South Asia Analysis Group 


Paper no. 321

20. 09. 2001

  

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Are The NGOs Accountable To People?: Their activities should be nation centric and not donor centric

By R.Upadhyay

The concept of voluntarism or voluntary action for a just and humane society is rooted to the functioning of social institutions in the indigenous Indian civilisation.  Some analysts have questioned the present role of Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) which sometimes goes against the selfless concept of such value based social programmes. They allege that some of them are working as brokers in alms Bazaar for implementation of donor-originated policies without proper understanding of the ground situation, which requires people-oriented development.

For various historical reasons, India has become susceptible to the multi-dimensional cultural challenges from the materialistic forces in the world.  Considering the unique character of its diversity as weakness, it has become a soft target for the global players, who are interested for their hegemony on this biggest democracy in the world.  They are accordingly alluring the 'Public Service Contractors' (David Korten in his book - Third Generation NGOs) known as Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) to pursue their design.

It may be easy to be cynical about the persisting inequalities and prevailing social evils in Indian society.  It may also be equally philosophical on the part of the NGOs to articulate the ideas and sentiments to cleanse the sociology of this country polluted during the alien rule for centuries.  But when such philosophy comes to the level of practice, these Public Service Contractors are by and large found more interested for their material as well as ideological cuts even at the cost of the beneficiaries' in particular and overall national interest in general.

In view of the diverse character of Indian society, its equalitarian development remained a complex problem for the state and accordingly, the NGOs were encouraged in post-colonial India to share the responsibility for involving the people for their empowerment, which is the fundamental precept of democratic polity.  However, the closing decades of the twentieth century witnessed a mushroom growth of NGOs as private sectors doing business on behalf of international funding agencies, which was contrary to the spirit of voluntary action.

With the decline of communism in India, the students and youths associated with this movement opted for their participation in the JP led movement of Total Revolution.  They successfully fought against the Emergency Rule in the country but their dream of a just society with humane face got shattered due to failure of Janata Party experiment. Exploiting the status of their confusion, some social institutions sponsored by religious groups offered professional training for social action to the selected groups of jobless youths and floated a large number of Non-Governmental Organisations.  Since those social activists were trained as "Social Service Contractors" under a missionary command of the forces detrimental to the indigenous concept of social development, their approach towards the egalitarian social order was not nation-centric.

In stead of their alliance to the welfare oriented ideology of the Grassroots Organisations (GROs) the NGOs allied themselves to the ideology of the donor agencies as a result they got themselves distanced from the people for whom they were working as paid service contractors.  Contrary to their initial commitment to value based orientation, they started selling the ideology of the donor agencies as their conduits.  Some of the NGOs, which are rooted to Christian tradition and structure have taken up the national sociology as a primary assignment.  With huge amount of funds under their disposal they have emerged as powerful lobbyists and are now doing spadework for promotion of an ideology of the donors.

With the ongoing changes in global environment, the NGOs have now adopted consultative role with various specialised agencies and are increasingly making aggressive attempts to become parallel power centres.  Their recent attempts to get caste discrimination in the agenda of WCAR attracted the media all over the world is one such example.  Are they objective, realistic and do they look to overall national interests? It is difficult to say.

The attempt of the NGOs to internationalise the caste-discrimination in Hindu society is a case for an academic discussion.  Contrary to the spirit of national sociology, which is being determined on the basis of ground situation, the issue was raised for discussion in an international forum.  It is a danger signal which should be considered as an assault on the sovereignty of the country.  The networking of like-minded Dalit outfits under the banner of National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights (NCDHR), which is being identified as a part of Christian movement, has the potential to generate civilisational conflict in Indian society.  It has hardly anything to do with the social elevation, poverty alleviation and economic development of the down trodden.

The conceptual deviation on the part of the NGOs from the desired goal of Dalit movement is being viewed as an attempt to create social disorder and detach the weaker section from the indigenous Hindu society.  Mahatma Gandhi, who launched Dalit movement, considered it exclusively as a Hindu problem and the responsibility of the Hindus.  Thus he played the politics of love towards the Dalits and derived massive support in the society.  Though, B.R.Ambedkar was not in agreement with Gandhi and played his politics of anger, he also fought against this problem in a domestic context. Being a founding father of Indian constitution he was satisfied with special provisions made in the constitution for Dalit empowerment.  This was the only right course of action for resolving Dalits' problem and their empowerment in a democratic set up.

