Foreign NGOs in India - Cause for concern

LurkerBaba

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Govt pulls plug on Ford Foundation funded NGO
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The Home Ministry has pulled the plug on funding by Ford Foundation to provide assistance to members of parliament(MP) for "research and analysis" for legislative activities. The Institute for Policy Research Studies (IPRS) had this year's applied for approval to Home Ministry to receive US $8,55,000 (around `4,70,25,000) from Ford Foundation under this project.

The proposal to receive funding under Foreign Contribution Regulation Act, has been turned down by the Home Ministry citing unethical practices by "researchers" provided by IPRS to MPs.

The project drew flak when the Institute's staffers started accessing Government files under the garb of providing assistance to MPs. These "researchers" had free access to Parliament Library and been sourcing crucial documents for the last six years under this project. The IPRC's application for foreign funds was opposed by Minister of State for Home Mullapally Ramachandran and upheld by former boss P Chidambaram.

From 2005 onwards, more than 300 MPs, cutting across political lines availed of assistance under this project, also known as PRS Legislative Research, for preparing questions and speech material for legislative works. These assistants assigned to MPs, were funded by this project.

Earlier, this project operated under a Delhi based NGO called Centre for Policy Research. But in March 2011, the people behind this project floated a company called Institute for Policy Research Studies (IPRS) in Mumbai under Section 25 of the Companies Act.

This project is also associated with Constitution Club.

According to sources, the Ministers rejected the application of IPRS, observing that this project had seen unethical practices including lobbying. It is learned that the Ministers observed in the file that it is not good for engaging private bodies on legislative activities of MPs and MLAs and these kind of practices would led to outsourcing of duties and responsibilities of legislators.

Sources said a section of the bureaucracy first raised objection on the role of these assistants, who sought access to all files and crucial information, which could be misused too. Questions were also raised why he questions were raised these "private persons funded by the NGO" should be allowed to assist MPs, when the government had provided official assistants to legislators.

Govt pulls plug on Ford funded NGO
 

Predator

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^ its more to do with the anna hazare movement, some people like kejriwal had received funding from ford foundation, now they may totally ban ford foundation from india. congress will do anything to continue their loot of the nation.
 

Iamanidiot

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The best way is to scrap FCRA or to further tighten it.Iam seeing the effect of tightening of Screws on NGO's in AP.Evangelist Jihadis from Texas are not as blatant as before
 

Raj30

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Flowing The Way Of Their Money | Lola Nayar
The Foundation Of Indian Policymaking?
A selection of Ford Foundation grants (2007-11)
1.Manish Sisodia, Founder, Kabir
Promoting RTI for transparency & accountability; Anna Hazare supporter $3,97,000
2.Nandan M. Nilekani, President, NCAER, Influential think-tank on policy issues that have found application $2,30,000
3.JNU, Leading liberal arts university; FF funds used to set up Centre for Law & Governance $4,00,000
4.Mathew Titus, Executive Director, Sa-Dhan Association Umbrella body of MFIs $9,10,000
5.Sandeep Dikshit, Governing body member, CBGA Promotes accountability & participatory governance $6,50,000
6.Yogendra Yadav, Fellow, Centre for Study of Developing Societies, A think-tank largely funded by ICSSR $3,50,000

Anna Hazare team-led 'India Against Corruption' movement for a Jan Lokpal bill. Author-activist Arundhati Roy, among others, raised concerns about Arvind Kejriwal's links with the foundation, which is touted as a front for multilateral agencies interfering in public policy matters. In the spotlight is Kabir, an NGO run by Kejriwal associate Manish Sisodia, which has received grants totalling $3,97,000 from the foundation. Kejriwal and Ford Foundation have both denied any links while Sisodia has said the money was for films, documentaries and campaigns on RTI (see Arvind Kejriwal interview). But the issue has rekindled old fears of a "foreign hand" in domestic policy.
The Ford Foundation, which completes six decades in India next year, provides a continuing flow of grants to institutions, think-tanks, civil society, and even farmer groups, to carry out research and advocacy work. The sums are not inconsequential—about $15 million (about Rs 70 crore) a year. And the recipients—320 grants, over the past four years—are the who's who of civil society and advocacy groups in India.
The foundation, on its part, makes no bones about its neo-liberal agenda, broadly pro-market, seeking accountability in governance, and promoting marginalised groups. It funds a small number of institutions, but chooses effectively. At a post-budget meeting two years back, it was noted that all the think-tanks represented (NCAER, NIPFP, ICRIER and the Centre for Policy Research) on the dais received grants from the foundation. Academicians and scholars from these think-tanks are regularly consulted by the government on various policy issues.
"The influence of agencies such as these goes far beyond what is recognised, and it's certainly not always benign."Anil Gupta, IIM-Ahmedabad Professor
On whether the views of these intellectuals actually get reflected in subsequent policies, Planning Commission deputy chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia declines to comment. "I don't really have a view on it," he says. He does, however, concede that India's association with the foundation "is something that has been on for a long time".
Over the last decade, there has been a shift," says a Planning Commission official. "Of late, they are not seen as being too active in providing technical inputs or helping in government policy implementation or any of the discussions that take place." Instead, the closer dialogue of policymakers with civil society groups is considered an indirect form of engagement by overseas agencies. Institutions like the Ford Foundation and other funding groups have been collaborating with civil society groups across issues as diverse as human rights, forest rights and agriculture to education, health and RTI.

