http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/Time-to-repeal-the-FCRA/article16946222.ece

LEAD

Time to repeal the FCRA

G. Sampath

DECEMBER 27, 2016

The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010, is nothing more than
a tool to keep ‘errant’ civil society organisations on a tight leash.
An autonomous, self-regulatory agency for NGOs is the need of the hour

In early November, the Union Ministry of Home Affairs rejected the
licence renewal applications, under the Foreign Contribution
(Regulation) Act, 2010 (FCRA), of 25 non-governmental organisations
(NGO). That means these NGOs can no longer receive funds from foreign
donors. Many of the affected organisations were rights-based advocacy
groups, with some involved in human rights work.

The National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government has defended its
action by claiming that these organisations had violated FCRA norms by
engaging in activities detrimental to public interest. But its
decision has drawn criticism from different quarters.

Civil society members have issued statements condemning the move,
charging the government with “abuse of legal procedures”. Opposition
MPs from six political parties have written to the Prime Minister
questioning the government’s motives, and termed it “a decision
motivated by the politics of vendetta, victimisation and an effort to
bully them into silence”. The National Human Rights Commission has
issued a notice to the Home Ministry, observing, “Prima facie it
appears FCRA licence non-renewal is neither legal nor objective and
thereby impinging on the rights of the human rights defenders in
access to funding, including foreign funding.”



Despite the censure, the NDA regime has shown no signs of relenting.
This mass cancellation of FCRA licences is not the first time that the
legislation has been used thus. In 2015, the Home Ministry had
cancelled the FCRA licences of 10,000 organisations. Prominent
international funding agency Ford Foundation, the environmentalist
group Greenpeace, and human rights advocacy group Lawyers Collective
have all been targets of FCRA-linked curbs on their activity,
suggesting a larger pattern in the way the state has used this law.

The origins of the FCRA

The original Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act was enacted in 1976
by the Indira Gandhi-led government during the Emergency. It prohibits
electoral candidates, political parties, judges, MPs and even
cartoonists from accepting foreign contributions. As the inclusion of
‘cartoonists’ under its ambit suggests, the intent was to clamp down
on political dissent.

The ostensible justification given for the law was to curb foreign
interference in domestic politics. This was the Cold War era, when
both the Soviets and the Americans meddled in the internal affairs of
post-colonial nations to secure their strategic interests. Amid
suspicions of the ubiquitous ‘foreign hand’ stoking domestic
turbulence, the FCRA was aimed at preventing political parties from
accepting contributions from foreign sources.

As the years passed, India seemed to overcome its suspicion of the
‘foreign hand’. It embraced foreign funding by opening up the economy
in 1991. The Indian state had no problem accepting contributions from
foreign donors such as the World Bank or the International Monetary
Fund. With the state wooing foreign investment, Indian businesses,
too, helped themselves to foreign funds. And so did our political
parties, despite the FCRA, 1976, expressly prohibiting them from
accepting money from ‘foreign sources’.

Both the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Congress were pulled up
by the Delhi High Court in 2014 for violating the FCRA by accepting
contributions from the Indian subsidiaries of the London-based
multinational, Vedanta. It ordered the government and the Election
Commission to take action against both the parties. To no one’s
surprise, the BJP-led NDA government did not take action against the
BJP. Nor did it do so against the Congress, which, as the leading
Opposition party, did not think it appropriate to protest this
flagrant flouting of a judicial directive.

Instead, earlier this year, the government quietly introduced a clause
in the Finance Bill that amended the relevant section of the FCRA,
2010, so that what was hitherto a “foreign company” now became an
Indian company. This amendment was introduced with retrospective
effect — a brazen attempt to legitimise the FCRA violations of the two
parties. This amendment has also opened the doors for all political
parties to accept funding from foreign companies, so long as it is
channelled through an Indian subsidiary.

