian system is not following.

This doesn’t excuse the Commonwealth mess. And I hope the strength of Indian civil society, its media and judiciary in particular, will mean that the corruption will not be overlooked now that the games are over. But I don’t expect India will ever hold a sporting event on a Chinese scale of efficiency – because the pressures to get it that right aren’t there yet. And if anything the capacities of the Indian state are shrinking as the economy grows. The best hope would be a recognition that the private sector should be allowed a much bigger slice of the action. But that would mean giving up a huge amount of patronage for the political leadership. The same arguments that apply to privatization and why it isn’t happening apply here as well.

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  • http://sklepkarina.pl siodla

    That’s bloody ordinary isn’t it?

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  • Anonymous

    We need Patriotic & decisive leaders like Narendra Modi to keep the country on track of progress. Nominees like MMS & Mukharjee have doomed the nation. There is sole aim of grabbing power & looting the country. The Janlokpal would have gone a long way in bringing accountability in the system.

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  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Suman-Mukherjee/744925892 Suman Mukherjee

    Very well written. Indeed, the latest trend of hysteric & sensationalized reporting in Indian media is worrying at best, sickening & irritating at worst. But personally, though I am not in a position to opine on the declining quality & standards of journalism in India, I am confident to attribute at least a part of the blame to the new found confidence of Indian Middle class on all matters concerning them including what they want to see, read & hear in the media. Today’s journalists are only left to catering to that at their own expense, can we really blame them for not doing something they are not allowed by their seniors to do?

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  • Gyan

    Indian journalists are the lowest paid in the world. Please pay them well, provide food and education, most importantly teach proper English and then recruit
    as reported for Newspaper.

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  • Abu Ahmed

    As a matter of fact, a constant watch on what and how is being reported in the print and elctronic media is very much needed. Inefficiency, callousness and negligence have become norm rather than exception with Indian journalism.

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  • Damned

    Fantastic well written!!!! This should be read 100 times by the idiotic news editors sitting in stupid news channels like ….who just know only one thing….jumping from their office chairs and taking the mobile camera vans for taking interviews of senseless ministers.

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  • Prasad Mantrala

    Very well said Mr. Sarkar. I am the Press & Media Secretary of United Kingdom Telugu Association (UKTA) who rushed to the hospital upon hearing the stabbing news of Mr Reddy. While I have repeatedly warned the media not to cook up stories, the fact that there was a lady among the 11 arrested became another loose end for the love triangle conclusion. We sincerely appeal to all media representatives to approach a reliable source such as Minister for Press & Information of High Commission of India or an association like us who are willing to help Indians in distress instead of probing the case from different angles and trying to tread on the Police’s toes!

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  • Dipankar

    Pranav D, I don’t know if I have the answers to your big questions, because I actually think that we have hit a point where we need to (re)familiarise ourselves with the basics of good journalism.

    But certainly the industry can devise schemes to seek out people who are passionate about journalism. It needs to train them well in all aspects of the craft before encouraging them to specialise. This is happening already in some parts of the industry but it’s obvious that there are gaps.

    Skills that you speak of, such as reasoning, analysis and balance, are not acquired overnight. They need time, resources, hard work and patience.

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  • Chris

    Fair comments, but the media’s audience is not only the government. I would say that the Indian public has a legitimate interest in violent attacks carried out against people of Indian origin even if they are not citizens of India (though I agree reporters need to make clearer what they mean by “Indians”).

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  • Bojraj

    Shouldn’t its be “poking their hoses inside the mouths of drivers instead of “poking their noses inside the mouths of drivers”

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  • Anatoliasmith

    Police and CRPF are always alert about Naxalities in the tribal area.

    http://savingnext.com/coupons/ashford-promo-code-exclusive-discounts-coupon-code.html

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