After New Delhi made it clear to the international community that it would
not accept direct aid from other countries to combat the Tsunami crisis, Indian
Home Ministry is now almost sure of disallowing foreign non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) to assist in the relief work, The Pioneer reported
Wednesday.
Indian Home Secretary Dhinder Singh Tuesday did indicate that, in line with
the government's self-reliance theory, only domestic NGOs should be allowed to
assist the central government and administrations of the tsunami-hit southern
states, said the English-language paper.
Singh was quoted as saying that the Home Ministry was yet to take an official
position on the requests being made by the foreign NGOs to join the domestic
NGOs in the relief efforts.
"Our priority right now is not the foreign NGOs. We have competent government
officials taking care of the relief and rehabilitation efforts and Indian NGOs
are also working even in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands," Mr Singh said,
referring to the worst tsunami-hit islands in the Bay of Bengal.
Particularly with regard to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, the Indian
central government is keen on allowing only local NGOs to reach victims there,
said the paper.
"The Island chain has a delicate ecology and there are many issues including
security aspects of the region that will have to be considered prior to granting
permission to foreign NGOs there. Besides, Indian NGOs are already there," Singh
said.
While global NGOs have began routing their assistance through Indian NGOs in
the tsunami-hit South Indian states, the Indian central government is closed to
the idea of having too many people on the archipelago, where the impact of the
disaster has been maximum.
Senior officials in the Home Ministry and its National Disaster Management
Cell which is coordinating the assessment and relief efforts in the
tsunami-ravaged areas earlier held the opinion thatwith stringent guidelines for
the island chain, foreign NGOs couldbe allowed to operate there.
The officials said that, following requests from foreign NGOs essentially
based in the European Union for permission to assist the Indian central
government in relief and rehabilitation work, aset of norms was to be
formulated. But as of now, the idea has been dropped, the paper said.
At least 9,571 people were confirmed dead and 5,801 missing in India in the
Dec. 26 massive earthquake measuring 8.7 on the Richter scale and the resultant
killer tidal waves in the Indian Ocean, according to a status report issued
Tuesday by the Indian Home Ministry.