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IANS
Nov 10, 2019, 05:36 PM | Updated 05:36 PM IST
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In the midst of the global focus on Syria with Turkeys latest offensive putting a big question mark on when the war will end, India has been quietly doing its bit to help the Syrian people cope, and also laying the foundation for its bright future.
It's not just with medicines and food supplies that India has been helping the war-wracked country, but now with education too.
India is providing scholarships to 1,000 Syrian students to study in Indian universities, in undergraduate, post-graduate courses and even PhD.
Behind the move to provide scholarships to students from Syria is a hope that it would in the near future replicate the success stories from the African continent -- where several current or former Presidents, Prime Ministers and Vice Presidents have attended educational or training institutions in India.
Syrian Ambassador to India Riad Abbas thinks so too, and is happy at the move by India.
"India supports Syria in many ways. They support Syrian people with medicine, with food, and this initiative has come from Modiji (Prime Minister Narendra Modi) for our students," Abbas told IANS in an interview.
"Around 1,000 students have come to India to study in different universities and different courses - from Bachelors to Masters to PhD"
"Through this means India is assisting Syria by rebuilding the brain" - here he taps his head with a meaningful smile, "the brain of our people to plant education, science, and peace".
According to Abbas, it is "the best thing to rebuild humanity and the people".
Could these students one day become leaders in Syria too?
"Definitely they could become... They will come back to our homeland to rebuild Syria. And maybe they will be in the government in future. They will be like ambassadors of India to Syria and Arab countries," he said.
Abbas said that all the Syrian students currently studying in India as part of the initiative "are satisfied by the nature of Indian people and the hospitality. They are happy in their universities, and are fully supported by the universities".
The students are in 11 government and private universities across the country.
Abbas hopes the initiative will become a yearly feature. "I hope we make it every year, if it is possible.
"Because we look forward to enhancing our relationship with India, and we want all our students to get their certificates from India, because Indian education is of a higher level, compared to other countries -- similar to the UK and US," he added.
Another important factor is the students "feel at home" in India due to the cultural affinities.
"There are similar traditions between the two countries and because of this they feel at home.
"Most of our students will come back to our homeland to help their families, their people and to rebuild Syria," he said.
Though the Western world sees Syria as badly battered and bruised, India sees Damascus as a strong country with a powerful military that has been able to determinedly push back the Islamic State militia, which a few years ago had threatened to overrun the country.
On Syria-India relations, he said: "We have cordial relations with India, since the independence of both countries. Both have similar views in many cases in the international arena."
He praised India's stand on the Syrian issue - on support for a political solution in Syria put forward by the people themselves, help realise the aspirations of the Syrian people and stand against any external intervention in Syria.
"Because India has a strong voice in the international arena and many countries follow India's position. And if all countries are like India, there would be no problem," he added.
(With Inputs from IANS)