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Ms. Susan M. Pojer & Mrs. Lisbeth Rath Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY

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1 Ms. Susan M. Pojer & Mrs. Lisbeth Rath Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY
the Indian subcontinent Since 1947: The Legacy of Independence Ms. Susan M. Pojer & Mrs. Lisbeth Rath Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY

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3 Border problems

4 Jawarlal Nehru Ally of Gandhi. 1st Prime Minister of India, 1947-1964.
Advocated Industrialization. Promoted “Green Revolution”. Mixed Economy. Nonaligned Movement. Nehru met Gandhi in 1916 at the annual Indian National Congress convention. He participated in the nonviolent civil disobedience campaign and spent time in jail along with Gandhi. At independence, Nehru became the nation’s first prime minister and was continually reelected until his death in 1964. Nehru pushed modernization of the country, and industrialization of its economy.

5 Non-Alignment Movement

6 India’s “mixed economy”
The “mix” refers to private and public ownership. Foreign aid and foreign investment are crucial. Urban areas have high-tech companies. Three quarters of the population are farmers living in small villages. India's "Green Revolution" allowed farmers to triple their crop by using modern science and technology. India has had a "mixed economy" in which both private business and government invest in and direct the economy. Today, India has been moving away from state ownership and subsidies to business. India's government has established five-year plans to set economic goals. The Green Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s made great headway, but faltered due to most farmers' lack of money to buy hybrid seeds, fertilizers, and equipment. Imports still needed.

7 India’s “Green Revolution”
Introducing higher- yielding varieties of seeds in 1965. Increased use of fertilizers & irrigation. GOAL  make India self-sufficient in food grains. India has had a "mixed economy" in which both private business and government invest in and direct the economy. Today, India has been moving away from state ownership and subsidies to business. India's government has established five-year plans to set economic goals. The Green Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s made great headway, but faltered due to most farmers' lack of money to buy hybrid seeds, fertilizers, and equipment. Imports still needed.

8 Indira Gandhi Nehru’s daughter. Prime Minister of India, 1966-1984.
Continues Nehru’s policies. Faced corruption charges & internal rebellion. Assassinated in 1984. Indira Gandhi was Nehru’s daughter. She married a man named Gandhi who was no relation to the Mahatma. Indira continued industrialization, begun by her father. In 1975 Gandhi was convicted on two counts of corruption in the 1971 campaign. While appealing the decision, she declared a state of emergency, imprisoned her political opponents, and assumed emergency powers. Governing by decree, she imposed total press censorship and implemented a policy of large-scale sterilization as a form of birth control. When long-postponed national elections were held in 1977, Gandhi and her party were soundly defeated. Although very popular at the polls, she faced a great challenge in dealing with nationalist movements among minority groups, especially the Sikhs in Punjab state. The Sikhs sought independence of Punjab, and when they used terrorism, Indira struck back. The Golden Temple -- an extremely holy Sikh shrine at Amritsar was being used by the terrorists as a weapons storehouse and a sanctuary. Indira ordered a military raid on the temple in which hundreds of Sikhs were brutally killed. In the process, the temple was badly damaged. In retaliation, just a few months later on October 31, 1984, Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her own Sikh bodyguards.

9 India’s persecultion of the Sikhs
Indira Gandhi was Nehru’s daughter. She married a man named Gandhi who was no relation to the Mahatma. Indira continued industrialization, begun by her father. In 1975 Gandhi was convicted on two counts of corruption in the 1971 campaign. While appealing the decision, she declared a state of emergency, imprisoned her political opponents, and assumed emergency powers. Governing by decree, she imposed total press censorship and implemented a policy of large-scale sterilization as a form of birth control. When long-postponed national elections were held in 1977, Gandhi and her party were soundly defeated. Although very popular at the polls, she faced a great challenge in dealing with nationalist movements among minority groups, especially the Sikhs in Punjab state. The Sikhs sought independence of Punjab, and when they used terrorism, Indira struck back. The Golden Temple -- an extremely holy Sikh shrine at Amritsar was being used by the terrorists as a weapons storehouse and a sanctuary. Indira ordered a military raid on the temple in which hundreds of Sikhs were brutally killed. In the process, the temple was badly damaged. In retaliation, just a few months later on October 31, 1984, Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her own Sikh bodyguards.

