Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
News

Climate Activist Jailed in India as Government Clamps Down on Dissent (nytimes.com) 124

Before anyone outside her hometown knew her name, Disha Ravi spent four years raising awareness among young people in Bangalore about the effects of climate change. Now the 21-year-old activist is jailed in New Delhi. The allegation: She distributed a "tool kit" in the form of a Google Doc containing talking points and contact information for influential groups to drum up support for farmers who have been protesting against the Indian government for months. The New York Times: The document -- which the police say she shared with Greta Thunberg, the 18-year-old Swedish climate activist -- resembles the kind that grass-roots organizations around the world have used for years to campaign for their causes. But Ms. Ravi, the police contend, was using it to "spread disaffection against the Indian State." The arrest, the latest in a series of broader crackdown on activists, has triggered anger and disbelief among opposition politicians, student groups and lawyers, who say the government is using its law enforcement agencies to increasingly stifle dissent, in line with a broader deterioration of free speech in India. Ms. Ravi's arrest, they said, has raised the crackdown to a new level.

"There is a method to this madness," said Manshi Asher, a researcher with the nonprofit group Environmental Justice, "and a pattern that is so clearly telling us that those asking critical questions would be silenced." Ms. Ravi is being held under a stringent sedition law that has been used to criminalize everything from leading rallies to posting political messages on social media. Although she has not been formally charged, she is to spend five days in police custody. In its response to other contentious policies -- including citizenship laws that worked against Muslims, a clampdown on the disputed Kashmir region and the farmers' protests -- Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has resorted to arrests, stifling dissenting voices and blocking access to the internet. Groups that track internet freedom say India's has declined for a third consecutive year. For months, thousands of farmers, many of them Sikhs from the agricultural heartland state of Punjab, have camped out on the outskirts of New Delhi, protesting a slate of new laws that will dismantle a subsidy system that has for decades protected them from the vagaries of the free market.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Climate Activist Jailed in India as Government Clamps Down on Dissent

Comments Filter:
  • by TuballoyThunder ( 534063 ) on Monday February 15, 2021 @05:27PM (#61066786)
    I can't even say that with a straight face.
  • Or another way to look at it is that the majority of the world is fed up with a bunch of besuited monkey type know-it-alls being parachuted into their country with a lot of cash to start trying to build up movements that answer to foreign funders and governments.

    FFS, stop pretending that our NGOs are spreading peace, love and democracy. They're nothing more than extensions of our ruling class that wield soft power so we can strut like fucking peacocks sniffing our own farts about how we're not imperialists.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday February 15, 2021 @06:25PM (#61066932)

      Disha Ravi is a native-born Indian citizen, not a foreign parachutist.

      Believe it or not, some people in India actually care about our planet. It is their planet too.

      • Disha Ravi is a native-born Indian citizen, not a foreign parachutist.

        She's the local arm of the foreign-backed movement the Indian government is suppressing from having influence in India.

        Believe it or not, some people in India actually care about our planet. It is their planet too.

        Believe it or not, some people in India actually eat cows. The meat is just as good for them too.

        That's the sort of response that deserves.

        • by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 15, 2021 @08:35PM (#61067330)

          Foreign NGOs are not the problem.

          Populist right-wing theocratic nationalisms are. We have seen it with Erdogan in Turkey, Netanyahu pandering to the ultra-orthodox in Israel, Vox in Spain, tele-evangelicals hijacking the Republican party in the USA, Abbott's regressive catholicism in Australia, etc.

          Oh, and Modi in India.

          Self-righteous charlatans can get away with a whole host of things when they have 'god' on their side.

          • Foreign NGOs are never _the_ problem, they're there to make sure problems happen so that the local population can be exploited.

            The self-interested can get away with everything if they feel they are the socially accepted oppressors.

  • by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Monday February 15, 2021 @05:55PM (#61066860)

    That slogan lives on in this century despite the mind boggling untruth of it. The sad thing is that around the world the voices of ordinary people are increasingly silenced. Even in the US. Oh, but we have social media, you say. Yes, all the better to obfuscate you, my dear. You hear no truth from your government and they don't hear you at all.

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday February 15, 2021 @06:02PM (#61066876)

      The fall of the greats.

      The world's largest democracy throws its citizens in jail.
      The world's greatest democracy attempts to overturn its own election.

      • > The world's largest democracy throws its citizens in jail.

        Mmm... might want to qualify that. Pretty much every country in the world throws at least some of its citizens in jail. Not sure about Sealand or the other micronations.

        • No I really don't. Not everyone is an autist that reads a sentence in isolation ignoring the context in which it is made. If you managed to read my comment without understanding what is being discussed, why and who I suggest you re-evaluate how you read a webpage.

    • Jon Brower Minnoch was the world's largest human at one point. "Large" doesn't necessarily imply "good" anyway.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by hey! ( 33014 )

      The Economist categorizes countries as "full democracies", "flawed democracies", "hybrid regimes" and "authoritarian regimes".

      The most populous "full democracy" at present is the United Kingdom. Until a few years ago the US was the largest "full democracy" but it has fallen just below the line due to low levels of public trust in government (this may happen to the UK in the next report for the same reason).

      • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

        The most populous "full democracy" at present is the United Kingdom.

        What about Japan and Germany? Is the table in Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] out of date and they've both dropped a category?

      • Even in the greatest democracy of all time, the US, studies have shown that the will of the voters are implemented pretty close to never.

        At least the Indian government is able to identify psy-ops done by globalists and strike back at those actively participating in them. That "farmers uprising" thing stink worse than any street in india.

  • Here, the government and Google would just collude and make sure that nobody could host the doc.
  • Activism only works when you have the freedom to act against your governments position. We can see here that you donâ(TM)t have that right in India. The farmers are more proof of that.
  • This is just a sample of what’s really happening in India. Read any non government affiliated media outlets websites and you will see something very similar of what was done a few decades ago when a segment of population were identified as the other and identified as the cause of all ills in the country. The acts of the right wing government and its affiliated organisations have been very similar. The so called ‘other’ has been identified. Religious sentiments have been exploited to the hi
  • Not the whole story (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Apparently, no one has a problem with Disha's climate related work.

    The issue at hand is that she built this toolkit in cooperation with known separatists. This is what got her into trouble with the authorities. And the funny thing is, she apparently knew that she was going to get into trouble and was breaking the law.

    It's that old adage "Choose your friends wisely..".

    Read coverage here : https://timesofindia.indiatime... [indiatimes.com]

    • Actually usefull comments seem to hardly get any attention on Slashdot anymore.
      The ticle of the story is so full of journalism tactics to make the right look bad.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Investigating this a bit further (the linked article was paywalled) the woman is charged for sedition, promoting hatred among groups and criminal conspiracy specifically for this violent demonstration:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    Almost 400 people were injured in the riots. The Red Fort which has a huge symbolic meaning (look it up) for most Indians was overrun and desecrated by the rioters and religious (Sikh) flags were hoisted at the Red Fort.

    From my understanding she did not directly incite sedition

  • It is one thing to use a bit of power, but he is moving along the same lines as China and even Russia, with abusing his powers.
    THis is going to backfire on his work to help India.
  • If you should have arrested her, when you're fucked in 20 years, because you did nothing.

    Change is difficult, isn it?
  • This is what happens when running a country is left to fundamentally retarded monkeys.
  • They love free speech everywhere but in their leftist home countries. And this "grass-roots" thing... is more kinda like astroturfing, with tech "millionaires and billionaires" money.

The truth of a proposition has nothing to do with its credibility. And vice versa.

Working...