India cancels Greenpeace’s foreign funding licence

Government claims environmental group spent money to block development projects

Indian prime minister Narendra Modi: his  government suspended Greenpeace’s licence in April and blocked funds in many of its bank accounts. Photograph: Prakash Singh/AFP/Getty Images
Indian prime minister Narendra Modi: his government suspended Greenpeace’s licence in April and blocked funds in many of its bank accounts. Photograph: Prakash Singh/AFP/Getty Images

India's government has cancelled a licence that allowed Greenpeace International's Indian unit to receive donations from abroad, the environmental group said on Thursday.

Indian prime minister Narendra Modi’s government suspended the group’s licence in April and blocked foreign funds in many of its bank accounts. The government said Greenpeace misreported funds and spent money to obstruct developmental projects.

The action was part of a wider crackdown – New Delhi has in recent months tightened surveillance on foreign-funded non-governmental organisations, cancelling several of their licences.

"It is yet another attempt to silence campaigns for a more sustainable future and transparency in public processes," Vinuta Gopal, interim co-executive director at Greenpeace India, said in a statement on Thursday.

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The government says it has found holes in Greenpeace’s balance sheet. The group rejects the allegations and has launched a legal action against Modi’s government.

In May, a New Delhi court allowed Greenpeace to gather domestic donations.

“Since the majority of our funding comes from Indian citizens, most of our work can indeed continue,” the Greenpeace statement said.

– (Reuters)