Skip to content
Hindi News, हिंदी समाचार, Samachar, Breaking News, Latest Khabar – Pratirodh

Hindi News, हिंदी समाचार, Samachar, Breaking News, Latest Khabar – Pratirodh

Primary Menu Hindi News, हिंदी समाचार, Samachar, Breaking News, Latest Khabar – Pratirodh

Hindi News, हिंदी समाचार, Samachar, Breaking News, Latest Khabar – Pratirodh

  • Home
  • Newswires
  • Politics & Society
  • The New Feudals
  • World View
  • Arts And Aesthetics
  • For The Record
  • About Us
  • Featured

How Human Rights Are Disappearing Before Our Eyes

Sep 2, 2024 | Pratirodh Bureau

Graffiti on the Berlin Wall. The fall of the wall in 1989 opened up the world to the spread of liberties and human rights (Caro Sodar / Pixabay CC0)

For most of human history human rights did not exist.

The struggle to secure them arguably began in 1215 with the Magna Carta in England, which promised protection from illegal imprisonment as a right.

But it took another 733 years and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, for  those rights to be enshrined for all.

Now, just 76 years later, they’re at risk of being lost.

Amid an ongoing and very public massacre in Gaza, to which the countries of the West remain mute spectators or enablers, the moral distinction between the liberal democracies of the West and the illiberal democracies and dictatorships among the rest is disappearing.

An estimated 40,000 Palestinians, many of them babies, children and women, have been killed in the Israeli massacre in Gaza which began after a terror attack by Hamas that killed 1,478 Israelis, most of them civilians.

The victims of Israel’s attacks include 113 journalists and 224 humanitarian aid workers, of whom 179 were employees of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees. There are also credible accusations of sexual crimes by Israeli forces.

The Western and especially the American response to all this, ranging from silent nods to standing ovations for the Israelis, may enable other governments around the world to justify all manner of human rights violations in the name of national security.

The rise and fall

The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the subsequent collapse of totalitarian regimes across Eastern Europe and in the former Soviet Union ushered in a new era of freedoms, rights and democracy in those parts of the world.

The United Nations organised a series of world conferences in the post-Cold War period starting with the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio, the 1993 World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna, the 1995 World Conference on Women in Beijing, and the 1995 World Summit for Social Development in Copenhagen.

Governments and Non-Government Organisations were mobilised for these conferences and the world saw an unprecedented growth of non-profit organisations including many that worked in the area of human rights.

In some nations ruled by autocrats who sought to suppress non-government organisations, especially human rights organisations, assistance from the West was their lifeline.

Western liberal democracies stood as the moral vanguard often critiquing the crackdown, and their media amplified this.

The September 11, 2001 attacks in New York by Al-Qaeda changed that.

The US’s PATRIOT Act encouraged other countries to adopt similar anti-terror legislation. The targeting of human rights organisations and activists under anti-terror laws began soon after and became a worldwide phenomenon.

By 2012, India had made “dissent” including causing or intending to cause disaffection against India a terror offence under its anti-terror law, the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

The law was amended in 2019 to enable individuals to be designated as terrorists without due process. Consequently, in 2024, Booker Prize-winning author Arundhati Roy became one of the accused under this law, for an alleged speech about Jammu and Kashmir in 2010.

The most significant negative impact on human rights groups worldwide from the September 11 attacks arose from the expansion of the mandate of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), initially established in 1989 by the G7 to develop policies to combat money laundering.

It expanded its mandate to include “terrorism financing” in 2001. The FATF issued several guidelines to ensure no terror financing by non-profit organisations (NPOs).

Governments around the world have since used this as a tool to throttle funding to NPOs.

In 2010, India was found non-compliant by the FATF’s Mutual Evaluation Report on NPOs clearly stating that “India has not demonstrated that measures are in place to sanction violations of oversight measures or rules by NPOs or persons acting on behalf of NPOs for NPOs other than those registered under the Income Tax Act and under the FCRA”. The report suggested India amend its laws on non-profits.

India subsequently amended the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act, 2010 (FCRA) in 2020 to further restrict the inflow and use of foreign funds. In the last decade, FCRA licences of more than 20,693 NGOs have been cancelled.

The most prominent human rights organisation in the world, Amnesty International, faces charges of money laundering in India and was forced to halt operations there in 2020 after its bank accounts were frozen.

The FATF evaluation published in June 2024 was cited by the Indian government for repeated extensions of the tenure of the Chief of Enforcement Directorate S.K. Mishra, a favoured bureaucrat of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The Enforcement Directorate  is the strong arm of the government responsible for cases against numerous opposition politicians and the first-ever arrest of an incumbent chief minister, Delhi’s Arvind Kejriwal.

India is not alone. Across the world, the FATF recommendations have been used to effectively close down non-profit organisations.

Economics and nationalism

The rise of China and India intensified an already existing debate about development assistance in the West. Then the 2007-08 financial crisis happened.

After that, state and private donors simply did not have adequate funds to share and development assistance came under stress and scrutiny in the West. The COVID-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine have further dried up resources.