10 Mrs. Gandhi assassinated!
Indira Gandhi was Nehru’s daughter. She married a man named Gandhi who was no relation to the Mahatma. Indira continued industrialization, begun by her father. In 1975 Gandhi was convicted on two counts of corruption in the 1971 campaign. While appealing the decision, she declared a state of emergency, imprisoned her political opponents, and assumed emergency powers. Governing by decree, she imposed total press censorship and implemented a policy of large-scale sterilization as a form of birth control. When long-postponed national elections were held in 1977, Gandhi and her party were soundly defeated. Although very popular at the polls, she faced a great challenge in dealing with nationalist movements among minority groups, especially the Sikhs in Punjab state. The Sikhs sought independence of Punjab, and when they used terrorism, Indira struck back. The Golden Temple -- an extremely holy Sikh shrine at Amritsar was being used by the terrorists as a weapons storehouse and a sanctuary. Indira ordered a military raid on the temple in which hundreds of Sikhs were brutally killed. In the process, the temple was badly damaged. In retaliation, just a few months later on October 31, 1984, Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her own Sikh bodyguards.

11 Rajiv Gandhi Indira’s son. Prime Minister of India, 1984-1989.
Some reform of economy and government. Also faced rebellion. Assassinated in 1991 while campaigning. . General elections in November 1989 brought the defeat of Rajiv Gandhi. Officials in his government were accused of taking kickbacks from the Bofors Company of Sweden in a purchase of guns for the army. Vishwanath Pratap Singh, leader of the Janata Dal party, was sworn in as prime minister on Dec. 2, In March 1990 India withdrew the last of its 50,000 troops from Sri Lanka. The peacekeeping force failed in its three-year effort to reconcile the Tamils with the majority Sinhalese. Campaigning to return to office, Gandhi was killed by a bomb blast on May 21, 1991.

12 A foreigner joins the family
Italian-born Sonia Maino married Rajiv She moved into the house of mother-in- law, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.

13 Mrs. Sonia Maino Gandhi 1983  Indian citizen.
1984  first lady when her husband, Rajiv Gandhi, succeeded his assassinated mother as Prime Minister.

14 1991  Tragedy struck the Gandhi family again when Rajiv was killed by a suicide bomber.

15 Sonia Gandhi remains Roman Catholic, but follows Hindu and Indian traditions.
With her children, she scattered Rajiv's ashes in the Ganges.

16 After Rajiv's death Sonia shied away from the spotlight
After Rajiv's death Sonia shied away from the spotlight. In 1998, she agreed to start her own career as a “Gandhi” again and became an important political leader.

17 Sonia's son Rahul and daughter Priyanka have also become politically active.

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19 “The Jewel turns down the crown!”
When her party won in the recent elections, she was asked to be Prime Minister. She decided not to accept the position.

20 Manmohan Singh May 2004  he held up a letter from India's president authorizing him to form a new government as prime minister. He stood next to Sonia Gandhi, the candidate for the post who stunned the country when she declined the office.

21 May 2004 India Swears in 13th Prime Minister and the first Sikh in the job.

22 Major problems & Issues in india today
Overpopulation  1 billion & climbing. Economic development. Hindu-Muslim tensions. Gender issues  dowry killings. Caste bias  discrimination against untouchables continues. The Kashmir dispute and nuclear weapons. Political assassinations. The population of India is just over 1 billion people. It is believed that India’s population will surpass that of China by No success with family planning, birth control/abortion. Necessity of large families in agrarian subsistence lifestyle. India's economy is uneven at best: many Indians lead a subsistence lifestyle, while a sizeable middle class and a small upper class live in the cities. The situation in Kashmir is quite dangerous. Ongoing hostilities continue, and both sides continue a low-level crossfire across the border of this divided region. Three wars have been fought over Kashmir: 1948, 1965, and The 1972 partition did not settle the issue. Because both sides, India and Pakistan, have nuclear weapons, some fear that the potential for large-scale war could lead to the use of these nuclear weapons. In the summer of 2002, India and Pakistan came within a hair’s breadth of war.

