How government-sponsored groups masquerade as civil society.
The Myanmar Women’s Affairs Federation is a gongo. So is Nashi, a Russian youth group, and the Sudanese Human Rights Organization. Saudi Arabia’s International Islamic Relief Organization is also a gongo, as is Chongryon, the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan. Gongos are everywhere, in China, Cuba, France, Tunisia, and even the United States.
Gongos are government-sponsored nongovernmental organizations. Behind this contradictory and almost laughable tongue twister lies an important and growing global trend that deserves more scrutiny: governments funding and controlling nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), often stealthily. Some gongos are benign, others irrelevant. But many, including those mentioned above, are dangerous. Some act as the thuggish arm of repressive governments. Others use the practices of democracy to subtly undermine democracy at home. Abroad, the gongos of repressive regimes lobby the United Nations and other international institutions, often posing as representatives of citizen groups with lofty aims when, in fact, they are nothing but agents of the governments that fund them. Some governments embed their gongos deep in the societies of other countries and use them to advance their interests abroad.
That is the case, for example, of Chongryon, a vast group of pro-North Korean, “civil society” organizations active in Japan. It is the de facto representative of the North Korean regime. Japanese authorities have accused several of its member organizations of smuggling weapons technology, trafficking pharmaceutical products, and funneling hundreds of millions of dollars, as well as orchestrating a massive propaganda operation on Pyongyang’s behalf. For decades, “civil society” groups based in a variety of countries have stridently defended Cuba’s human rights record at U.N. conferences and regularly succeed in watering down resolutions concerning Cuba’s well-documented violations. Bolivarian Circles, citizen groups that support Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, are sprouting throughout Latin America, the United States, and Canada. Their funding? Take a guess. Iran, Saudi Arabia, and other wealthy governments in the Middle East are also known to be generous—and often sole—benefactors of NGOs that advance their religious agenda worldwide.
Jamia Hafsa – a gongo? Distraction tactics?
Citizens of Karachi? Its hard to believe we have woken up from our perpetual state of apathy. Who organized this event? Who is sponsoring it? Who sponsored the ads? Another Gongo I suspect.
Deliberate Polarization of the issue.
Check out the dicussion on Pakistaniat






No comments yet
Comments feed for this article