A farmer sits on a trolley loaded with
melons as he waits for customers at a fruit and vegetable market in the
northern Indian city of Chandigarh on May 30, 2014. India’s Intelligence Bureau
has accused Greenpeace and other lobby groups of hurting economic progress by
campaigning against power projects, mining and genetically modified food, the
most serious charge yet against foreign-funded organizations.
New Delhi. India’s domestic spy service has accused Greenpeace
and other lobby groups of hurting economic progress by campaigning against
power projects, mining and genetically modified food, the most serious charge
yet against foreign-funded organizations.
The leak
of the Intelligence Bureau’s report comes as Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s new
administration seeks way to restore economic growth that has fallen to below 5
percent, choking off investment and jobs for millions of youth entering the
workforce.
Greenpeace
denied it was trying to block economic expansion, saying the allegations were
an attempt to silence dissent and that it stood for sustainable growth.
The
government report is likely to intensify the debate over whether Asia’s third
largest economy will pursue the path of fast growth under the Modi
administration or try a more balanced strategy that the previous government
sought.
It has
also turned the spotlight on the role of foreign funded organizations, some of
whom said they feared a crackdown by the new regime, seen as more friendly to
business.
“A
significant number of Indian NGOs funded by donors based in US, UK, Germany and
Netherlands have been noticed to be using people-centric issues to create an
environment, which lends itself to stalling development projects,” the
Intelligence Bureau said.
These
included coal-fired power projects, genetically modified organisms, mega
industrial projects including South Korean firm Posco’s steel plant and
Vedanta’s bauxite project both in Odisha, hyro-power projects in Arunachal
Pradesh, the strategic state on the border with China.
Together,
the cancellation, disruption or delay to these development projects had clipped
gross domestic product growth by 2 to 3 percent a year, according to an excerpt
of the report seen by Reuters.
Modi promises development
progress
Greenpeace
alone was leading a “massive effort to take down India’s coal-fired power plant
and coal mining activity,” it said.
Dozens
of projects have stalled in recent years because of local opposition,
environmental hurdles and land acquisition difficulties. Modi, campaigning on a
platform of development, promised to cut red tape and implement projects that
have been approved.
India is
desperate for power, and coal is expected to remain at the heart of its energy
security for decades. Government-controlled Coal India Ltd has not been able to
mine fast enough, forcing power producers to import costly coal from Indonesia,
Australia and South Africa to bridge the shortfall.
Seventy
million households — 35 percent to 40 percent of the country’s 1.2 billion
people — still have no access to electricity. This summer authorities in north
India are battling power breakdowns and public anger as the country swelters
under the longest heat wave on record.
The
Intelligence Bureau said the foreign NGOs and their Indian arms were serving as
tools to advance Western foreign policy interests.
“Greenpeace
aims to fundamentally change the dynamics of India’s energy mix by disrupting
and weakening the relationship between key players,” the IB report said.
Greenpeace
said it had asked the government to share with it the intelligence report so it
could defend the allegations against the organization.
“We have
a legitimate right to express our views in what is the world’s largest
democracy. We believe that this report is designed to muzzle and silence civil
society who raise their voices against injustices to people and the environment
by asking uncomfortable questions about the current model of growth,” it said.
Greenpeace
believed that India should embrace renewable energy and improve energy efficiency
instead of destroying forests to access the coal underneath (Reuters Photo/Ajay
Verma)
Goyal Energy Solution (GES) is a leading name in the coal trading, coal mines, steel grade coal, assam coal,coal merchants and coal suppliers business in north east India.
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