Ban on Popular Front of India
Source: Indian Express
GS II: National Security and Challenges
What is discussed under Ban on Popular Front of India?
- Popular Front of India (PFI)
- Why is PFI Controversial?
- About the Ban
- Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act
Why in News?
- For close connections to terror funding, the central government banned the Popular Front of India (PFI) and its fronts for five years.
- The judgement was made under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), following a week in which security authorities launched nationwide raids and detained scores of persons associated with PFI in different states.
Popular Front of India (PFI)
- The PFI was founded in 2006.
- It identifies itself as a non-governmental social organisation whose declared goal is to work for the poor and disadvantaged people of the nation and to combat injustice and exploitation.
- The PFI was formed after the National Development Front (NDF), a contentious organisation founded in Kerala a few years after the Babri mosque was destroyed in 1992, united with two other southern organisations.
- Over the next few years, it grew in size as new organisations from around India amalgamated with it.
- Currently, the PFI, which has a major presence in Kerala and Karnataka, is active in more than 20 Indian states and claims to have hundreds of thousands of cadre members.
Why is PFI Controversial?
- The government has charged the organisation and its members with:
- Crimes against the state
- Creating enmity amongst different sections of society
- Taking attempts to destabilise India
- The PFI initially came to public attention in 2010 following an attack on a college lecturer in Kerala.
- Although the PFI distanced itself from the suspects, a court convicted several of its members for the attack.
- Members of the organisation were also linked to the beheading of a Hindu man in the western state of Rajasthan.
- Police in the eastern state of Bihar reported a few months ago that the organisation had allegedly disseminated a manifesto calling for India to become an Islamic republic.
- In 2018, PFI supporters were accused of stabbing to death a leader of the left-wing Students Federation of India (SFI) in the Kerala coastal city of Ernakulam.
About the Ban
- The government claims it has banned the PFI and its affiliate groups for allegedly engaging in illegal acts that are harmful to the country’s integrity, sovereignty, and security.
- It has noted the group’s suspected ties to banned Islamist organisations such as:
- Students Islamic Movement of India (Simi)
- Jamat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB)
- Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS)
Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act
- The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act is an Indian law that aims to prohibit illegal activity associations in India.
- Its principal goal was to provide authorities for dealing with acts aimed at undermining India’s integrity and sovereignty.
- The most recent change to the legislation, the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Amendment Act, 2019 (UAPA 2019), allows the Union Government to label individuals as terrorists without following due process.
- The UAPA is also referred to as the Anti-Terror Law.
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