Amnesty International says it has been forced to halt its India operations due to "reprisals" from the government. The watchdog has also accused Modi's government of indulging in a "witch-hunt of human rights organizations".
Amnesty
says its bank accounts have been frozen and it's been forced to lay off
staff in the country, and suspend all its campaign and research work. "We
are facing a rather unprecedented situation in India. Amnesty
International India has been facing an onslaught of attacks, bullying
and harassment by the government in a very systematic manner," Rajat
Khosla, the group's senior director of research, advocacy and policy,
told the BBC. "This
is all down to the human rights work that we were doing and the
government not wanting to answer questions we raised, whether it's in
terms of our investigations into the Delhi riots, or the silencing of
voices in Jammu and Kashmir."
In a report released last month, the group said police in the Indian capital, Delhi, committed human rights violations during deadly religious riots between Hindus and Muslims in February. Earlier in August, on the first anniversary of the revocation of Indian-administered Kashmir's special status, Amnesty had called for the release of all detained political leaders, activists and journalists, and for the resumption of high-speed internet services in the region.
In
2019, the watchdog testified before the U.S. Foreign Affairs Committee
during a hearing on human rights in South Asia, where it highlighted its
findings on arbitrary detentions, and the use of excessive force and
torture in Kashmir. Amnesty has also repeatedly condemned what it says is a crackdown on dissent in India.
In
August 2016, a case of sedition was filed against Amnesty India over
allegations that anti-India slogans were raised at one of its events.
Three years later, a court ordered the charges to be dropped.
In
October 2018, the group's offices in the southern city of Bangalore
were raided by the Enforcement Directorate, which investigates financial
crimes. Its accounts were frozen then too, but Amnesty says it was able
to access them after seeking a court's intervention. In
early 2019, the group says dozens of its small donors were sent letters
by the country's income tax department. And later in the same year,
Amnesty's offices were raided again, this time by the Central Bureau of
Investigation, based on a case registered by India's home affairs
ministry.
The
current government has stated that Amnesty was being
investigated over suspicions that the group was violating Indian laws
surrounding foreign funding. "That's
a blatant lie. Amnesty India is in full compliance of all domestic
legal requirements and international legal requirements as well," Mr
Khosla said.
The
group's announcement comes amid growing concern over the state of free
speech in India. The development, activists say, could dent India's
long-standing reputation of being a thriving democracy.
"India
does not stand in good company with these moves it is making. We
operate in over 70 countries, and the only other country previously that
we had been forced to shut operations in was Russia in 2016," says Mr
Khosla. "I hope people around the world sit up and take notice. We are
doing this with a very heavy heart, and a deep sense of anguish and
grief."
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