The electoral sociology generated through Mandal politics has already polluted the national sociology by creating inter caste mistrust within Hindu society.  Playing up Dalit card by the NGOs may therefore, be viewed as a similar attempt to pursue the New Policy Agenda (NPA) of the foreign donor agencies as a part of some hidden objective. "The 'alms bazaar' of which NGOs are partners increases the likelihood that they are implementers of donor policies" (Quote from Smillie - 1995 in NGOs, States, and Donor: An Overview. Page 8).

The NGOs, while working as collaborators of the global players in the latter's design to disturb the sociology of the country may cause immense harm to the social cohesion.  The English speaking social activists, who are nurtured in colonial culture hardly, allow the vernacular field management specialists to execute the operational programmes and resolve the people-centric social or developmental problems independently.  By making the GROs as prisoners of the social activists - often termed as "Social Mafia" the very purpose for which they were formed is found lost.  This will make India a playground of civilisational conflict being engineered by the PSCs with the help of foreign funds.

The NGOs are expected to be accountable to the beneficiaries, who are under the control of the GROs.  But in view of their increasing closeness with the donor agencies for grabbing increasing volume of foreign funds, they follow the idiom - 'He who pays the piper calls the tune'.  In absence of any transparent mechanism to scrutinise their accountability to the beneficiaries, they become immune to any public criticism.  In stead of being people-centric, most of the NGOs are donor-centric.  This is a dangerous trend, which requires scrutiny through some legal agencies under the existing law of the land.

The increasing volume of foreign funds without proper monitoring the output of the GROs has made the donors-NGOs combine so powerful that they openly propagate the public cheering about their 'marvelous' work, which factually may not be true.

A word of caution here.  There are NGOs and NGOs. . Due to diversification of the NGOs, any generalisation about them may be misleading.  Besides, the on going materialistic transformation of society all over the world has made the situation so complex that it is difficult to distinguish between the nation-centric NGOs and their global-centric counterparts.  In a multi-dimensional role of the global-centric 'Social Mafia' it is difficult for the GROs to understand their hidden agenda.  However, the functioning of some of the leading NGOs in the country particularly those rooted to some ideological institutions suggests that they have deviated from their defined role to involve the people and help the state in promoting a civil society in a peaceful manner.

The purpose of my paper is not to identify the NGOs and divide them in camps of good and bad groups.  But it may be useful for an academic discussion so that the authorities concerned could find out ways and means and redefine the role of the NGOs in the changed social and political scenario.  Since India is passing through a phase of transitional crisis, it requires a check and balance system to ensure that the NGOs do not cross the limit in the overall context of national interest.  If the NGOs are involved in generating social tension for some historical errors, which are constitutionally declared illegal and the state is sincere in their eradication, they will never achieve the desired goal to help the creation of a just and humane society.

Performance of some of the nation-centric NGOs has also become a debatable issue. They have hardly played any effective and visible role.  For example, Global Organisation of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO) failed to project the discrimination against the people of Indian origin and their plight in various countries in the world, where they were taken during colonial powers as labourers and slaves.  These people had made sincere effort with hard labour for the economic development of these countries and settled there for generations as lawful citizens.  But, they are still facing discrimination as far as their political right is concerned.  If the Arab-Leftist combine could project their views against Zionism or caste discrimination in Hindu society, the GOPIO could have raised the issue of discrimination against the people of Indian origin and also of their sale as slaves in the markets of Arab world during the medieval and colonial India.  But it failed to do so for the reason best known to the participants in WCAR.

The concept of democracy lies with people's participation in governance.  The post-Independence Indian polity, true to the spirit of democracy encouraged the voluntary action groups in various fields for people's empowerment projects.  But unfortunately due to absence of intellectual honesty these groups became prisoners of the same system as of colonial India, which lacked intellectual understanding of the national sociology of this country.

Contrary to the vision of Gandhi and Ambedkar, the NGOs in question are involved in the politics of hate against the caste Hindus and misguide the Dalits to take vengeance by organising Dalit movements with the help of foreign funds.  It is not denied here that discrimination against Dalits continue in some form in some places.  But the politics of vengeance will simply weaken the nation and halt the process for sustainable development of Dalits.

(The views expressed in the paper are of the writer.  E-mail ramashray60@yahoo.com)

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