From The Indian Express, 11 June 2014
Priyadarshi Siddhanta & Amitav Ranjan
An Intelligence Bureau report on foreign-funded NGOs “negatively impacting economic development” in India has called Greenpeace “a threat to national economic security”, citing activities ranging from protests against nuclear and coal plants and funding of “sympathetic” research, to allegedly helping out an Aam Aadmi Party candidate in the recent Lok Sabha elections.
The allegations are part of the IB’s report, dated June 3, submitted to the Prime Minister’s Office. As reported first by The Indian Express, the IB claims the negative impact of the NGOs’ role on GDP growth to be “2-3 per cent per annum”.
The report, signed by IB Joint Director S A Rizvi, accuses Greenpeace of contravening laws to “change the dynamics of India’s energy mix”. The bureau says Greenpeace’s ‘superior network’ of numerous pan-India organisations has helped conduct anti-nuclear agitations and mounted “massive efforts to take down India’s coal fired power plants and coal mining activity”. Greenpeace will take on India’s IT sector over e-waste among other “next targets”, the report says.
While several NGOs are named in the IB’s 21-page report, that lists seven sectors/projects that got stalled because of NGO-created agitations against nuclear power plants, uranium mines, coal-fired power plants, farm biotechnology, mega industrial projects, hydroelectric plants and extractive industries, the main international one singled out for criticism is Greenpeace.
Throughout, the IB report sees Greenpeace as the prime mover of mass-based movements against development projects. “It is assessed to be posing a potential threat to national economic security… growing exponentially in terms of reach, impact, volunteers and media influence,” it notes. The efforts are focused on “ways to create obstacles in India’s energy plans” and to “pressure India to use only renewable energy”.
The report also accuses Greenpeace, “actively aided and led by foreign activists visiting India”, of violating the provisions of the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act of 2010 (FCRA), and financing “sympathetic studies” at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) and at IIT-Delhi.
While FCRA provisions debar organisations getting foreign funding from political activity, former Greenpeace consultant Pankaj Singh stood as an Aam Aadmi Party candidate from Sidhi Lok Sabha seat in Madhya Pradesh in the recent general elections. Mahan coal mines, against which Greenpeace has been protesting, fall under this constituency.
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Absolutely one of the best articles that I have seen on WUWT. If only more would stand up.
Russia passed legislation some years ago which required NGOs to file as Foreign Operatives.
Heck, even Poland’s been infiltrated … no, no – O/T we’re talking about Greenpeace. Nice shade of green though 🙂
Six non-governmental organisations, which figure in an Intelligence Bureau report on NGOs stalling development projects, operate out of a single building in Katwaria Sarai in South Delhi.
The IB report on the ‘Impact of NGOs on Development’ said inquiries into “pattern, design and funding of protests at nuclear plants and uranium mines” revealed a “superior network” of pan-India organisations closely linked to territorial outfits that were also indulging in agitation against GM foods and the POSCO steel plant in Orissa.
“The manner of free-funding for these NGOs is observed from the fact that ASHA and its IFSF campaign are headquartered with four prominent anti-nuclear NGOs at a single address — A-124/6, Katwaria Sarai, New Delhi — which is an unmarked, small, two-room flat,” the report stated.
“These four NGOs are Indian Social Action Forum (INSAF), Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament & Peace (CNDP), Popular Education & Action Centre (PEACE) and Jan Sangharsh Samanvaya Samiti, the latter being the focal point for anti-Fatehabad nuclear power plant,” it added.
http://www.ngoreporter.com/ngo-scare/
Websearch also comes up with:
Gopal Krishna
ToxicsWatch Alliance (TWA)
A-124/6, First Floor, Katwaria Sarai,
New Delhi 110 016
For more information contact Peoples Forum Against ADB secretariat:
INSAF, A-124/6, Katwaria Sarai
New Delhi 110016
KAVITHA KURUGANTI
Alliance for Sustainable & Holistic Agriculture (ASHA)
A-124/6, First Floor
Katwaria Sarai, New Delhi 110 016
This from a copied email addressed to about 50 world wide NGO types.
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/punjabeco-crisis/angLpnuPoyg/YnfDX8ZiY_MJ
Not so sure about the 2 room flat as other reports call it 2 of 3 floors are occupied by NGO’s.
Maybe Putin was right, impound the ship and jail the crew.
I’m not sure Greenpeace as such is the problem, but rather the groups providing their funding.
