Dear all,
Over the past few months, there has been increased activity from IIIT 
Hyderabad’s Open Knowledge Initiatives (OKI) team within Indic Wikimedia 
communities, along with conversations around upcoming conferences. We wanted to 
share the context to help situate these developments.
The increased engagement from IIIT Hyderabad with Indic Wikimedia communities 
follows the integration of the Open Knowledge Initiatives (OKI) team into IIIT 
Hyderabad, which now hosts multiple verticals of work related to open knowledge 
and Wikimedia projects across Indic languages. This expanded scope has 
naturally led to greater institutional activity and collaboration with 
communities.
More details about the initiative and areas of work are available here: 
https://w.wiki/KtNL
We also wanted to clarify that WikiConference India 2026 (WCI 2026), and the 
Open Knowledge Conference are distinct in both structure and purpose. 
WikiConference India 2026 is envisioned as a community-led, capacity-building 
space for Wikimedia contributors, affiliates, and partners across India and 
South Asia, with volunteer committees guiding the process and includes regional 
participation . WCI 2026 is supported by IIIT Hyderabad and the Open Knowledge 
Conference is being designed as a strategic forum to connect research, 
practice, and emerging movement-wide challenges, including sustainability, 
contributor retention, and responsible technology integration.
There is a participation paradox along with other trends like evolving 
relationships with Legacy knowledge authorities and a fragmenting consensus on 
"facts," the Open Knowledge Conference aims to develop actionable, 
research-informed strategies to address these trends across Global Majority 
communities, while addressing emergent movement relevant trends
While the two conferences may appear close in timing, they serve different 
audiences and objectives. Additionally, India has hosted relatively few 
national-level Wikimedia conferences over the past decade and a half, and this 
surge of activity reflects renewed momentum rather than a recurring pattern. It 
is also worth noting that the Open Knowledge Conference is tentatively 
scheduled for the later months of 2026 and the timelines are still being 
finalised.
We hope this context is helpful. We look forward to continued collaboration and 
shared learning across communities.
Best regards,
Pavan Santhosh,
Program Manager,
Open Knowledge Initiatives at RCTS,
IIIT-Hyderabad.
________________________________
పంపినవారు: Pankaj Sharma via Wikimedia-l <[email protected]>
పంపినవి: 30, ఏప్రిల్ 2026, గురువారం 11:04 AM
గ్రహీత: Masum al Hasan <[email protected]>; Belinda Mbambo 
<[email protected]>
Cc: Wikimedia India Community list <[email protected]>; 
Wikimedia Mailing List <[email protected]>; 
[email protected] <[email protected]>; 
[email protected] <[email protected]>; Pankaj 
Sharma <[email protected]>
విషయం: [Wikimedia-l] Re: [WikimediaIndia-l] Re: Re: Why Was Nepal Denied While 
Overlapping Grants Were Approved in India?

I appreciate your kind words Rocky, and I understand the spirit behind your 
encouragement. However we as a community feel compelled to express some 
concerns that continue to weigh heavily on us.

While your message acknowledges the effort we’ve put into the proposal, I want 
to be clear that the discouragement comes not just from the rejection, but from 
the lack of transparency and fairness in the decision-making process. As you 
rightly mentioned, many regions already have established conferences, but South 
Asia is still in the early stages. That's exactly why our proposed SAARC 
Conference was so important.

The last SAARC conference was held in 2019 organized by CIS, but since then no 
initiatives have been taken to host another one. When our community finally 
took the step to revive this effort, the proposal was rejected. The main reason 
cited by the committee was:

 "One of the main factors in the committee’s decision is the close connection 
between WikiConference India and a potential SAARC Conference. Given the 
current uncertainties surrounding WikiConference India (due to the recently 
rejected FCRA license for CIS), the committee believes it would be best to 
focus on resolving that situation before considering funding for an additional 
large conference in the region."

This reasoning raises several important questions, which I’ve also raised in my 
previous email. Why were we asked to solve the internal issues of an 
organization in India? We are just a volunteer-led community, not paid 
employees.

Additionally, our emails to the India mailing list have been rejected by some 
of the same people involved in the decision-making process. This gives the 
impression that discussion is being suppressed, and that the voices of the 
volunteer community are being ignored. It feels like the foundation is 
preventing these critical issues from being discussed with the broader 
community.

Belinda, as I mentioned before, I shared a set of questions regarding 
transparency and clarifications in an email on 18th April. Unfortunately I have 
not yet received any responses. We hope Belinda, you will respond to these 
questions on this email.

Furthermore, we have come to know that CIS is now the International Institute 
of Information Technology Hyderabad. What surprised us even more is that the 
director board members for both organizations are the same. Is there a 
potential conflict of interest or undue influence in how proposals from these 
institutions are being evaluated?

We have also observed that proposals with institutional backing seem to receive 
faster approval and less scrutiny than others, despite having similar goals and 
target audiences. A recent example is the renamed Open Knowledge Conference, 
which was approved with minimal questioning and without addressing the concerns 
raised by the community.

