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NGOs, fall in line

Diggy

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A series of actions against Greenpeace, beginning with the offloading of its activist Priya Pillai from a London flight, has reached a stage where the international NGO’s licence has been suspended forcing its functioning to a halt. The action has drawn a huge outcry against the government by the civil society, among others. The move has also been described as one against freedom of speech and expression. Is the government sending a message to all the NGOs involved in civic actions?

Journalists were swamping the offices of Foreigners Division in the Union Home Ministry as the action against Greenpeace India poured in on the afternoon of April 9, first on TV channels. The confirmation came fast and the DETAILS were on the ministry website. Aided by a dossier they prepared after a six-month “painstaking investigation”, officials explained where all Greenpeace erred.

Officials wondered how someone can be allowed to function when they “prejudicially” affected “national interest”, “public interest” and “economic interest” of the State. Citing its over half-a-dozen actions, the government suspended the permission granted to Greenpeace to take foreign donations and asked it to explain in 30 days why its ACCOUNTS in a “non-professional manner”, “protest-creation” in localities where there were none, paying high salaries against the “spirit” of charitable work and “depriving” the country of energy through protests in the coal sector.

The move surprised not only journalists but a section of officials too as it came after the government tasted defeat twice in courts against Greenpeace in a span of three months. The Delhi High Court cited insufficient documentation and reasoning, besides questioning how one could infringe upon the right to dissent in cases related to freezing Greenpeace’s accounts and preventing activist Priya Pillai from going to London to appear before the British MPs in January.

Conspiracy theories were also abound with some even linking the presence of a senior Intelligence Bureau official, known for his watch on NGOs, in the ministry corridors to the action against Greenpeace. Some questioned the rationale and feared the move would not stand judicial scrutiny. “This may not serve the purpose. Wait for an international backlash now,” a top official told Deccan Herald. However, the Foreigners Division is confident. They believe they have done their homework as they checked the account books to find a “lot of discrepancies”. The NGO, however, is certain of showing the government its place once again in courts.

The action against Greenpeace is not the first as governments love to hate NGOs. Indira Gandhi brought in a stringent Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) in 1976 during the Emergency to squeeze the Jayaprakash Narayan-led Opposition, which she believed was aided by the “foreign-funded” civil society. She did not leave three NGOs, including the Gandhi Peace Foundation. Almost 30 years later, one of her successors, Manmohan Singh, questioned the ‘dollar-funded’ protests as he “lamented” that NGOs, “often funded” from the US and the Scandinavian countries, are “not fully appreciative” of the development challenges that India faces. Now, the government under Narendra Modi, who also views them with suspicion for their campaign against him on Gujarat riots, has raised the bogey against the NGOs.

If the UPA institutionalised a mechanism to engage NGOs through Sonia Gandhi-led National Advisory Council, it fell out with the civil society towards the end of its 10-year rule. The government’s suspicion grew as international NGOs like Greenpeace spearheaded or supported movements against power projects, GM food and cotton, nuclear energy and human rights violations. With its ‘spread and deep pockets’, Greenpeace attracted special attention.

Government sources said Greenpeace was on the radar from 2012 onwards specially due to its “anti-coal activism”. An IB report, commissioned by UPA and leaked in June soon after Modi assumed power, said its activists were “focussed on ways to create obstacles” in India’s coal-based energy PLANS and methods to pressure the country to use only
renewable energy
.

Why is Greenpeace singled out? Officials give a variety of reasons for it, ranging from its ‘reach’ in the country to its ability to ‘strike where it hurts’ and the mobilisation of locals against big projects. By taking on the biggest in the ground, they said, the government wanted to send a message to other NGOs, especially those with international links, not to mess with it.

The government is angry with Greenpeace for its “success” in mobilising locals against projects like Mahan Coal Ltd and preventing a 15,000 MW thermal power plant in Singrauli, according to the ministry dossier. The Singrauli protests were to be followed by “protest-creation” in eight other locations, impacting 40,000 MW thermal power generation plants under the “direct guidance of since black-listed foreign activists”. The government, sources said, believes that Greenpeace’s activities on blocking projects are helping foreign governments.

In the dossier, it even suggests that Pillai’s “foreign-funded” travel to London to brief British MPs on the Mahan coal block would “advance the foreign policy interests” of the British government only. It goes on to cite a series of protests by Greenpeace, like the mobilisation of 2.5 lakh people from drought affected areas to stop diversion of water supply from agriculture and drinking, establishment of Mahan Sangharsh Samiti to protest against Mahan coal block and anti-GM protest on Parliament Street in Delhi.

Its report on pesticides in tea and activists climbing billboards in Mumbai for 50 hours asking Indian tea companies to remove those pesticides was another irritant for the government. Intelligence reports suggested that the NGO also decided to target other “commonly consumed goods”, like rice and wheat, by highlighting the abuse of pesticides in it.