It is no secret that the ultimate consequence (objective?) of the “carbon-solving” proposals is to maintain the global economic status quo and, if the poor get even poorer, so much the better. See the activists’ work in economically vulnerable areas in Africa and Asia. Every time these poor folk are denied the same access to energy you and I have, you know the activists score a victory because they celebrate it publicly.
It is an issue of control. The poorer a people are, the more vulnerable and manageable they are. Jehovah’s Witnesses naively tell you all about it if you bother to hear, for example. They only remain truly successful wherever humanity is struggling to feed itself.
Finally, a government office had the nads to speak the truth about Greenpeace.
Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, Earth First and several more of that ilk, are all a threat to economic development and the prosperity of advanced societies. Their ‘science’ is so biased it is a joke, but sadly, they are in the top ranks when it comes to spreading propaganda and misinformation which is eagerly lapped up by the useful idiots who are all to keen to rush out waving placards, or storm some corporate HQ in ‘protest’ against some ephemeral risk they can’t even spell. Their agenda is purely political, anti-industrial, anti-wealth, anti-progress and to a large extent anti-people. I suspect they are useful to our current crop of politicians as a way to distract the marching and protesting classes.
But the damage they do to economies is mounting steadily. Someone will have to take them on in the not to distant future, or they will succeed in destroying everything in our society.
Note, Aam Aadmi Party is not the Green Party. They are primarily running on an anti-corruption line. They managed to win one state with a good turnout operation. It turned out they were really only good at campaigning as protest candidates, and their newly elected chief minister(equialent to governor) ended up resigning within months. In the most recent elections, they ran protest candidates against top leaders of other parties, but failed to even win again in Delhi.
Greenpeace and Green Parties, generally, are the fragments of the Communist Parties hoovered up from the left over fragments of the Communist Implosion. They are terrorist organisations run by the fanatical urban elites and encouraged as a front by Neo-Marxist politicians like Obama.
Fine,but unless the Indian Government makes membership of Greenpeace [and similar organisations] illegal, so what?! [six months minimum I would suggest!]
CAGW is essentially a white middle class thing. Interventions by Green organisations in India [and Africa] can be viewed in many ways : neo-colonianism, racism, or simply Western government funded efforts to destroy any competiition. Who knows?
It is amazing how many white people have no problem with jobs or funding to make these efforts.
I read that tens of thousands of activists will soon be invading Paris. What percentage will be white.
Prof. Caleb Rossiter was ‘sacked’ because he was more concerned with the lives of people in Africa while thousands of white activists living in their comfortable Western lifestyle do their best to ensure the Africans stay in the utmost poverty. Except of course for people like Mugabe who is claiming compensation for the effects of CAGW. After all, those Swiss bank accounts don’t fill themselves!
I’ve been preaching this all along. Label them (Greenpeace, WWF etc) domestic terrorists, jail their top leaders and seize all their assets, end of the problem.
Curious George asks “Does any country have a National Economic Security?“. Yes, all do. National security is often seen as military, but it has to be much wider than that. Just do a web search for “National Economic Security”.
PS. The USA (plus allies) defeated the Soviet Union economically more than militarily. Both were crucial, but the economics did the trick.
Terrorists. The world will be a better place without them.
It would appear that India is smarter
than the U.S.
Every quarter I am asked to be a guest lecturer in an economics class. I work in the electric utility field. I show a slide of a young African woman cooking dinner over a dung fire in a hut. I ask the ladies what they believe her life expectancy is. They are shocked when I tell them 45 vs. their 79. Then I ask if they think for an instant that she doesn’t want affordable electricity so she can have the chance to live as long as you?
They usually respond with silence…
Peter Miller says:
June 13, 2014 at 11:15 am
You have to remember that Greenpeace was started as a joke and then things got steadily out of hand.
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No it wasn’t. I was in Vancouver, BC going to University when it started. The initiating action was protesting the US underground atomic tests at Amchitka, an Alaskan Island, Many of us felt the US was doing something very silly in a fault zone
I met many people who were involved in the early years. And in the early years, I supported them as they had decent ideals. But it morphed as the originators lost control of the organization they started and Greenpeace became radicalized.
Read Patrick Moore’s book: “Confessions of a Greenpeace Dropout”. I don’t agree with everything in the book, but I can agree with much of it. The book presents a decent perspective on what happened to Greenpeace – and a lot of other organizations that get taken over by zealots after being started by some folks with genuine concerns.