This is particularly striking considering that the grantees of this event have 
close ties to the Wikimedia Foundation, with some having previously served as 
grant officers at Wikimedia Foundation. It raises important questions about the 
evaluation process and whether such prior relationships might be influencing 
the way proposals are reviewed. If these relationships are playing a role, it 
could result in a situation where proposals from institutional bodies are 
approved quickly and with less scrutiny, while volunteer-led proposals like 
ours face more stringent questioning.

We believe that these issues need to be addressed in order to ensure a fair 
future for all proposals, regardless of whether they are led by volunteers or 
institutions.

We look forward to hearing your responses to these concerns and to 
understanding the rationale behind these decisions.

Pankaj

On Tuesday, April 21st, 2026 at 8:49 PM, Belinda Mbambo via WikimediaIndia-l 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Hi Pankaj,

Replying here in addition to the conversation you started directly with us.

We understand a rejection of any proposal is a disappointing outcome and we 
work with a certain set of criterias, processes and resources. As was shared on 
wiki,<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants_talk:Programs/Wikimedia_Community_Fund/Conference_Fund/Wikimedia_SAARC_Conference_2026#c-CKibelka_(WMF)-20250319155900-Decision_on_the_Wikimedia_SAARC_Conference_2026_proposal>
 the conference committee - made up of Wikimedians - did not approve the 
conference for a range of reasons.

We work closely with the Conference 
Committee<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Conference_Grants/Committee> 
who, together with inputs gathered from multiple discussions with the grantee, 
arrive at the funding conclusions. On the same pages you will find the 
timelines, stages, process and be able to review past proposals and reports.

It was suggested to build capacity and expertise of the team before scaling up 
to large regional events. This approach would better align with the Maithili 
Wikimedians’ track record in event organization and grant management.

I know others have also enquired about this process - more information can be 
found here on 
meta-wiki<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Conference/en#Eligibility_requirements>.

There are some basic eligibility 
criteria<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Conference/en#Eligibility_requirements>
 to apply for a Conference Fund, we use these parameters to ensure funds are 
disbursed to those who have past experience with managing a large fund and/or 
conference, the past record, no pending reports and/or work with a Fiscal 
Sponsor who fulfills some of these requirements.

Furthermore, there are multiple factors that are considered (along with the 
above) which differ in each round (external situation, available resources, 
assessment of all submissions) and emerging community needs and strategy.

A rejection is always supported by suggestions on steps which could be taken to 
address any identified improvements, if applicable. You can find the responses 
to all recent 
proposals<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Conference/Browse_applications#>
 on their talk page.

Best,
Belinda


[https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/Fu6ujnrrEMNkZniwgLYiO93yoa7AmhNsA9PV0GkMmRwXdZCVzfI2BcjODVswf64eB-VRDVc8mdSvcEdNpRzHse5z1Y3EVtHGph9aVBz000ljCXqXE5Hiwy6793hm_elgXVqatz2j]
    Belinda Mbambo
Senior Manager: Global Movement Communications
Wikimedia Foundation<https://wikimediafoundation.org/>


On Tue, Apr 21, 2026 at 7:31 AM Masum al Hasan via Wikimedia-l 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi Pankaj,

I understand that the outcome must be disappointing, especially after the 
effort invested in preparing the proposal. Please do not feel discouraged.

Many regions already have established regional conferences, and South Asia is 
still working toward that milestone. In that context, the initiative taken by 
the Maithili Wikimedia community is both significant and commendable. Even 
though the proposal was not funded this time, the effort itself carries 
substantial value.

I would like to sincerely appreciate the Maithili Wikimedians for taking this 
important first step. This should not be viewed as a failure, but rather as the 
beginning of a larger and more ambitious journey. Such initiatives often lay 
the groundwork for future success, and this effort will certainly be remembered 
as a pioneering one.

Best,
Rocky



On Fri, Apr 3, 2026 at 4:46 PM Pankaj Sharma via Wikimedia-l 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Thank you Butch, Arvind, Николай, DR and Lane for the thoughtful responses and 
for sharing additional perspectives related to this matter. I would like to 
follow up to clarify a few points and to raise some concerns that remain 
unresolved from the earlier discussion.

Our community proposal to organize the SAARC Conference in Nepal for 
2026<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants_talk:Programs/Wikimedia_Community_Fund/Conference_Fund/Wikimedia_SAARC_Conference_2026>
 was declined, with one of the key reasons stated at talk page as: "One of the 
main factors in the committee’s decision is the close connection between 
WikiConference India and a potential SAARC Conference." Additionally, we were 
advised that "Given the current uncertainties surrounding WikiConference India 
(due to the recently rejected FCRA license for CIS), the committee believes it 
would be best to focus on resolving that situation before considering funding 
for an additional large conference in the region."

