>"India’s civil society is one of its biggest industries. It includes over
200,000 registered NGOs—more than the number of private firms in the
country’s agriculture and finance sectors. The contribution of these
charities—which range from small concerns to vast India-wide networks—to
development and the individual lives of millions of poor Indians is
incalculable."

>"Since coming to power in 2014, Narendra Modi’s administration has shut
down or depleted thousands of charities, according to industry veterans. The
sector is operating in an 'environment of fear,' says an NGO boss."

>"The home ministry, which regulates ngos, has cancelled nearly 17,000
licences to receive foreign contributions under the act since 2014. It has
also made applying for a licence much harder. This is a powerful curb
because of how dependent many of the most influential Indian NGOs are on
foreign money."

>"An analysis of its ['home ministry's'] targets seems . . . to fit into
two categories. The first is non-Hindu, faith-based NGOs, which bjp figures
accuse of trying to convert Hindus. . . . The second major target are
groups the bjp considers to be ideological opponents."

>"Hindu outfits, including members of the Sangh Parivar, a family of
organisations that backs the BJP, are rarely or never attacked. (Nor is the
ruling party—though it probably receives a lot of foreign donations.)"

>"The FCRA (Foreign Contribution Regulation Act) restrictions on big NGOs
are hurting the many smaller outfits they support, often in India’s poorest
regions. . . . The weakening of such bodies is likely to result in fewer
innovative ideas, poorer policy and less oversight."

>"The fear is that if the BJP wins a third term in the election due by May,
as looks likely, things could get worse."
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Published in: *The Economist*
Date: February 21, 2024
Source:
https://www.economist.com/asia/2024/02/21/indias-civil-society-is-under-attack?etear=nl_today_3&utm_id=1854873
economist.com
<https://www.economist.com/asia/2024/02/21/indias-civil-society-is-under-attack?etear=nl_today_3&utm_id=1854873>

India’s civil society is under attack
------------------------------

Asia <https://www.economist.com/asia/> | Uncharitable India
The crackdown is hurting policymaking and millions of poor Indian lives

India’s civil society is one of its biggest industries. It includes over
200,000 registered NGOs—more than the number of private firms in the
country’s agriculture and finance sectors. The contribution of these
charities—which range from small concerns to vast India-wide networks—to
development and the individual lives of millions of poor Indians is
incalculable.

Activist groups helped India gain independence in 1947 and have since
helped restrain the state’s excesses and compensate for its weaknesses. Care
India, which provides public-health education and other services to women
and girls, assisted 84m people in 2021-22. Research outfits such as the Centre
for Policy Research (CPR), a think-tank in Delhi, drafted many of the
policies that have made India a laboratory of anti-poverty schemes. Registered
NGOs, a minority of the total, are estimated to employ 2.7m people. Perhaps
only Bangladesh, globally-famed for its ngos, owes more to them. This makes
the decade-long attack that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government has
launched on the sector high-risk and costly.

Since coming to power in 2014, Narendra Modi’s administration has shut down
or depleted thousands of charities, according to industry veterans. The
sector is operating in an “environment of fear” says an NGO boss. Victims
in the past year have included Care India and CPR, which had their licences
to receive foreign donations suspended and revoked. Care has since laid off
4,000 people. cpr, a non-partisan body that in 2022-23 produced over 600
articles, policy notes and chapters, has laid off all but a handful of its
200 researchers and may not survive. On a measure of civil-society health
compiled by V-Dem, a Swedish think-tank, India’s score has fallen by half
since 2014.

The exact number of organisations affected is hard to ascertain because of
the diverse legal means used against them. Some, initially including CPR,
have been plagued by tax raids. Individual activists have been arrested on
anti-terrorism charges. Such cases rarely lead to convictions; by tying up
limited resources and paralysing operations, the legal process is the
punishment. Yet the tool most often wielded by the government is the
Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA). Passed in 1976 to limit any
unwelcome “foreign hand” (which at the time mostly meant America) in
India’s affairs, it allows the government to deny NGOs foreign funding.

The home ministry, which regulates ngos, has cancelled nearly 17,000
licences to receive foreign contributions under the act since 2014. It has
also made applying for a licence much harder. This is a powerful curb
because of how dependent many of the most influential Indian NGOs are on
foreign money. Nearly half of the 200 biggest rely on overseas donations
for more than half their income, according to a survey by Sattva
Consulting, an advisory outfit. Organisations that work on policy and
research are even more reliant. Around 75% of CPR’s funding came from
abroad.