See also:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/02/26/confessions-of-a-greenpeace-droput-to-the-u-s-senate-on-climate-change/#more-103850
Mike Jonas says:
June 13, 2014 at 4:12 pm
PS. The USA (plus allies) defeated the Soviet Union economically more than militarily. Both were crucial, but the economics did the trick
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I think we won a battle, not a war. The battle is ongoing and it is looking like the BRICS countries may win the next battle.
Empires rise, empires fall.
Interestingly I just wrote to our foreign minister about the lawlessness of international NGOs and the UN and what could be done to make them transparent and subject to redress by the citizenry for their actions. For example making it so that you could sue the UN in an international court for damages if a treaty was enacted that damaged you and that all payouts became a burden on all signatories to the treaty, International organisation FOI and anti-corruption watchdog, were other suggestions.
Greenpeace are verging on terrorism and piracy, not quite but nearly, Putin was right in prosecuting for piracy for example. Greenpeace have been given far too long out of the cot, and need to be called in for dinner, and put to bed for the night. Expect stamping of feet.
Years and years upon years ago when I was a greenie, beardie, weirdo I thought about sending Greenpeace a donation but before doing so I decided to take a closer look at them.
Who were the movers and shakers, where were they, how were they funded, what was their institutional structure, how did they make decisions as to what campaigns to run, did they have a coherent strategy and what were they up to in different countries around the Globe?
After much casting about I could only find an answer to the last question. Greenpeace USA were posing as radicals campaigning to ban the import of PVC toys, presumably that was damaging the US chemicals industry, while everywhere else they were campaigning to damage local economic activity.
I never sent the donation but subsequently applauded the French for sinking Rainbow Warrior and that despite my antipathy towards nuclear testing.
Prima facie the Indians have got it right.
I am not surprised by this finding.
2% to 3% of GDP is huge. Just think of the current GDP growth in developed nations. If only they could have seen annual growths in GDP of this order these past 6 or so years.
I suspect that NGO have a similarly adverse effect on the prospects of developed nations. Certainly in the UK they have hindered the development of shale, and the promotion of costly renewables, and the adverse effect that this has on consumer spending and industrial competitiveness, must have lost the UK at least a loss of 2% GDP.
bobl says:
June 13, 2014 at 8:32 pm
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Once protest reaches the pioint of physical interference, then there is a strong argumenet that it is right to hold the protestors accountable for their actions. Personally, I do not consider that Russia overstepped the mark.
Lobbying and protesting raises difficult issues. For example, in the UK, there have been a number of studies suggesting that due to the recent run of cold winter weather and high energy costs, some 25,000 to 40,000 people have each year needlessly died prematurely.
Now we have seen much protesting against fracking. If this has delayed extracting cheap gas by fracking by say just 1 year, and if fracking were to go ahead and if as a result gas prices would significantly fall (as seen in the US) leading to lower energy bills, then these protestors have directly or indiirectly resulted in the neddless premature deaths of about 25,000 to 40,000 people. If these protest have delayed exploitation of fracking by 2 years then about some 50,000 to 80,000 premature deaths etc.
Why should protestors be entitled to ravage such missery and suffering on people with impunity. Protestors rarely have the moral high ground when one considers the full (but possibly consequential) implications of their actions. The true victims of their actions are all too often not faceless large multinational corporations. Perhaps it is time that society considers a new law to hold protestors accountable for their actions (although it would be difficult to strike the right balance).
A good move as far as it goes; but I’ve wondered for a while if India is violating similar laws here in the US, by funding PETA which is mainly about trying to get the meat industry outlawed. Who else but Hindus would want to do that?
jdgalt says:
June 13, 2014 at 9:51 pm
A good move as far as it goes; but I’ve wondered for a while if India is violating similar laws here in the US, by funding PETA which is mainly about trying to get the meat industry outlawed. Who else but Hindus would want to do that?
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WHOA! Not all Indians are Hindu and not all Hindus don’t eat meat. Cows are off the list, but other meats, including related species like buffalo, are not, depending on location. About 80% of Indians are Hindu, and about 75% of that 80% are vegetarian or 60% of the population. Can’t speak for the other religions. If you are interested, look it up. Where did you get the PETA reference?
Today’s Greens are yesterday’s Reds. Well done India, now for WWF, FoE…………