The Indian government has launched a crackdown on Greenpeace
and other environmental groups (Sierra Club, 350.org, Avaaz and the
Bank Information Center) after intelligence officials accused climate activists
of harming the country’s economic security. Authorities over the weekend barred
a Greenpeace staff member from traveling to London to speak to British
lawmakers about alleged legal and human rights violations in India by Essar, a
British-registered energy company. Another Greenpeace staffer was barred from
entering India in September despite holding a valid visa. Soon after Modi took
office in May, India’s intelligence agency, in a report leaked to the news
media, said that advocacy campaigns by Western-funded nongovernmental
organizations were “stalling development projects” and had reduced India’s
annual economic growth by 2% to 3%. Greenpeace, it said, “is assessed to be
posing a potential threat to national economic security.”
The government last year blocked Greenpeace from accessing
foreign funds, and Indian media reported this month that authorities had
imposed similar restrictions on four U.S.-based environmental advocacy
organizations. A representative of one of the groups has had his personal bank
account frozen and been ordered to explain every deposit sent from the group’s
U.S. office since 2010.
Activists say the five groups are being targeted for
campaigning against India’s coal-based energy industry, the source of 80% of
the country’s domestic power production and a linchpin of the government’s
economic development plans. They have organized protests against the coal
projects, arguing not only that the carbon emissions pose an environmental
threat but also that the process of awarding coal blocks has been plagued by
corruption, environmental degradation and land-grabbing. With one-quarter of
its 1.2 billion people lacking electricity, India rejects arguments by green
activists that it must move away from coal energy, saying the alternative would
be to keep its citizens in poverty. Indian authorities have frequently lashed
out at critics of their development strategy, accusing activists of undermining
India’s development at the behest of unspecified foreign interests. Last
January, Greenpeace activists posing as a cleaning crew scaled the glass facade
of Essar’s 21-story offices in Mumbai and unfurled a banner saying, “We Kill
Forests,” a reference to the Mahan forest, which would be destroyed to develop
the coal mine.
“The groups who’ve been working on coal and climate change
are the groups that are being singled out,” said Priya Pillai, the Greenpeace
staff member who was blocked from traveling to London. “Is it now an offense in
India to speak out for the most marginalized people in the country?” Pillai
asked.
“The so-called free speech they are talking about is not
free speech, it’s not free opinion; it’s paid opinion,” G.V.L. Narasimha Rao,
the national spokesman for Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, said, “They
are acting as foreign propagandists and foreign agents.”
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has pledged to make India more
business-friendly and begun to chip away at the regulations that domestic and
foreign industries claim have stifled investment and economic growth. Last
week, at a major business convention in Modi’s home state of Gujarat, Secretary
of State John F. Kerry said U.S. companies were eager to do business with the
new government.
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