It may be pertinent to point out here that it was the Congress, under
the stewardship of Manmohan Singh, that replaced the original FCRA,
1976, with a more draconian version in 2010. But why the new law? To
answer that question, we need to consider the differences between the
two legislations.

The new FCRA

Human rights activist Venkatesh Nayak draws attention to three changes
that render the new Act more stringent than the old one. Firstly, FCRA
registration under the earlier law was permanent, but under the new
one, it expired after five years, and had to be renewed afresh. This
instantly hands the state a whip with which to bring errant
organisations to heel.

One may recall that earlier this year, 11,319 NGOs lost their FCRA
licences without the government having to either examine their records
or suspend their registrations individually — their licences simply
expired as the deadline for renewal passed.

Second, the new law put a restriction (50 per cent) on the proportion
of foreign funds that could be used for administrative expenses,
thereby allowing the government to control how a civil society
organisation (CSO) spends its money.

The third and most important distinction is that while the 1976 law
was primarily aimed at political parties, the new law set the stage
for shifting the focus to “organisations of a political nature”. The
FCRA Rules, 2011, framed by the United Progressive Alliance
government, has served the NDA well as a manual on how to target
inconvenient NGOs, especially those working on governance
accountability. It helpfully enumerates the kind of organisation that
could be targeted under the FCRA as “an organisation of a political
nature”.

The list is revealing: trade unions, students’ unions, workers’
unions, youth forums, women’s wing of a political party, farmers’
organisations, youth organisations based on caste, community,
religion, language and “any organisation… which habitually engages
itself in or employs common methods of political action like ‘bandh’
or ‘hartal’, ‘rasta roko’, ‘rail roko’ or ‘jail bharo’ in support of
public causes”.

Institutionalising double standards

Put simply, a political class that has no qualms taking money from
foreign sources, that amended the FCRA to let itself off the hook for
past violations, that opened the doors for all political parties to
accept foreign funding, that paved the way for Indian businesses to
access foreign capital, is now anxious to prevent CSOs from accessing
foreign funds because some of them question its policies in a
democratic battle to protect constitutional rights and entitlements.

Last April, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights to Freedom of
Peaceful Assembly and of Association undertook a legal analysis of the
FCRA, 2010. He submitted a note to the Indian government which stated
unambiguously that the FCRA provisions and rules “are not in
conformity with international law, principles and standards”.

The UN Special Rapporteur’s argument was fairly straightforward. The
right to freedom of association is incorporated under the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which India
is a party. Access to resources, particularly foreign funding, is part
of the right to freedom of association. While this is not an absolute
right and is subject to restrictions, those have to be precise, and
defined in a way that “would enable a CSO to know in advance whether
its activities could reasonably be construed to be in violation of the
Act”.

The report says that restrictions in the name of “public interest” and
“economic interest” as invoked under the FCRA rules fail the test of
“legitimate restrictions”. The terms are too vague and give the state
excessive discretionary powers to apply the provision in an arbitrary
manner. Besides, given that the right to freedom of association is
part of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (article 20), a
violation of this right also constitutes a human rights violation.

Does all this mean that the FCRA should be repealed? If yes, how then
do we monitor the foreign funding of NGOs?

Of course, NGO funding needs to be regulated. One cannot deny that
corrupt NGOs exist, or that unscrupulous NGOs that receive foreign
funds may serve as conduits for money laundering. But there are better
ways to address these concerns than an FCRA that institutes an
‘Inspector Raj’ for the NGO sector.

In fact, a seven-member task force was set up way back in 2009 to
create a national-level self-regulatory agency, the National
Accreditation Council of India (NACI), that would monitor and accredit
CSOs. It was to be an independent, statutory body along the lines of
the Bar Council. The task force submitted its report to the Planning
Commission in September 2010. It was never heard of again. Instead,
what we got in September 2010 was a more aggressive FCRA. Perhaps it
is time to repeal the FCRA and revive the idea of an autonomous,
self-regulatory agency for CSOs.

[email protected]

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Peace Is Doable

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