He said that successive governments too followed the same policy as it did not want to miss out on the economic benefits after the discovery of natural gas in that country.
"India took a 180-degree turn. President (Pervez) Musharraf going to Yangon...And literally a week after, our Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh (was) following suit and changing the policy approach. And all governments, thereafter, decided that they cannot afford to be estranged with the next door neighbour.
The former Minister of State for External Affairs was speaking at the launch of a book 'Democratisation of Myanmar'.
Noting that India could not remain estranged with its neighbour when the Myanmarese government supported rebel groups, bandits and drug smugglers, Tharoor said when the 1990 elections were set aside in the country, India was the staunchest supporters of Myanmarese democracy.
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"In the first half of 1990s, India was the most tangible supporter of democracy movement in Myanmar," Tharoor said.
Quoting from a piece he wrote in 1990s after the shift in India's policy, Tharoor, whose initial posting during his stint in the UN was in Southeast Asia, said "India's policy be governed by the head rather than the heart but in the process we are losing a little bit of our soul."