Our SAARC proposal was rejected due to uncertainties in India and concerns 
about overlap, it is surprising to observe that another proposal, Open 
Knowledge Conference was approved today without proper scrutiny, despite being 
closely related in scope, audience, and regional context. Our proposal had lot 
of questions asked for and the recent approved grant got approved surprisingly 
without any questions asked by the committee. Why for we volunteers there was 
lots of questioning but when the proposal is from a institutions under a staff 
role there is no question asked? This raises an important question about 
consistency in decision-making. We noticed in the committee's feedback that the 
Open Knowledge Conference is described as "an iteration of a recurring event." 
But we have been unable to identify previous editions of this event under the 
same name. At the same time there has been discussion on the talk 
page<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants_talk:Programs/Wikimedia_Community_Fund/Conference_Fund/Open_Knowledge_Conference>
 about the proposal previously being framed as a "Wikimedia Technical Summit" 
before being renamed. This raises an important question: if this is indeed a 
recurring event could the committee clarify under what name and format previous 
iterations were held? Additionally what was the rationale for the change in 
naming and how does this relate to the continuity being referenced in the 
evaluation ?

If the uncertainty around WikiConference in India and regulatory challenges 
were significant enough to halt our proposal entirely why were similar concerns 
not applied when evaluating proposals emerging from the same team at 
International Institute of Information Technology Hyderabad? Is this difference 
in treatment influenced by the fact that our proposal led by the community 
volunteers, while proposals from the International Institute of Information 
Technology are being submitted in a staff or institutional capacity ?

The argument of close connection between events also appears to have been 
applied selectively. In our case it was a decisive reason for rejection. 
However in other instances where thematic and organizational overlap is 
evident, this concern does not seem to have been given the same weight.

This raises a fundamental question pointing:

Why should our proposal be affected by regulatory or organizational problems in 
another country? What about the close connection for proposal for 
WikiConference India 2026and Open Knowledge Conference?

We want to share that the WikiConference India 2026 and the Open Knowledge 
Conference are scheduled within a span of approximately two months, while our 
rejected proposal of Wikimedia SAARC Conference 
2026<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Programs/Wikimedia_Community_Fund/Conference_Fund/Wikimedia_SAARC_Conference_2026>
 and WikiConference India 
2025<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Programs/Wikimedia_Community_Fund/Conference_Fund/WikiConference_India_2025>
 had a gap of 10 months. Which one is here overlapping, SAARC or Open Knowledge 
Conference !

We note that Nepal was encouraged to scale down and build experience through 
smaller events. It is very much discouraging to see differing standards applied 
when other entities are getting multiple large-scale grants with overlapping 
goals and participants without any discussions or questions.

We respectfully ask to WMF and the community:

  1.  How are overlap and regional connection being defined and applied across 
different proposals ?
  2.  Why were external factors in one country used to delay or reject a 
proposal from another.?
  3.  What measures are in place to ensure equitable and consistent evaluation 
for both volunteer-led and staff-led proposals ?

Our community strongly believe that all communities regardless of size or 
geography should be given a fair opportunity to grow and contribute.

We request to have an committee to investigate all the previous and on-going 
grant proposals from this institution and make the process more transparent. We 
hope this can open a constructive and transparent dialogue toward greater 
accountability and consistency in decision-making process and allocation of 
funds to the communities.

Regards,
Pankaj

On Tuesday, March 24th, 2026 at 3:18 AM, Pankaj Sharma 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
The community proposal to host the regional SAARC Conference in 2026 in 
Nepal<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants_talk:Programs/Wikimedia_Community_Fund/Conference_Fund/Wikimedia_SAARC_Conference_2026>
 was declined. The reasons provided was the event would be redundant and an 
unnecessary expense because a similar conference is planned in India in the 
year of 2025. However in 2025 conference in India didn't happened and 
surprisingly our proposal was declined beacuse of that. But why.!!!

While Nepal’s proposal was viewed with skepticism regarding our capacity, the 
2025 conference in India failed to materialize due to a failure in financial 
management and a lack of understanding regarding local FCRA regulations in 
India. This resulted in a substantial huge waste of Wikimedia Foundation 
resources. It is disheartening that the Conference Grant Program Officer 
applied Indian legal constraints as a blanket assumption for Nepal, hindering 
our community's growth based on a misunderstanding of our local context.

I have a question: How did the legal situation in India affect the decision on 
a proposal of Nepal?

Looking ahead to 2026 I was doubtful by the current grant applications from the 
International Institute of Information Technology Hyderabad. I see that a 
request for 207,000 USD has been submitted for WikiConference India 2026. 
Simultaneously, the same individual representing the same institution, has 
applied for an separate 87,554.81 USD for an Open Knowledge Conference within a 
gap of few months of the first event with same purpose and target participants.

As a Wikimedian this raises serious questions about the equitable distribution 
and potential misuse of community resources. While Nepal is told to scale down 
and gain experience with smaller events, a single institution is requesting 
nearly 300,000 USD for overlapping projects with same people in the 
organization role and same theme.

If the Wikimedia Foundation is concerned about redundancy and extra costs when 
it comes to Nepal, why is it being overlooked when a single institution in 
India applies for two major grants for nearly identical purposes? We need more 
accountability and a fairer distribution of resources to ensure that all 
communities not just one can grow. We urge the foundation and the community to 
investigate these for the benefit of the entire regional community and stop 
wasting the resources make the process more transparent and accountable.

Regards,
Pankaj

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