The DEVELOPMENT agenda

The government “found out” that Greenpeace selected five ultra mega power projects – Sasan (MP), Krishnapatnam (AP), Giriye (Maharashtra), Sundargarg (Odisha) and Mundra (Gujarat) – and thermal power projects in four coal dependent industrial areas – Korba and Raigarh (Rajasthan), Jabalpur (MP) and Varanasi (UP) – as its targets. It was also apprehensive of “unrest” as Greenpeace organised construction workers in urban areas for “use in agitation”.


essar1.jpg


tigers%204.jpg





The detailed notices to Greenpeace and the dossier show the schism between the government and the NGO on what it perceives as development. Activists believe that the government’s fear and opposition to NGOs are “exaggerated” and those sitting in South Block (PMO) and North Block (Finance and Home Ministries) decide what is national interest. The government, on the other hand, feels that it has to work for the welfare of people and it could not compromise national interest at the behest of foreign-funded NGOs that work in the garb of charitable work.

You may love or hate NGOs. However, the question remains whether the government can “harass” voices of dissent by selectively using the FCRA, which activists demand should be re-looked at.

Will Ford Foundation, one of the main funding sources of Modi-critic Teesta Setalvad’s Gujarat-based NGO, be the NEXT NGO on the block to face trouble for “direct interference in the internal affairs of the country and also of abetting communal disharmony in India?” Home ministry officials are examining the findings of an FCRA team, which inspected the files of Setalvad’s NGO.

Funding for NGOs in states

State 2013-14 2012-13 2011-12 2010-11
Rs in crore Rs in crore Rs in crore Rs in crore
Delhi 2,828.27 2,261.71 2,285.75 2,019.63
Tamil Nadu 1,751.93 1,646.29 1,704.91 1.563.17
Andhra Pradesh 1,337.93 1,165.64 1,258.52 1.183.65
Karnataka 1,322.64 1,132.25 1,104.28 1.002.00
Maharashtra 1,292.91 1,062.46 1,104.28 915.40

Donations from abroad
Largest donor: The United States

Rs 4,491.90 crore 2013-14
Rs 3,821.19 crore 2012-13
Rs 3,839.96 crore 2011-12
Rs 3,268.54 crore 2010-11


Donations from Pakistan

Rs 48.06 lakh 2013-14
Rs 2.20 crore 2012-13
Rs 41.66 lakh 2011-12
Rs 1.79 crore 2010-11



@Abingdonboy @SrNair @gslv @thesolar65 @TejasMk3 @Soumitra @doppelganger @SarthakGanguly @Chanakya's_Chant @Mike_Brando @Srinivas @Itachi @magudi
 
. .
We are also facing uncertainty regarding POSCO in my state. May be some NGOs are involved??

@SRP Any knowledge. As far as I know from newspapers that locals are involved, but suspect there is a hand behind it.
 
.
Greenpeace trying to hurt Indian tea industry: MHA | Business Standard News

The industry employs 3.5 million workers and earned Rs 644 million from exports last year.

The Greenpeace has not released the forensic analysis, which intelligence sources believe, was done at a private laboratory in some country in Europe, the home ministry said.

“The Tea Board of India has disagreed with the above findings and sees it as an attempt to impact Indian tea exports,” the report said.

“The anti-tea Greenpeace campaign is similar to the one against Chinese tea companies. In April 2012, Greenpeace had published a similar questionable report 'Hidden Ingredients in Chinese Tea' which had claimed to have found 29 different pesticides in 18 tea samples. It has also decided to target other commonly consumed goods such as rice, wheat etc. and highlight the abuse of pesticides in these sectors," the Home Ministry report said.



Greenpeace Trying to Hurt Indian Tea Industry: MHA
 
. .
We are also facing uncertainty regarding POSCO in my state. May be some NGOs are involved??

@SRP Any knowledge. As far as I know from newspapers that locals are involved, but suspect there is a hand behind it.

you are from orissa brother , posco was such a big loss isn't it , i read somewhere it was single largest investment in india and would have created thousands of jobs in your state. NGOs were after it , i remember activists dressing up in those avatar costumes and protesting against posco.

Kyu ki is bar no silent sardar, abki bar Modi sarkar

more than taking action i think people in our rural areas should be made aware of the vested interests these foreign funded ngos have , do you know in mahan greenpeace guys went there and stayed for months in the villages , they deployed a group of activists , started a small office and every day they use to cover the surrounding areas & instigate the local villagers against the govt , a UK based foreign national also traveled to mahan and was training indian activists on how to generate protests.
 
