NEW DELHI: Greenpeace India has said it will keep operating in the country till June as its staff was willing to work without pay to ensure that the NGO doesn’t ‘disappear completely’ in the next few weeks.
Facing a possible closure in the country following the home ministry’s decision last month to block its accounts, the environmental NGO’s executive director Samit Aich in a press interaction here said his staff was ready to work without pay in June.
“Today my staff sent me a very moving letter in which they promised to work without pay for one month. I hope it will not come to this and my staff and their families avoid this hardship. But if necessary, we are able to keep the basic functions of Greenpeace India running until the end of June”
“Over 30,000 supporters have now signed a petition to the home ministry, calling on the home minister to end the crackdown on civil society groups and unfreeze our accounts” Aich said.
The Delhi High Court will on May 26 hear Greenpeace India’s writ petition which challenged the suspension of its Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) licence and the block on its national and international bank accounts.
Aich said he had great faith in the Indian judicial system and was hoping for a positive outcome.
He invited Greenpeace supporters from around the world to sign an open letter to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, urging him to lend his voice in support of free speech in India.
“We are confident of our case and are hopeful that the court will grant us relief on Tuesday. But the wheels of justice can take time, and we need to make sure we don’t disappear completely in the next few weeks. This plan enables us to do that”
The body has also invited its supporters from around the world to sign an open letter to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, urging him to lend his voice in support of free speech in India.
The government has barred Greenpeace India from receiving foreign funds by suspending its licence for six months and freezing all its accounts after alleging that it has ‘prejudicially’ affected the country’s interests.
“I am asking for thousands of people around the world to join me in standing up for Greenpeace India and speaking up for freedom” Aich said in his email to supporters.
He said that the Greenpeace International is also watching the situation very ‘closely’ and are ‘concerned’ as such a situation was unprecedented in the organisation’s history.
Greenpeace India has also submitted a comprehensive rebuttal to the Home Ministry’s show-cause and demanded immediate unblocking of its domestic bank accounts.
Greenpeace India campaigner Priya Pillai also accused the government of ‘systematically dismantling’ every legislation put in place as regulation to protect the environment in the last one year.
“Each of the legislations have been diluted in the last one year including the land bill, the forest rights act..each of these areas, government has diluted in favour of corporates, single window clearances, doing away with environmental and social impact assessments and community consent. This is a matter of grave concern for us” Pillai said.
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