Dubai: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi received the United Arab Emirates' highest civilian honour during a visit Saturday to the oil-rich Gulf nation, reinforcing ties between the countries even as he pursues stripping statehood from the disputed Muslim-majority region of Kashmir.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, with Khaldoon Khalifa al-Mubarak, chairman of the Abu Dhabi Executive Affairs Authority, after arriving in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. AP
The induction of Modi into the Order of Zayed shows the importance the UAE places on India, the world's third-largest consumer of crude oil.
India is home to a rapidly growing consumer market and labour pool that the federation of sheikhdoms relies on for its own economy.
Activists, however, decried the UAE bestowing the award on Modi as he pursues a clampdown on the Himalayan region claimed by both Pakistan and India.
Modi is also to travel to Bahrain to become the first Indian premier to visit the island nation.
"With several Gulf states in an ever-tightening embrace with Modi, human rights have been discarded in favour of economic opportunities," wrote Samah Hadid, a Beirut-based human rights advocate.
Abu Dhabi's powerful crown prince, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, personally put the gold medal around Modi's neck during an event that was closed to press in Abu Dhabi, the Emirati capital.
With a portrait of Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, the UAE's first president for whom the order is named, behind them, the two men shook and held hands for a moment and spoke quietly.
"You deserve it," Sheikh Mohammed told Modi at one point while posing for photos. Modi had been announced as a recipient of the prize in April in a tweet from Sheikh Mohammed.
"We have historical and comprehensive strategic ties with India, reinforced by the pivotal role of my dear friend, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who gave these relations a big boost," a tweet from his account read.
Sheikh Mohammed's announcement came just before Modi won re-election. Their interaction on Twitter and elsewhere shows the personal relationship the two men have forged, said Abdulkhaleq Abdulla, an Emirati political science professor.
"We've never had it like this before," Abdulla said. "From there, everything circles down."
Even without the personal touch, India has for decades been a major point of trade for the Emirates, from trade routes to gold smuggling.
Some 3.1 million Indians now call the UAE home alone, ranging from labourers to multimillionaires, according to Indian government statistics.
By comparison, estimates suggest there are only around 1 million Emiratis living in the country of over 9 million.
Across the wider Gulf Cooperation Council, which includes six Gulf Arab nations, there are 8.5 million Indians. They send billions of dollars a year in remittances back home.
That, coupled with cooperation on political and defence matters, makes India ever-more important for the UAE and other Gulf Arab states.
"Countries like India cannot be taken for granted anymore," said Kabir Taneja, an associate fellow at the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation think tank.
The timing of the award, however, comes amid Modi's push in Kashmir. On 5 August, Modi's government revoked a decades-old special status granted to Kashmir and deployed thousands of troops in the region.
Indian-controlled Kashmir has been under a sweeping military curfew since then that has seen thousands detained and residents cut off from all communication and the internet.
Pakistan and India, both nuclear-armed nations, have fought two wars over control of Kashmir since they won independence from the British in 1947.
Although Modi's decision affects Muslims living in Indian-controlled Kashmir, the move has drawn a largely muted response from Gulf Arab nations.
The UAE's ambassador to India, in particular, referred to Kashmir as an internal issue for India.
While calling the timing of the award "awkward," Abdulla, the Emirati professor, said it made sense for the UAE to honour its promise to give Modi the Order of Zayed.
"No matter what you do, no matter one way or the other, there's going to be people who criticize it," he said. Others, like British parliamentarian Naz Shah from the Labour party, see it far differently.
She published an open letter addressed to Sheikh Mohammed asking him to reconsider giving the award due to the "brutality" she described Modi as directing.
"I ask you to question this decision and reconsider giving such an award, not only because the majority of the Kashmiri people share the same faith as you, but because we have a duty as human beings to stand up against the disregard of human rights and evil," Shah wrote.
Pakistan itself, which also has close ties to both the Emirates and Saudi Arabia, had no immediate comment to the prize being awarded to Modi. Pervez Musharraf, a former Pakistani general who seized power in a 1999 bloodless coup, himself received the award in 2007.
Musharraf has been living in self-imposed exile in Dubai for years to avoid arrest on criminal charges. Activists, however, said awarding the medal only gives cover to India amid the Kashmir crackdown.
"India has not only escaped international condemnation for its actions, but it is also shoring up support from Muslim allies," wrote Hadid, the Beirut-based activist.
"The plight of Kashmiris will not only be silenced by India's clampdown but also the apathy of those who long claimed to speak for them," he added.