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India's
immortal Gandhi was also an African hero. When he died, the leaders of
the independence struggle declared a day of mourning for him.
By
Prof. Mike Oquaye, High Commissioner of Ghana in India
INDIA IS an age-long friend of Africa. You cannot recap the struggle for
independence in Africa without emphasizing that the anti-colonial struggle,
which Ghana happened to be at the forefront, took a huge cue from events
in India soon after the Second World War. Indeed, the Asian struggle of
Independence led by India under Nehru, inspired the African struggle for
self-emancipation led by Ghana under Kwame Nkrumah. India's immortal Gandhi
was also an African hero. When he died, the leaders of the independence
struggle declared a day of mourning for him. The West African Pilot published
in Lagos, Nigeria wrote: "We shall badly miss that tangible symbol of
Indian nationalism, that fountain of fortitude and virtue, the inspirer
of them that are on the thorny road to freedom". (Feb 2, 1948, p.1).
At a time when the world was polarized into East and West, our two countries
led by great leaders, together with other leaders such as Tito of Yugoslavia,
Nasser of Egypt, Sukarno of Indonesia, helped to chalk a path of non-alignment
to promote world peace. The joint efforts of our great leaders were not
only beneficial to the whole world, but also, they kindled a tradition
of friendship and co-operation between India and Africa. Indeed, in global
politics, at the United Nations, within the Commonwealth of Nations, India
proved beyond doubt that it was a friend of Africa.
The world today has become bi-polar rather than uni-polar and the relevance
of non-alignment should receive fresh attention if the dream of Nehru,
Nkrumah, Nasser and others should not sink into oblivion.
Many Africa leaders are conscious of the need to rediscover our special
relationship with India to our mutual benefit. For example, when His Excellency
Mr. J.A. Kufuor, President of the Republic of Ghana, was sending me here
early last year as High Commissioner, he instructed, inter alia,: "India
is very close to my heart. We should revitalize our relationship to rediscover
a new era of South-South co-operation-politically, economically, socially
and culturally." This should be a guiding principle in the search for
meaningful cooperation between India and African nations.
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