. . .
I hope this time GoI would screw the Greenpeace .
I think they are determined for that otherwise they dont need 6months of painstaking investigation.
The fate of the Greenpeace should be a lesson to other NGOs
 
.
A series of actions against Greenpeace, beginning with the offloading of its activist Priya Pillai from a London flight, has reached a stage where the international NGO’s licence has been suspended forcing its functioning to a halt. The action has drawn a huge outcry against the government by the civil society, among others. The move has also been described as one against freedom of speech and expression. Is the government sending a message to all the NGOs involved in civic actions?

Journalists were swamping the offices of Foreigners Division in the Union Home Ministry as the action against Greenpeace India poured in on the afternoon of April 9, first on TV channels. The confirmation came fast and the DETAILS were on the ministry website. Aided by a dossier they prepared after a six-month “painstaking investigation”, officials explained where all Greenpeace erred.

Officials wondered how someone can be allowed to function when they “prejudicially” affected “national interest”, “public interest” and “economic interest” of the State. Citing its over half-a-dozen actions, the government suspended the permission granted to Greenpeace to take foreign donations and asked it to explain in 30 days why its ACCOUNTS in a “non-professional manner”, “protest-creation” in localities where there were none, paying high salaries against the “spirit” of charitable work and “depriving” the country of energy through protests in the coal sector.

The move surprised not only journalists but a section of officials too as it came after the government tasted defeat twice in courts against Greenpeace in a span of three months. The Delhi High Court cited insufficient documentation and reasoning, besides questioning how one could infringe upon the right to dissent in cases related to freezing Greenpeace’s accounts and preventing activist Priya Pillai from going to London to appear before the British MPs in January.

Conspiracy theories were also abound with some even linking the presence of a senior Intelligence Bureau official, known for his watch on NGOs, in the ministry corridors to the action against Greenpeace. Some questioned the rationale and feared the move would not stand judicial scrutiny. “This may not serve the purpose. Wait for an international backlash now,” a top official told Deccan Herald. However, the Foreigners Division is confident. They believe they have done their homework as they checked the account books to find a “lot of discrepancies”. The NGO, however, is certain of showing the government its place once again in courts.

The action against Greenpeace is not the first as governments love to hate NGOs. Indira Gandhi brought in a stringent Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) in 1976 during the Emergency to squeeze the Jayaprakash Narayan-led Opposition, which she believed was aided by the “foreign-funded” civil society. She did not leave three NGOs, including the Gandhi Peace Foundation. Almost 30 years later, one of her successors, Manmohan Singh, questioned the ‘dollar-funded’ protests as he “lamented” that NGOs, “often funded” from the US and the Scandinavian countries, are “not fully appreciative” of the development challenges that India faces. Now, the government under Narendra Modi, who also views them with suspicion for their campaign against him on Gujarat riots, has raised the bogey against the NGOs.

If the UPA institutionalised a mechanism to engage NGOs through Sonia Gandhi-led National Advisory Council, it fell out with the civil society towards the end of its 10-year rule. The government’s suspicion grew as international NGOs like Greenpeace spearheaded or supported movements against power projects, GM food and cotton, nuclear energy and human rights violations. With its ‘spread and deep pockets’, Greenpeace attracted special attention.

Government sources said Greenpeace was on the radar from 2012 onwards specially due to its “anti-coal activism”. An IB report, commissioned by UPA and leaked in June soon after Modi assumed power, said its activists were “focussed on ways to create obstacles” in India’s coal-based energy PLANS and methods to pressure the country to use only
renewable energy
.

Why is Greenpeace singled out? Officials give a variety of reasons for it, ranging from its ‘reach’ in the country to its ability to ‘strike where it hurts’ and the mobilisation of locals against big projects. By taking on the biggest in the ground, they said, the government wanted to send a message to other NGOs, especially those with international links, not to mess with it.

The government is angry with Greenpeace for its “success” in mobilising locals against projects like Mahan Coal Ltd and preventing a 15,000 MW thermal power plant in Singrauli, according to the ministry dossier. The Singrauli protests were to be followed by “protest-creation” in eight other locations, impacting 40,000 MW thermal power generation plants under the “direct guidance of since black-listed foreign activists”. The government, sources said, believes that Greenpeace’s activities on blocking projects are helping foreign governments.

In the dossier, it even suggests that Pillai’s “foreign-funded” travel to London to brief British MPs on the Mahan coal block would “advance the foreign policy interests” of the British government only. It goes on to cite a series of protests by Greenpeace, like the mobilisation of 2.5 lakh people from drought affected areas to stop diversion of water supply from agriculture and drinking, establishment of Mahan Sangharsh Samiti to protest against Mahan coal block and anti-GM protest on Parliament Street in Delhi.

