The government is “treating human rights organizations like criminal enterprises and dissenting individuals as criminals without any credible evidence,” said Avinash Kumar, executive director of Amnesty International India, in a statement. Its goal is to “stoke a climate of fear.”
Amnesty said it would lay off more than 100 staff members and cease its human rights campaigns. Its recent work included reports alleging police complicity in deadly inter-religious riots in Delhi earlier this year and an investigation into India’s crackdown in the restive region of Kashmir.
Tuesday’s announcement puts India in the same category as authoritarian regimes such as Russia, the only other country where Amnesty International previously ceased operations when it shuttered its office in 2016. The director of its Turkey arm was arrested but its office in the country remains functional. The group does not have a presence in China.
Amnesty said that it was in compliance with all Indian laws and had received no formal communication from the authorities regarding the freezing of its bank accounts earlier this month. No charges have been filed against the organization, it said. It plans to challenge the freezing of its accounts in court but said it did not expect a ruling soon.
A spokesman for the Enforcement Directorate — an investigative agency that enforces laws regarding money laundering and foreign exchange — did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Amnesty isn’t the only international watchdog that is under pressure from the government. Greenpeace India has been the subject of an investigation by the Enforcement Directorate since 2018. The probe forced them to reduce their staff by a third and scale back their work on climate change.
The investigation puts a “psychological strain on the staff,” said Binu Jacob, the executive director of Greenpeace India. “It is also a drain on the system when you have give your time and energy to legal matters.”
Rights groups in India have been harsh critics of the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, which they accuse of stifling dissent and undermining the country’s secular founding ideals.
In turn, such groups have faced greater scrutiny from the government. Since 2014, when the government swept to power, thousands of nongovernmental organizations have been banned from receiving funds from abroad. This month, lawmakers passed a contentious bill tightening these rules further, which has been seen as a government warning to fall in line.
In other instances, prominent critics of the government have faced more severe consequences. Several such figures are in jail awaiting trial. These include a well-known academic, lawyers and student leaders, all of whom were charged under a draconian anti-terror law.
Amnesty said it has faced sustained harassment for several years. In 2016, the group was charged with sedition after anti-India slogans were allegedly shouted at an event it held. The organization was acquitted by a court three years later.
It’s office in Bangalore was raided in 2018 over alleged violations in receiving foreign funds and accounts frozen, forcing layoffs. A court reprieve enabled them to access the accounts again.
Some of Amnesty’s regular donors were sent notices by tax authorities in 2019, adversely affecting its fundraising campaigns, it said.
In August, the group released a report on the February 2020 Delhi riots in which more than 50 people were killed, the majority of them Muslims. It alleged that the Delhi police had participated in the violence, an accusation rejected by the authorities, who called the report “lopsided and biased.”
Rajat Khosla, a senior director at Amnesty International’s office in London, said that the group’s executives in India had been repeatedly summoned earlier this month for questioning and subjected to “all sorts of threats and intimidation.” The interrogations went on for hours, Khosla said, and included questions about why Amnesty did research into the Delhi riots.
Khosla said the probe into Amnesty’s work was part of a “systematic pattern” of conduct by the government toward civil society groups.
“What worries me tremendously,” said Khosla, “is what is happening to core democratic values in a country like India.”
Joanna Slater contributed reporting.