23 Greater tamil nadu

24 Tamil Separatism: The “tamil tigers”

25 Is the dream gone?

26 pakistan Led briefly by Muhammad Ali Jinnah. Prime Minister Ayub Khan.
Dangerous combination Was not prepared to rule in 1948. Strong Islamic fundamentalism. Impoverished. Pakistan divides in 1972 W. Pakistan = Pakistan E. Pakistan = Bangladesh Khan stressed modernization. His following in West Pakistan held liberal views of Islamic law, leading to dissent within W. Pakistan, and especially in East Pakistan. After Khan left office in 1969, East Pakistan refused to pay taxes to West Pakistan. West Pakistan sent in troops, sparking civil war. Thousands killed, millions escaped to India. India entered the war, helped Bangladesh declare its independence in 1972.

27 Benazir Bhutto First Woman Prime Minister, 1988
Ousted in 1990, 1993 on corruption charges. Nawaz Sharif Ousted three times. Struggle between modernizers and fundamentalists.

28 Gen. Pervex Musharaff Coup d’etat.
Secular government against Islamic fundamentalists. U.S. ally in the “War on Terror.”

29 Major problems & Issues in Pakistan today
Economic development. Political instability/military dictatorship. Hindu-Muslim tensions. Gender issues  honor killings. Terrorism. The Kashmir dispute and nuclear weapons. The population of India is just over 1 billion people. It is believed that India’s population will surpass that of China by No success with family planning, birth control/abortion. Necessity of large families in agrarian subsistence lifestyle. India's economy is uneven at best: many Indians lead a subsistence lifestyle, while a sizeable middle class and a small upper class live in the cities. The situation in Kashmir is quite dangerous. Ongoing hostilities continue, and both sides continue a low-level crossfire across the border of this divided region. Three wars have been fought over Kashmir: 1948, 1965, and The 1972 partition did not settle the issue. Because both sides, India and Pakistan, have nuclear weapons, some fear that the potential for large-scale war could lead to the use of these nuclear weapons. In the summer of 2002, India and Pakistan came within a hair’s breadth of war.

30 India v. Pakistan: dangerous rivals

31 India-Pakistan Border Disputes

32 1971 India-Pakistan War

33 Mrs. Gandhi with her troops

34 2002 Military Statistics

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36 1. jimmu & kashmir

37 Kashmir Crisis

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39 Indian Soldiers Patrol the India-Pakistan Border in Pura, the Winter Capital of the State of Jammu & Kashmir

40 Indian Soldiers Near the Pakistani Border - 2001

41 A Pakistani Ranger at the Indian-Pakistani Joint Border Check Post in Wagha, India - 2001

42 Anti-war Protestors in Karachi, Pakistan - 2001

43 Kashmiri Militants

44 2. nuclear rivalry

45 What title would you give this political cartoon?

46 The India-Pakistan Arms Race Heats Up in the Late 1990s

47 2002 Nuclear Statistics

48 India’s Prithvi Missiles First Tested in 1988

49 Supporters of former Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee chant nationalist slogans in support for his nuclear policy

50 Former Indian Prime Minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, displays a sword given to him by Sikh youths in New Delhi to honor him for making India a nuclear power

51 Right-wing Pakistani Activists Burn Indian Flag to Protest Indian Nuclear Tests - 1998

52 Hot Air Balloon Protesting India & Pakistan’s nuclear testing - 1998

53 India Displays Nuclear Missiles During “Republic Day,” - 2002

54 India Successfully Tested Agni Missiles - 2002

55 Musharraf and Vajpayee at a meeting on nuclear issues in Nepal in 2002

56 Is this a possibility?

57 India's Prime Minister ManMohan Singh
Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf

58 New Friends? Musharraf and India's new Prime Minister Manmohan Singh speak by telephone frequently affirming a strong desire for peace and resolution of their disputes, including Kashmir, on which the two countries have fought two of their three wars.

59 Partners in the “War on Terror?”

60 US Sells F-16 Jets to Pakistan—India Not Pleased! (3/25/05)
ManMohan Singh of India with President Bush (9/04)


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