Its report on pesticides in tea and activists climbing billboards in Mumbai for 50 hours asking Indian tea companies to remove those pesticides was another irritant for the government. Intelligence reports suggested that the NGO also decided to target other “commonly consumed goods”, like rice and wheat, by highlighting the abuse of pesticides in it.

The DEVELOPMENT agenda

The government “found out” that Greenpeace selected five ultra mega power projects – Sasan (MP), Krishnapatnam (AP), Giriye (Maharashtra), Sundargarg (Odisha) and Mundra (Gujarat) – and thermal power projects in four coal dependent industrial areas – Korba and Raigarh (Rajasthan), Jabalpur (MP) and Varanasi (UP) – as its targets. It was also apprehensive of “unrest” as Greenpeace organised construction workers in urban areas for “use in agitation”.


essar1.jpg


tigers%204.jpg





The detailed notices to Greenpeace and the dossier show the schism between the government and the NGO on what it perceives as development. Activists believe that the government’s fear and opposition to NGOs are “exaggerated” and those sitting in South Block (PMO) and North Block (Finance and Home Ministries) decide what is national interest. The government, on the other hand, feels that it has to work for the welfare of people and it could not compromise national interest at the behest of foreign-funded NGOs that work in the garb of charitable work.

You may love or hate NGOs. However, the question remains whether the government can “harass” voices of dissent by selectively using the FCRA, which activists demand should be re-looked at.

Will Ford Foundation, one of the main funding sources of Modi-critic Teesta Setalvad’s Gujarat-based NGO, be the NEXT NGO on the block to face trouble for “direct interference in the internal affairs of the country and also of abetting communal disharmony in India?” Home ministry officials are examining the findings of an FCRA team, which inspected the files of Setalvad’s NGO.

Funding for NGOs in states

State 2013-14 2012-13 2011-12 2010-11
Rs in crore Rs in crore Rs in crore Rs in crore
Delhi 2,828.27 2,261.71 2,285.75 2,019.63
Tamil Nadu 1,751.93 1,646.29 1,704.91 1.563.17
Andhra Pradesh 1,337.93 1,165.64 1,258.52 1.183.65
Karnataka 1,322.64 1,132.25 1,104.28 1.002.00
Maharashtra 1,292.91 1,062.46 1,104.28 915.40

Donations from abroad
Largest donor: The United States

Rs 4,491.90 crore 2013-14
Rs 3,821.19 crore 2012-13
Rs 3,839.96 crore 2011-12
Rs 3,268.54 crore 2010-11


Donations from Pakistan

Rs 48.06 lakh 2013-14
Rs 2.20 crore 2012-13
Rs 41.66 lakh 2011-12
Rs 1.79 crore 2010-11



@Abingdonboy @SrNair @gslv @thesolar65 @TejasMk3 @Soumitra @doppelganger @SarthakGanguly @Chanakya's_Chant @Mike_Brando @Srinivas @Itachi @magudi

You know, having worked with a few American NGOs as a student on a few public health projects, I can tell you that I am EXTREMELY happy with this move.

Next in line, I hope GOI bans BBC from India. For 10 years. Nothing else will make me happier. Well, maybe some Baby type ops in Pakistan might come a bit higher .....
 
.
We are also facing uncertainty regarding POSCO in my state. May be some NGOs are involved??

@SRP Any knowledge. As far as I know from newspapers that locals are involved, but suspect there is a hand behind it.

Koi Shaq !!

Intl NGOs on IB radar for helping anti-Posco groups


Bhubaneswar: Even as the signing of MoU between Odisha government and South Korea-based steel behemoth Posco was done nine years ago for setting up of a $12 billion steel plant in the state, the project work is yet to take off. Here are the few reasons that were mentioned in a secret report of the Intelligence Bureau (IB), which was submitted to PMO and Home Ministry. The news TV channel has got an access to the part of the report.


On July 3, IB’s joint director SA Rijvi has submitted copies of the report that said the role of some international NGOs such as London-based Amnesty International, Action AID and Survival International is under suspicion with regard to creating hindrances against the Posco project.

As per the report, London-based Association for India’s Development (AID) has prepared a draft plan for Posco Pratirodh Sangram Samiti (PPSS) to take anti-Posco protests to the international level. Two activists – Biju and Shalini from AID were in touch with the PPSS with this regard.


Besides, another organisation INSAF is mentioned in the report for significant role in creating anti-Posco sentiments. Personally, six persons from PPSS including its advisor, advocate and officials have got funds from INSAF.


Further, the report added even one city-based NGO Sustainable Use of Natural and Social Resources, which was involved in anti-Posco activities, got funding from INSAF.

During 2008-09 to 2011-12 INSAF has received Rs 4.87 crore foreign contributions, the report said.


Odisha Television Limited
 
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