Gurpreet Singh: UN should rethink its decision to give Champions of the Earth Award to Narendra Modi

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      The United Nations needs to do to India's prime minister what Canada did to Aung San Suu Kyi.

      Narendra Modi was given a Champions of the Earth Award earlier this month in Delhi by United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres, a day after Canada stripped Suu Kyi of her honorary citizenship.

      Suu Kyi is the Myanmar leader accused of remaining indifferent to the persecution of Rohingya Muslims at the hands of military officials and Buddhist extremists. The Canadian Senate unanimously passed a motion to revoke her honorary citizenship, given in recognition of her long struggle against dictatorship.

      While human rights-advocacy groups rejoiced over this victory in Canada, the United Nations Environmental Program chose to honour someone whose track record on human rights and the environment is problematic.

      Modi leads the right-wing Hindu nationalist Bhartiya Janata Party, which is determined to turn the world’s so-called largest secular democracy into a Hindu theocracy.

      Ever since his party came to power with a brute majority in 2014, attacks on religious minorities have grown. In fact, Modi was formerly chief minister of the western Indian state of Gujarat, and is often accused by human-rights activists of culpability for the anti-Muslim massacre of 2002 in that state.

      Thousands of Muslims were slaughtered across the state by his party men following the burning of a train carrying Hindu pilgrims. That incident, which left more than 50 dead, was blamed by Modi on Muslim fundamentalists. 

      Modi was never convicted in connection with the bloodshed, though survivors of the violence believe that he was complicit in the crime.

      To be fair, Modi was given the Champions of the Earth award by the UN for taking some initiatives to deal with climate change, such as promoting solar technology. Undoubtedly those steps are important, but his government has been protecting companies that are responsible for causing pollution and have been targeting environmental activists and land defenders.

      Global Witness report noted that being an environmental activist is as dangerous as it is important, including in India, where the situation has reportedly turned as bad as in Colombia and Congo. The report revealed that 11 activists and members of indigenous communities were killed in 2017 alone. Another 16 were killed in 2016. 

      Much like in Canada, Indigenous groups in India continue to fight for their right to land and against extraction industries that are trying to evict them in the name of development and progress. Industry has the backing of the Indian state.

      Recent arrests of political activists and intellectuals who've been raising concerns over the rights of Indigenous communities in mineral-rich tribal areas of India only show how intolerant Modi government is toward any voice of dissent—even if it is meant to defend the climate and livelihood of those poor and marginalized.

      These individuals were not only branded as sympathizers of Maoist insurgents active in the tribal belt, but were also accused of being involved in a conspiracy to murder Modi, a charge that has been refuted by Maoists.

      Ironically, the UN has also raised the issue of jailed Delhi University Professor G.N. Saibaba, who was given life sentence despite being 90 percent disabled below the waist. Like others, he was also dubbed as Maoist supporter.

      It is widely believed that Saibaba was framed for standing up for the rights of Indigenous communities. 

      This year, 13 protesters were killed in a police action in Thoothukudi, Tamil Nadu, where they were demonstrating against water and air contamination caused by the Sterlite copper factory, owned by the Vedanta Group. It has donated money to the BJP and other big parties.

      Vedanta is a resource-industry giant that is also in direct conflict with Indigenous communities in other parts of India.

      For the record, Modi is also a climate change denier.

      He has argued that Mother Earth has become older and thus has lost her resistance power. That is his explanation of climate change and global warming, which obviously has nothing to do with science.

      Both Modi and his party continue to confuse people by mixing science with Hindu mythology.  

      In the light of these facts, the UN has not only given legitimacy to the political right, which is embroiled in fights with environmentalists and human-rights activists all over the world, it has also set a bad example by picking someone who could be described as anything but a champion of the Earth.

      Gurpreet Singh is cofounder of Radical Desi magazine. He's also the author of Why Mewa Singh Killed William Hopkinson: Revisiting the Murder of a Canadian Immigration Inspector and Fighting Hatred With Love: Voices of the Air India Victims' Families. Both were published by Chetna Parkashan.

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