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FROTH AND BUBBLE
India bans Greenpeace from receiving foreign funds
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) April 9, 2015


Environmental activists risk jail over Istanbul protests
Istanbul (AFP) April 9, 2015 - Fifteen Turkish ecological activists could face up to seven-and-a-half years in jail after prosecutors charged them with public order offences over protests against the construction of a mosque in Istanbul last year, judicial sources said Thursday.

The activists have been charged in the indictment by prosecutors with breaking the law on protests and throwing bottles and stones at the security forces.

Under the charges, the accused face jail terms of between one year and three months up to seven-and-a-half years, the source added. The date of the trial has yet to be fixed.

Activists late in 2014 had held a series of protests in the Uskudar district on the Asian side of Istanbul against the construction of a major new mosque in a green space.

The area, known as the Validebag Grove, is one of the rare green spaces in the packed Turkish city and is also an important staging point for migratory birds.

Opponents argue that the project is needless as the area is already home to 26 mosques and would require a major felling of trees.

Despite a court injunction ordering a halt to the construction, the building work carried on with the building site protected by anti-riot police.

Turkey has moved to construct a number of new mosques under the rule of the Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) which came to power in 2002.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the time backed the construction of the Uskudar mosque and slammed the protesters.

The controversy came after security forces put down nationwide protests in May-June 2013 that began as demonstrations to stop construction on a park in central Istanbul and snowballed into a wave of anger against Erdogan.

India on Thursday suspended Greenpeace India's foreign funding licence, the latest move against the environmental watchdog after the government accused it of hurting the country's economic interests.

India's home ministry issued a notice saying the ban was imposed after an audit of the environmental group's bank accounts in September revealed the organisation had violated rules governing foreign funding and withheld information on transactions.

"The government hereby suspends the registration of the association," the ministry said on its website.

"The government is satisfied that the acceptance of foreign contribution by the said organisation has prejudicially affected the public interests... and has prejudicially affected the economic interest of the state in violation," it said.

Greenpeace India Thursday said it is yet to receive any official notice of the ban, adding that "it will not be cowed down by a campaign against dissent".

"This is a smear, pure and simple," the group's executive director Samit Aich said in a statement.

The latest suspension is for an initial 180 day period, but the government has asked the group to explain why it should not be barred permanently, and given them 30 days to appeal.

In June New Delhi froze Greenpeace India's bank accounts after its intelligence agency accused them of hurting the country's economic progress by "stalling development projects" following protests by the group that delayed important industrial projects.

A Delhi court in January asked Prime Minister Narendra Modi's new government to unblock funds totalling more than $272,000, but no action has yet been taken, the group says.

"All of this was put before the Delhi High Court when we brought a case against the Centre, and the court decided in our favour," Aich said.

The campaign group receives 70 percent of its funding from Indian donors living in India, Aich added.


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