["The MHA has gone too far by blocking our domestic bank accounts,
which are funded by individual Indian citizens. If Greenpeace India is
first, who is next?"

That's a deeply disturbing query we just cannot shrug off.

Sign an online petition here:
<http://act.greenpeace.in/freedomofspeech/?track_id=FOS_SM_FB_FBAD1_PAID>.]

http://scroll.in/article/725296/greenpeace-says-it-may-shut-india-operations-in-a-month

FREEZING DISSENT
Greenpeace says it may shut India operations in a month
Scroll Staff  · Yesterday · 04:58 pm

With bank accounts frozen by government, NGO tells employees that its
cash reserves will last only until June 1.

Greenpeace India has asked its 340 employees to prepare for the
organisation to shut down in a month, unless the Home Ministry
unfreezes its bank accounts.

The environmental NGO said in a press release on Monday that it has
"has been left with funds for staff salaries and office costs that
will last for just about a month" and that it will not be able to
continue with its campaigns "which strived to represent the voice of
the poor on issues of sustainable development, environmental justice
and clean, affordable energy".

On April 9, the government blocked the NGO's bank accounts and asked
it to explain why its registration should not be cancelled, claiming
that Greenpeace had "prejudicially affected the economic interest of
the state". It also stopped it from receiving funds from abroad. The
order was based on a Home Ministry report prepared in September,
though some of the reasons for the crackdown listed in the internal
document bordered on the absurd.

***The NGO says that the accounts contain donations from 77,000 Indian
citizens.*** [Emphasis added.]

In its press released, Greenpeace described the government order as
"strangulation by stealth". It asked Home Minister Rajnath Singh "to
stop using arbitrary penalties and admit that he is trying to shut
Greenpeace India down because of its successful campaigns".

The government's decision has been widely criticised by others in the
development sector. A letter  by 180 prominent civil society activists
claimed that the government's decision to block the accounts appears
to be an attempt to signal that opposition to its developmental
policies will not be accepted - "even when these are proving to be
ecologically unsustainable and socially unjust".

It declared, "These are dangerous signs for the future of democracy in India."

While Greenpeace India is preparing to challenge the government
decision in court, the organisation said that "the legal process could
extend well beyond June 1 -- when cash reserves for salaries and
office costs will run dry".

The Greenpeace release included a statement from campaigner Priya
Pillai, who had been prevented from travelling abroad until the ban
was quashed by the Delhi High Court in March. "I fear for my own
future, but what worries me much more is the chilling message that
will go out to the rest of Indian civil society and the voiceless
people they represent," she is quoted as saying. ***"The MHA has gone
too far by blocking our domestic bank accounts, which are funded by
individual Indian citizens. If Greenpeace India is first, who is
next?"*** [Emphasis added.]
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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