I write this letter in reference to the article that appeared in your newspaper on January 13, which has quoted the Sri Lankan president saying that a Sri Lankan memorial dedicated to the IPKF (Indian Peacekeeping Force) will be ready by this February. It is very heartening to read that at last the Sri Lankans have shown some gratitude to the Indian army for their heroic efforts in fighting the LTTE during the IPKF operations.
This Sri Lankan memorial is perhaps long overdue. But I have a question. Has any Indian government ever thought of building such a memorial for the IPKF? Remember the saying ‘A country that does not honour its soldiers dishonours itself’?
— Pawan Kaul Pune
OSA, RIP
This refers to your timely and lively editorial ‘No half-measures’ (IE, January 19). Ever since the Right to Information Act came into force, it has proved handy for the common man to lay hands on the vital information on several public issues, which were hitherto denied under the garb of the Official Secrets Act.
However, the OSA now seems to have lost its very purpose for which it was brought into existence in 1923. It should thus be fully replaced by the RTI Act, with some suitable modifications to take care of “public interest” in its true sense.
— S.K. Gupta Delhi
Echo chambers
The US political process bears an uncanny resemblance to mainstream filmmaking. Elections and speeches are scripted to the letter, politicians put on a tirelessly rehearsed act, catering endlessly to the whims of the target audience. A successful filmmaker can’t afford to risk raising issues in a way that don’t immediately reflect audience sympathies. Good politicians vying for votes are similar in that they speak according to the already existing expectations and prejudices of the voting public.
... contd.