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This story is from August 22, 2018

India grateful, but won’t accept foreign donations for Kerala

India will not accept the generous help that has been offered by foreign governments after the floods in Kerala. This does not, however, extend to private contributions pouring in from all over the world, given the huge diaspora from Kerala. Even during the Uttarakhand floods in 2013, the UPA government too politely refused foreign aid.
India grateful, but won’t accept foreign donations for Kerala
Flood victims unload food and relief material from an Indian Air force helicopter at Nelliyampathy Village in Kerala on August 21, 2018. (Reuters photo)
Key Highlights
  • While India was extremely grateful for the offers, its own resources would be used to rebuild Kerala
  • This does not, however, extend to private contributions pouring in from all over the world
  • During the Uttarakhand floods in 2013, the UPA government too politely refused foreign aid
NEW DELHI: India will not accept the generous help that has been offered by foreign governments after the floods in Kerala. The UAE, Qatar and Maldives have all pledged assistance to India for relief, rehabilitation and reconstruction in the state.
But high-level sources said that while India was extremely grateful for the offers, its own resources would be used to rebuild Kerala.
India will say "thank you" but "no thank you" as internal resources are mobilized. This does not, however, extend to private contributions pouring in from all over the world, given the huge diaspora from Kerala.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the UAE's PM, offered almost Rs 700 crore to Kerala . It was seen as an acknowledgment of the connection between Dubai and Kerala as well as the close ties between UAE and India. In a tweet, PM Modi thanked the ruler of Dubai. Kerala CM Vijayan also offered fulsome gratitude.
Qatar has offered almost Rs 35 crore while Maldives, a country with which India's ties have nosedived recently, stepped up with an offer of $50,000. Congress MP Shashi Tharoor also landed up at the United Nation's doorstep in Geneva to ask for aid.
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That was unlikely to go anywhere, because the request has to come from the Indian government.
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India's stance is not new or unique. Even during the Uttarakhand floods in 2013, the UPA government too politely refused foreign aid.
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