Both the British and the Indian public will be dismayed at the latest RSS response, which is an attempt todistort the real issues and concerns rather than address them. Funding of extremist organisations is aserious public concern. Public faith can only be restored if the RSS and its British and Indian frontorganisations are willing to 'open their books' to public scrutiny. Awaaz proposes to initiate anenquiry by the British Parliament into these concerns. We stand fully by the findings of our report.
NOTES
1. Sam Jones, 'India refuses visas to charity investigators', The Guardian (online edition), 27February 2004.
2. The Awaaz report is available from www.awaazsaw.org. The reportis titled: In Bad Faith? British Charity and Hindu Extremism, published by Awaaz - South Asia Watch Ltd,London, 2004, ISBN 0 9547174 0 6.
3.The RSS, the 'National Volunteers' Corps', was formed in 1926 and is dedicated to turning India from asecular, democratic, multi-religious nation into an authoritarian anti-minority 'Hindu nation'. It has alarge family of closely allied organisations operating in India and abroad. The founders and key leadersof the RSS were strongly inspired by Fascist Italy and supported Nazi Germany. The ideology of the RSSis 'Hindutva', a belief that India only belongs to Hindus who 'share the blood' of 'Vedic-Aryans' and whoconsider India as their 'holyland'.