What explains the assault? Industry watchers, almost none of whom were
willing to be named in this article, cite the government’s Hindu-first
ideology and growing intolerance of opposing views. An analysis of its
targets seems to support this. Most fit into two categories. The first is
non-Hindu, faith-based NGOs, which bjp figures accuse of trying to convert
Hindus. Pandering to that exaggerated fear, Amit Shah, the BJP’s home
minister and second-in-command, said “no mercy” would be shown to outfits
trying to change India’s “demography”. Hardly any NGO works explicitly for
that aim. Yet of those that lost foreign-funding licences in the past two
years, more than half were Christian or Muslim. The India branch of World
Vision, an ecumenical Christian NGO that has been working on child welfare
in India for seven decades and was assisting over 300,000 children, lost
its licence last month. Hindu outfits, including members of the Sangh
Parivar, a family of organisations that backs the BJP, are rarely or never
attacked. (Nor is the ruling party—though it probably receives a lot of
foreign donations.)

The second major target are groups the bjp considers to be ideological
opponents. This is a broad category, given that Mr Modi’s party suspects,
probably rightly, that most NGOs prefer its main rival, the Congress
party. Aakar
Patel, a former head of Amnesty International’s India office, claims Mr
Modi considers the entire sector “a disease”. Amnesty International, an NGO
known for probing abuses by Sangh activists, was another victim. It ceased
operations in India in 2020 after its funds were frozen in a
money-laundering case.

To a degree, the curbs reflect a disagreement between the bjp and its
rivals about the nature of development. Congress, which has roots in the
social activism of Mohandas Gandhi and other pre-independence leaders, has
generally pursued it alongside NGOs. For example, the previous Congress-led
administration launched a National Advisory Council (NAC), including
academics and activists such as Jean Dreze, an economist, to advise the
government and mark its card. The BJP, by contrast, thinks the decades-long
NGO-Congress collaboration has produced frustratingly poor results, in part
due to some of the charities’ high overheads and other inefficiencies. It
advocates instead a strong, tech-savvy, centralised state, largely
unencumbered by interfering outsiders. Mr Modi characterises this approach
as “hard work over Harvard”.

Yet the weakness of the Indian state cannot be wished away. State
governments are especially reliant on NGOs to deliver basic services, such
as the education that Pratham, an NGO, is providing to 5.6m children. For
all the BJP’s many efforts to help the poor, from higher spending on
transfers to them as a share of GDP to huge improvements in digital
infrastructure, the state’s reach—in education and health care
especially—still only goes so far.

Moreover, the details of the crackdown on ngos often appear more vindictive
than based on genuine ideological difference. Though many of Congress’s
collaborators were critical of its efforts (Mr Dreze was one of several who
resigned in high dudgeon from the now-defunct NAC), the BJP appears to
consider all ngos with Congress ties hostile. Its moves against them, which
are in line with a broader intolerance of dissent, often seem political. The
Centre for Equity Studies, another Delhi-based think-tank, had its FCRA
licence suspended after its founder, Harsh Mander—another former NAC
member—criticised
the government. His house in Delhi was recently raided by intelligence
agents. The BJP is “vengeful”, says Paranjoy Guha Thakurta, a journalist
who experienced a similar raid over his association with NewsClick, a
left-leaning outlet under investigation for allegedly running Chinese
state-sponsored content.

The FCRA restrictions on big NGOs are hurting the many smaller outfits they
support, often in India’s poorest regions. This is a “fatal blow to small
NGOs that rely on subgrants”, says the leader of a big grassroots outfit.
The erosion of brainpower at institutes such as CPR could be irreversible.
Many of its former scholars have gone abroad or to work in better-paying
private firms. The weakening of such bodies is likely to result in fewer
innovative ideas, poorer policy and less oversight.

Simultaneous campaigns against critical journalists and opposition
politicians—often using the same legal tools—are likely to exacerbate the
institutional damage and risk of groupthink. Already, says a senior
official, decisions are “often centralised” without any external input. The
fear is that if the BJP wins a third term in the election due by May, as
looks likely, things could get worse. ■

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