Pakistan Today (Lahore)

The Biden ADMINISTRA­TION IS enabling INDIA’S human rights ABUSES

BY FAILING TO HOLD MODI TO ACCOUNT, BIDEN IS PERPETUATI­NG DEEPENING RELIGIOUS PERSECUTIO­N AGAINST INDIAN MINORITIES

- Sunita Viswanath, PETER COOK and RASHEED ahmed

oN November 17, United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken named 10 countries on the US government’s official list of the world’s worst offenders of religious freedom. A notable omission was India. The announceme­nt comes in response to recommenda­tions from the United States Commission on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom (USCIRF), a bi-partisan and autonomous federal panel. For two years in a row, the USCIRF has recommende­d that India be listed as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) along with 13 others.

Last year, then-secretary of State Mike Pompeo refused to include India on that list. This year, Blinken also did not accept USCIRF’S recommenda­tion on India.

It is no secret that the US considers India a critical ally. The US Department of State’s website says that “The United States and India have shared interests in promoting global security, stability, and economic prosperity through trade, investment, and connectivi­ty.” It adds that India is America’s “major defence partner” and the two nations have “deepened cooperatio­n on maritime security, interopera­bility, and informatio­n sharing”.

Yet, being a critical ally has not kept Saudi Arabia off the CPC list for years. The Department of State says the kingdom has a “longstandi­ng security relationsh­ip” with the US and is its “largest foreign military sales (FMS) customer, with more than $100 billion in active FMS cases”. So why can’t India be designated as CPC and targeted sanctioned imposed on its agencies and officials, as USCIRF has recommende­d, for its considerab­le human and religious rights abuses?

Blinken’s refusal to designate India as CPC contradict­s and is inconsiste­nt with his own position on India. Just seven months ago, he released the US Department of State’s global religious freedom report that indicted India for severe religious persecutio­n. It contained damning reports from the ground implicatin­g members of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government and his affiliates from the 96-year-old Hindu nationalis­t organisati­on Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) in the persecutio­n of religious minorities, especially Muslims and Christians.

In fact, year after year, the Department of State’s candid reporting on India has held no punches. In March, Blinken released a global human rights report recording “significan­t human rights issues” in India, including extrajudic­ial killings by the police, torture, arbitrary arrest and detention, violence against minorities, unjustifie­d arrests or prosecutio­n of journalist­s, and censorship and blocking of websites.

Yet, just weeks after taking office, President Joe Biden chose Modi as one of the world’s first leaders to meet. It is ironic that barely days prior to that Bidenmodi virtual meeting, research organisati­on Freedom House released a report in which it documented India’s democracy decline from “free” to “partly free”.

A week later, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin flew to New Delhi on his first foreign visit to discuss “shared goals” with Modi but failed to mention India’s human rights abuses. In July, Blinken visited India to claim that “the US and India share a commitment to democratic values; this is part of the bedrock of our relationsh­ip and reflective of India’s pluralisti­c society and history of harmony.” Again, no mention of India’s appalling human rights.

In September, the then US Charge d’affaires Atul Keshap, an Indian American, met RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat, who holds no government position, but heads India’s superstruc­ture of religious persecutio­n and calls for turning India into a Hindu nation. They discussed “India’s tradition of diversity, democracy, inclusivit­y and pluralism”.

In October, weeks after the Taliban unexpected­ly seized Afghanista­n, Blinken’s second-in-command, Deputy US Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, landed in New Delhi and promptly saluted India and the US as “thriving” democracie­s.

Department of State officials claim that the US “privately” raises human rights issues with India. They point to Biden’s invocation of Mahatma Gandhi’s “message of nonviolenc­e, respect, tolerance” at his meeting with Modi at the White House in September, and Vice President Kamala Harris telling Modi the US and India should “protect democracie­s”.

But Biden, Harris, Austin, Blinken, Sherman and Keshap have failed to hold any substantiv­e dialogue on India’s assault on democracy in their meetings with Modi, his foreign and defence ministers, national security adviser, top diplomats, and Bhagwat.

Modi is expected to join the Biden administra­tion’s “Summit for Democracy” on December 9-10, where he will no doubt falsify his record of persecutin­g religious minorities, human rights defenders, critics, lawyers, journalist­s, students and politician­s.

The Department of State’s own reports show that India’s democratic decline is contrary to the Summit’s agenda of “defending against authoritar­ianism; addressing and fighting corruption; and advancing respect for human rights”.

This summit’s emphasis on human rights can offer the opportunit­y to state in clear, public, and no uncertain terms the Biden administra­tion’s objections to the unacceptab­le persecutio­n taking place in India so that the Indian government gets the point. We expect the president to be more forceful and less opaque in his criticism given the stated purpose of the conference.

America’s refusal to clearly say that India’s escalating repression contradict­s its long-held commitment to the ideals of rights, freedoms and liberties must not continue. Our own credibilit­y as a democracy is undermined if we aid and abet the world’s largest democracy in becoming the world’s second and most autocratic society after China, which, of course, Blinken has re-designated as CPC.

Sunita Viswanath is a co-founder of Hindus for Human Rights and lives in Brooklyn, New York. The Reverend Peter Cook is Executive Director of New York State Council of Churches. Rasheed Ahmed is Executive Director of Indian American Muslim Council.

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