For human rights organisations in the global south which were largely sustained by financial assistance from Western countries, the combination of state repression and fund crunch have been fatal.

As right-wing nationalism has taken centre stage in country after country, from India to Brazil and Hungary to the US in the last decade, authorities have taken measures to block foreign funding to NGOs to prevent “foreign interference”.

The issue for governments is sovereignty and national security. As we are witnessing with Gaza, there are no limits to what can be justified through such arguments.

The effective ban on foreign funding and the Soros Foundation in 2018 by Viktor Orbán of Hungary, a recipient of the Soros Foundation’s scholarship to study at Oxford, epitomised the backlash against rights and democracy issues in the West. The European Union stood by as a mute witness as Orbán made Soros the scapegoat of the far right.

Governments copy one another in their rhetoric and tools of repression.

Russia’s Foreign Agent Law of 2012, which requires anyone who receives support from outside Russia to declare themselves as foreign agents, is being replicated in Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Slovakia and Hungary, just the way India’s FCRA law was replicated in Bangladesh which established an NGO Affairs Bureau to control foreign funding.

However, it is not in Russia but in the West that one can find older laws that arguably set the template.

The United States has had a Foreign Agents Registration Act since 1938 that requires public disclosures from “agents of foreign principals engaged in political activities”, although the law is not evenly applied.

The United Kingdom is leading the way in setting a template for targeting environmental defenders.

In July 2024, five environmental activists were charged with conspiracy to cause a public nuisance for organising direct action protests that caused gridlock on London’s orbital motorway in November 2022. They face long sentences after being found guilty.

If history is any guide, this action of the United Kingdom will soon reverberate in its former colonies and the world.

(Published under Creative Commons from 360info. Read the original article here)

Tags: economics, human rights, Magna Carta, National Security, nationalism, Pratirodh

Continue Reading

Previous India Must Get Serious About Flood Zoning
Next Using Comics To Unpack Agricultural Concepts

More Stories

  • Featured

Making Cuts In Implementation Of MGNREGA A Crime Against Constitution

15 hours ago Pratirodh Bureau
  • Featured

Tiger Death Highlights Strained Human-Wildlife Interactions In Assam

21 hours ago Shalini
  • Featured

Scientists And Monks Perform Last Rites For A Himalayan Glacier

22 hours ago Shalini

Recent Posts

  • Making Cuts In Implementation Of MGNREGA A Crime Against Constitution
  • Tiger Death Highlights Strained Human-Wildlife Interactions In Assam
  • Scientists And Monks Perform Last Rites For A Himalayan Glacier
  • Bihar Yearning For Change But The Election Is Wide Open
  • Shipwreck Spills Oil, Plastic & Legal Loopholes
  • As India’s Groundwater Runs Dry, The Calls For Reform Grow
  • ‘US Invite To Pak Army Chief Huge Diplomatic Setback For India’
  • Politics Based On Grievance Has A Long And Violent History In America
  • How Birds Are Taking A Hit From Microplastics Contamination
  • Kharge Reviews 11 Yrs Of NDA Govt, Says PM Made 33 Mistakes
  • Upholding The Law, SC Halts Amnesties For EIA Violators, Jolts Industry
  • Using Indian Languages When Reporting About The Environment
  • ‘Maximum Boasts, Minimum Achievements’: Congress Attacks Shah
  • On Navigating Privacy And Transparency In The Digital Age
  • Book Review: The Highs And Lows Of Looking For India’s Rare Birds
  • ‘Govt Has Stopped Talking About Present, Now Selling Dreams Of 2047’
  • Commentary: Education Is A Powerful Tool For Biodiversity Conservation
  • World Set To Lose 39% Of Glaciers, Says Study
  • ‘We Need Politics Connected With Reality, Not Economy For Select Capitalists’
  • How Trees Outside Forests Impact Well-Being Of Humans

Search

Main Links

  • Home
  • Newswires
  • Politics & Society
  • The New Feudals
  • World View
  • Arts And Aesthetics
  • For The Record
  • About Us

Related Stroy

  • Featured

Making Cuts In Implementation Of MGNREGA A Crime Against Constitution

15 hours ago Pratirodh Bureau
  • Featured

Tiger Death Highlights Strained Human-Wildlife Interactions In Assam

21 hours ago Shalini
  • Featured

Scientists And Monks Perform Last Rites For A Himalayan Glacier

22 hours ago Shalini
  • Featured

Bihar Yearning For Change But The Election Is Wide Open

4 days ago Pratirodh Bureau
  • Featured

Shipwreck Spills Oil, Plastic & Legal Loopholes

4 days ago Pratirodh Bureau

Recent Posts

  • Making Cuts In Implementation Of MGNREGA A Crime Against Constitution
  • Tiger Death Highlights Strained Human-Wildlife Interactions In Assam
  • Scientists And Monks Perform Last Rites For A Himalayan Glacier
  • Bihar Yearning For Change But The Election Is Wide Open
  • Shipwreck Spills Oil, Plastic & Legal Loopholes
Copyright © All rights reserved. | CoverNews by AF themes.