Amnesty India says raid at its
office aimed at silencing government critics
Amnesty International office in Bangalore, India.- AFP |
Amnesty India’s bank accounts have been frozen following an
Enforcement Directorate raid at its Bengaluru office on October 25.
The bank accounts of human rights watchdog
Amnesty International in India have been frozen, effectively
stopping its work, after the government’s financial crime investigating agency
carried out a 10-hour raid at the group’s Bengaluru
office on Thursday.
“Amnesty India’s bank accounts have been frozen by the Enforcement
Directorate, effectively stopping our work. Amnesty India is thus the
latest target of the government’s assault on civil society in
the country,” Amnesty India wrote on its website on Friday.
The ED searched Amnesty's Bengaluru office on suspicion that
it had violated foreign direct investment guidelines and said that further
investigations were ongoing.
Silencing government critics
"ED raid on Amnesty India shows a disturbing pattern of
the government silencing organisations that question power,"
the human rights group said on Twitter on Friday. "It is clear that the
government wants to instil fear among Civil Society Organisations."
“The Enforcement Directorate’s raid on our office today
shows how the authorities are now treating human rights organizations like
criminal enterprises, using heavy-handed methods that are commonly found in
repressive states,” Aakar Patel, Amnesty International India’s
Executive Director said after Thursday’s raid. “Our staff have been harassed
and intimidated,” he said.
Employees were told to shut their laptops and not allowed to
use their phones to call friends and families, Amnesty said, adding it fully
cooperated.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's nationalist government has
tightened surveillance on non-profit groups over the past four years, saying
they are acting against India's interests.
Licences of thousands of foreign-funded groups, including
one backed by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, have been cancelled or
suspended on charges such as misreporting of donations.
Human rights
Patel said that as an organization committed to the rule of
law, Amnesty's operations in India have always conformed with national
regulations. “The principles of transparency and accountability are
at the heart of our work. We have nothing to hide. Everything about our
structure has been available in the public domain for all to
see,” Patel added.
Amnesty has been regularly vocal about India of human rights
violations in the restive Himalayan region of Kashmir.
“Our work in India, as elsewhere, is to uphold and fight for
universal human rights. These are the same values that are
enshrined in the Indian Constitution and flow from a long and
rich Indian tradition of pluralism, tolerance and dissent. They are
the same values that inspired the freedom struggle against colonial rule,”
Patel said.
Amnesty India says over 4 million Indians have supported its
work over the last six years and around 100 thousand Indians have made a
financial contribution.
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