4/9/15, "India freezes Greenpeace bank accounts over 'tax violation'," BBC
In a long-running
dispute India accused the environmental group of "stalling development
projects" by protesting against large infrastructure plans.
Greenpeace India rejected the six-month restrictions as "clear attempts to silence criticism and dissent".
It said it complies with the law governing foreign contributions.
In its suspension order, the Indian government accuses Greenpeace of not fully declaring the amount of foreign funds it brings into the country.
It
has suspended all its bank accounts for six months and threatened to
permanently cancel the registration which allows it to operate in the
country.
Greenpeace India said it was yet to receive an official notice but
described the move as a campaign by the government against dissent.
The
government and Greenpeace have been locked in confrontation for several
months over a number of campaigns the group has been running against
large projects.
Last month, the non-governmental organisation claimed a victory when the government recommended the Mahan forests in Madhya Pradesh not be auctioned for coal mining.
The government accuses Greenpeace of blocking India's development.
A
senior government official told Reuters: "We have evidence to prove
that Greenpeace has been misreporting their funds and using their
unaccounted foreign aid to stall crucial development projects."
But
the organisation says it has been, and will continue to be, compliant
with the law governing foreign contributions and is only highlighting
the impact of projects on the environment and rural communities.
Since
coming to power in May last year, PM Narendra Modi's government has
pushed through a series of long-awaited reforms and new policies making
it easier for companies to win approval for new projects.
Greenpeace
activists have accused him of watering down environmental rules after
it allowed industries to operate closer to protected green zones.
Divya
Raghunandan, Greenpeace India's programme director, said: "We are being
repeatedly targeted because we are protesting against the government's
unlawful policies.""
=====================
400 million people in India still have no access to electricity:
10/20/14, "Access to electricity in India has no impact on climate change," economictimes.indiatimes.com
"While India still lacks electricity access for much of its population -
around 400 million people - the country has vastly increased access in
the last 30 years, researchers said."...
====================
Half of India's 1.2 billion people defecate in the open:
3/4/12, "India census: Half of homes have phones but no toilets," BBC
"Nearly half of India's 1.2 billion people have no toilet at home, but
more people own a mobile phone, according to the latest census data.
Only 46.9% of the 246.6 million households have lavatories while 49.8%
defecate in the open. The remaining 3.2% use public toilets."...
.
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