At the UN: zombie NGOs in the service of Delhi’s narrative
The Indian government’s Srivastava disinformation network, unveiled by Brussels NGO EU DisinfoLab, is also working at the UN. The lobbying operation has targeted the Human Rights Council in Geneva, using a series of fake NGOs. Part three of the investigation by
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If an uncle who died thirty years ago suddenly came back to life and showed up unannounced for Christmas, it would be surprising if no one asked him any questions before serving him turkey. But that is essentially what happened at the UN in 2005. That year, an organisation, the Commission to Study the Organisation of Peace (CSOP), was literally resurrected in the UN records. Along with a dozen other NGOs it was part of a huge disinformation network serving the interests of New Delhi, reveals a EU DisinfoLab report published by
What a waste
December 23, 2020
The engine of economic growth in South Asia has sputtered to a halt due to Indian intransigence and lack of vision. A region that was colonized by the British and bilked off a wealth exceeding $45 trillion between 1765 and 1938, as per economist Utsa Patnaik, is still suffering a self-imposed rigor mortis in the fields of trade and economic cooperation.
The thousand pounds guerilla in the room – India – is mostly to be blamed for this waste. According to a Commonwealth International Trade Working Paper, South Asia utilizes only 14 percent of its intra-regional trade potential, with India having the lowest intra-regional trade to total trade percentage of 2.2 percent.
BBC exposes India’s fake media outlets that discredit Pakistan
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BBC exposes India’s fake media outlets that discredit Pakistan
ISLAMABAD: A dead professor and numerous defunct organisations were resurrected and used alongside at least 750 fake media outlets in a vast 15-year global disinformation campaign to serve Indian interests, a new investigation has revealed. The man whose identity was stolen was regarded as one of the founding fathers of international human rights law, who died aged 92 in 2006. It is the largest network we have exposed, said Alexandre Alaphilippe, executive director of EU DisinfoLab, which undertook the investigation and published an extensive report on Wednesday, BBC reported.
ISLAMABAD: A dead professor and numerous defunct organizations were resurrected and used alongside at least 750 fake media outlets in a vast 15-year global disinformation campaign to serve Indian interests, a new investigation has revealed. The man whose identity was stolen was regarded as one of the founding fathers of international human rights law, who died aged 92 in 2006.
“It is the largest network we have exposed,” said Alexandre Alaphilippe, executive director of EU DisinfoLab, which undertook the investigation and published an extensive report on Wednesday, BBC reported.
The network was designed primarily to “discredit Pakistan internationally” and influence decision-making at the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) and European Parliament, EU DisinfoLab said. EU DisinfoLab partially exposed the network last year but now says the operation is much larger and more resilient than it first suspected.
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