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FROTH AND BUBBLE
India bars Greenpeace from receiving foreign funding
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) Sept 3, 2015


India's Modi urges 'climate justice' ahead of Paris meet
New Delhi (AFP) Sept 3, 2015 - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi called Thursday for a focus on "climate justice" rather than climate change, saying the poor suffered most from global warming.

India is under pressure to commit to cutting its carbon emissions ahead of a major conference in Paris later this year aimed at forging a global climate pact.

It argues the burden should lie with industrialised countries, which have been accused of hypocrisy in heaping demands on poorer nations.

In a speech in New Delhi Thursday, Modi said natural disasters such as flooding or drought disproportionately affected poor communities and called for a shift in focus.

"We can't let climate change keep affecting people in this manner. Which is why I believe the discourse must shift focus from climate change to climate justice," he said.

India has so far resisted pressure to commit to any major emissions cuts despite a pact last year between the two top global emitters, China and the United States.

Modi has bet big on coal, a key source of pollution, although India also has an ambitious renewable energy output target of 175,000 megawatts by 2022.

US President Barack Obama added to the pressure in January, saying the world did not "stand a chance against climate change" unless developing nations like India reduce dependence on fossil fuels.

India has cancelled a license allowing Greenpeace's Indian arm to collect money from overseas, the organisation and Indian media said Thursday, the latest in an ongoing battle between the environmental group and Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government.

India's government claims the NGO violated rules governing foreign funding and withheld information on transactions, and also accuses it of damaging the country's economic interests by campaigning against mining and nuclear projects.

On Thursday, the Press Trust of India (PTI) news agency reported that the government had cancelled the group's foreign funding license, citing an unnamed official from the country's home ministry.

PTI said the decision would be conveyed on Friday to the Delhi High Court, which is hearing a Greenpeace petition against the curbs.

In a statement, senior Greenpeace India official Vinuta Gopal said the move was "a desperate attempt to get us to cease our work".

"The cancelling of our... registration is the government's latest move in a relentless onslaught against the community's right to dissent," Gopal said. "It is yet another attempt to silence campaigns for a more sustainable future and transparency in public processes."

Modi's government in April suspended the watchdog's foreign funding license and froze its domestic bank accounts, which Greenpeace said could force it to shut down.

At the time, the government said it was acting on an audit which showed the organisation had violated rules on foreign funding and had not disclosed transaction information.

The following month, however, an Indian court unfroze Greenpeace's accounts.

Greenpeace, which has been at loggerheads with the government over claims of environmental damage caused by India's heavy reliance on coal and the impact of deforestation and nuclear projects, accuses the government of waging a "malicious campaign" against it.

In addition to the financial curbs, authorities prevented one of its campaigners from leaving Delhi in January after she was placed on a suspicious persons list, and Greenpeace said in June that an Australian staff member was barred from entering the country despite holding a valid visa.

The latest decision marks another setback for foreign charities operating in India, after the country placed the US-based Ford Foundation and Christian charity Caritas on a watch list.

Modi's nationalist government, in power since last year, has cancelled the foreign funding licenses of around 9,000 charities since a major crackdown began in April.

Greenpeace says almost 70 percent of its funding is generated locally and despite the restrictions, the watchdog has said it will continue most of its operations.

According to Indian media, a secret report by the main intelligence agency recently warned that delays to key development projects being sought by Greenpeace and other activist groups could knock up to three percentage points off India's annual growth rate.


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