| BBC Worlds flagship interview programme, HARDtalk,
will have an Indian special starting 12 to 16 April. BBC's presenter
Tim Sebastian will travel to India to meet key political and industry
figures ahead of the nationwide general elections.
The Hardtalk in India guest details are as follows:
12 April: Arun Jaitley, Indian Law and Commerce Minister, Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP).
India is shining, according to Indias BJP-led coalition government.
Growth is surging and the countrys IT industry is so successful
in the outsourcing of jobs that its worrying politicians
in the United States. Yet more than a quarter of Indians still live
in poverty, in a nation that remains beset by corruption and poor
infrastructure. Indias international image was also blighted
by the riots in 2002 in the BJP-governed state of Gujarat, in which
up to 2,000 Muslims died. Arun Jaitley is asked when will Muslims
in Gujarat receive justice, and whether India is shining for all,
or just for a lucky few.
13 April: Sheila Dikshit, Delhi Chief Minister, Congress Party
The Congress Party used to dominate Indian politics, ruling for
42 of the 57 years since independence in 1947. Yet, it was heavily
defeated in 1998, and few observers predict anything other than
a similar fate this year. Led by Sonia Gandhi, the wife of assassinated
Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, Congress is struggling to combat the
tide of good economic news for the BJP-led coalition government.
Sheila Dikshit is a rare Congress success story, holding Delhi for
her party in the recent round of state elections. Is Sonia Gandhi
failing the party, and why dont Indias burgeoning middle
classes want to vote for Congress?
14 April: Vishnu Hari Dalmia, President, Vishwa Hindu Parishad
(World Hindu Council)
The Vishwa Hindu Parishad is a Hindu nationalist organisation, affiliated
to the governing BJP. It agitates for a Hindu agenda and its leaders
regularly deliver inflammatory speeches, particularly regarding
the violence in Gujarat in 2002, where up to 2,000 Muslims died
in riots that followed the deaths of 58 Hindu pilgrims. International
human rights groups accuse the VHP of organising the killings, and
one VHP leader has even said that he praises Gujarat.
Vishnu Hari Dalmia is asked whether his organisation is fomenting
racial hatred in India.
15 April: Syed Shahabuddin, President, All India Muslim Majilis-e-Mushawarat
Syed Shahabuddin is a former MP, diplomat and journalist, and for
a long time has been a leading voice for Indias Muslims. He
has campaigned vigorously for Muslim rights, including the ability
to observe personal and family laws that are different from those
of non-Muslims. He has attacked the ruling BJP as the enemy
of Muslims, even though the BJP says its trying to reach out
to Muslims and is moving away from its hardline Hindu roots. Why
does the Muslim community not have more effective political leadership
and representation, and is Shahabuddin pursuing special privileges
for Indias 150m Muslims?
16 April: Kiran Karnik, President, Indias National Association
of Software and Service Companies (Nasscom)
Nasscom is the trade body for Indias IT industry, the success
of which is gaining attention around the globe. Its also worrying
other countries, though - in the USA, the outsourcing
of jobs to India has become a hot pre-election topic, with dozens
of laws proposed to prevent further losses of employment. In the
UK, unions are campaigning vigorously, claiming tens of thousands
of posts are being transferred abroad. Kiran Karnik is asked if
Indian IT is about to become the victim of its own success, and
what Indian business wants from the countrys next government.
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