The most influential among NGO leaders have also headed commissions set up by the government. For example, a Commission for Women Workers in the Unorganized Sector set up by Rajiv Gandhi in 1985 was headed by Ela Bhatt of SEWA. In the same year, Bunker Roy of Tilonia, was made a member of the Planning Commission. Currently, the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights is headed by Shantha Sinha, the founder of MV Foundation, a NGO supported by leading international donor agencies. The campaign for Women's Reservation Bill has been run mainly by NGOs with deep pockets due to huge grants they receive. The powerful Ganga River Basin Authority headed by the Prime Minister has a handsome representation of CSOs. Centre for Science and Environment, one of the best endowed NGOs has been represented on every committee for drafting environment related laws. The Right to Information Act was also drafted by NGOs. The RTI movement got the high profile it did because well endowed NGOs mobilized support for it, including advocacy through the media.
All our family laws of the last two and a half decades have been amended or crafted at the behest of foreign funded NGOs -- be it the absurd anti-dowry law, the laws against Indecent Representation of Women in the Media or the anti-sati legislation. They are the only ones who have the funds to organize "consultations" in different cities, organize networks, hire PR agencies for outreach through the media, and run national and international advocacy campaigns.
Take the example of Domestic Violence Act of 2005 vintage. UNIFEM and other western foundations provided crores of rupees to the Lawyers Collective for drafting this law and running an advocacy campaign for its enactment. The ostensible mandate of such grants is that the organisation concerned justifies its claim as a CSO by actually evolving mechanisms for widespread consultations with diverse social groups. But in this case, as in all such instances, handpicked journalists, lawyers, judges, parliamentarians and likeminded NGO activists are invited for a series of meetings in different cities. Lawyers Collective assumed that NGO activists do not merely represent their own subjective views but represent all of India's people and therefore there is no need to consult and get feedback from any other social group or indigenous organisations such as caste, jati, biradari associations, village panchayats, or residents associations in urban areas. In any case, the organisers had already made up their mind that the draft they had prepared was the best possible legislation on the subject, even though a lot of its provisions are blindly copied from domestic violence laws of western countries without taking into account the specificities of the Indian family situation or its law enforcement machinery. Representatives of the Lawyers Collective and other likeminded NGOs were also included in the committee set up by the Law Ministry for giving final shape to the law. It was passed in Parliament without any serious debate simply because international agencies with political clout and deep pockets along with influential NGOs backed the law.
Since the enactment of the Domestic Violence Act in 2005, Lawyers Collective has been provided additional funds to ensure that police and IAS officers, judges and media persons are brought in to attend high powered workshops and training courses where the same NGO lectures to "sensitise" the judiciary, the police, media and bureaucracy for implementation of this and other laws enacted through their influence. Never mind that lakhs of affected families are at war with some of the provisions of domestic violence laws and the ham-handed manner of their implementation. The ideological hegemony exercised by the lobbies propagating such legislation is so entrenched that any one pointing to its flaws is dismissed as being anti-women. (For a detailed critique of DV Act and other feminist legislation see my book of essays, Zealous Reformers, Deadly Laws published by SAGE, 2008).
Such is the financial clout of western funded CSOs and their ability to keep one jet-setting globally that senior IAS officers are taking leave to work for them and many have set up their own NGOs as a post retirement career option.
Some of these NGOs, especially those that worked on the RTI legislation or those providing valuable health care, educational or other needed services for marginalised and neglected sections of society, have done outstanding work and deserve to be consulted and included in the policy making process. But many of the laws invoked by our NGOs, including pious sounding laws like the Right to Education Act, are extremely draconian and arbitrary. They are causing more harm than good.
But the backing they get from powerful western donor agencies, especially if they are linked to their respective governments, ensures that politicians and police do not dare attack them the way unprotected RTI and other activists have been attacked and some even murdered. For example, a senior IAS officer concerned at the repeated violent attacks on me and other Manushi workers by political mafias and police on account of our work for street vendors once advised me: "You should attach yourself with UNDP or some other influential donor agency. No politician, no police would dare touch you then because they are afraid of campaigns let loose against them by international networks of activists."