This also fits in with a recent shift in the US policy of association with India, which is now focusing on building state-to-state partnerships by "engaging Indian state and local leaders" throughout the country on "topics of mutual interest". Civil society groups and think-tanks are expected to play an important role in this.
That said, in an economic global order where Western institutions and ideas dominate, the influences are subtle. Foreign funding agencies don't have to push any agenda. As a socio-political observer put it, "First the language is learnt and slowly the terminology and knowledge becomes part of conditioning." In such a milieu, it is hard to distinguish who is pushing which agenda. Whether we like it or not, this is inbuilt in the "global village" package.
 

Predator

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4,139 NGOs lose FCRA licence, most in TN - Indian Express
Shyamlal Yadav : New Delhi, Fri Aug 10 2012, 03:32 hrs

The government has, over the past one month, prohibited 4,139 NGOs from receiving contributions from sources overseas. The largest block of NGOs who have been shackled — 794, or about 19 per cent of the total — are based in Tamil Nadu, ground zero of the NGO-led protests against the Kudankulam atomic power plant.

The government has published the list of NGOs who have lost their Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) registration on the home ministry's web site. FCRA clearance is mandatory for an NGO to receive any contribution from overseas. The registrations were "canceled" because of the "violation" of FCRA between July 2012 and last week, the ministry has said.

Earlier in March, the government had cracked down on four NGOs for allegedly funding the massive protests that had paralysed work at the Kudankulam plant site in Tamil Nadu's Tirunelveli district for weeks, and ordered a freeze on the bank accounts of some other NGOs.

In November 2011, it had frozen the bank accounts of 21 NGOs, and barred another 60 from accepting overseas contributions.

While FCRA clearance is mandatory for all NGOs that accept foreign contributions, the government makes public the names of organisations which receive over Rs 1 crore in overseas contributions in any financial year. According to the home ministry, there were 262 NGOs in this category in 2011-12, a majority of whom were based in Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Delhi.

Together, these 262 NGOs received Rs 1,006.58 crore in foreign contributions, says the ministry web site. Major recipients of foreign contributions were SOS Children's Village, Delhi (Rs 67.93 crore), Missionaries of Charity, Kolkata (Rs 62.78 crore), AMG India International, Guntur (Rs 48.13 crore), Sadar Anjuman Ahmedia Quadian, Gurdaspur (Rs 39.22 crore) and Hyderabad Eye Institute, Hyderabad (Rs 33.47 crore).

The number of NGOs whose FCRA clearance has been withdrawn over the past one month — 4,139 — is 9.5 per cent of the total 43,451 registered in India. The largest number of these NGOs are based, after Tamil Nadu, in Andhra Pradesh (670), followed by Kerala (450), West Bengal (384), Maharashtra (352), Delhi (299), Karnataka (296), Orissa (160), and Gujarat (158).

Total foreign contributions to NGOs fell sharply in 2011-12 from Rs 3,463.71 crore in 2010-11. An analysis of foreign receipts by NGOs published in The Indian Express on January 4, 2012 reported that as many as 958 NGOs received contributions of over Rs 1 crore in 2010-11, a little less than four times the number of the next year.


finally someone in the govt has woken up and is doing his duty, the free reign given to troublemakers posing as NGO's has finally come to an end. i wonder if the murderous ngo worldvision is included in this list.
 

Iamanidiot

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I have been ahead of the curve here as usual.If you see my previous posts.The congress is tactically supporting RSS to hinduise the central Indian tribal belt.Two other factors are Jagan and Kudankulam which showed them what is coming
 

Predator

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^ i think its more complex, catholic sonia has a natural hatred towards protestant jagan reddy, that's the reason for using CBI to ensnare him in corruption cases.

as far as central india goes, maoists are still supported by congress. if the congress had cracked down on maoists as mamta has done in west bengal then there would be no daily killings going on in jharkhand, odisha and chattisgarh.
 

KS

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Jagan is Protestant...I dont think so...must be one of those fringe pentecostal or baptist types....Even Protestants are pretty mainstream..though not on the scale of Catholics..


I have been ahead of the curve here as usual.If you see my previous posts.The congress is tactically supporting RSS to hinduise the central Indian tribal belt.Two other factors are Jagan and Kudankulam which showed them what is coming
CT....:D

BTW this is for you JP gaaru - http://www.organiser.org/Encyc/2012/6/3/-b-1,240-Christians-including-a-pastor-came-back-to-Hinduism--b-.aspx?NB&lang=4&m1&m2&p1&p2&p3&p4&PageType=N
 
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Iamanidiot

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Jagan is Protestant...I dont think so...must be one of those fringe pentecostal or baptist types....Even Protestants are pretty mainstream..though not on the scale of Catholics..




CT....:D
Karthic lot of factors involved in it other than Jagan.The Vanavasi Kalyan Ashram is the largest tribal NGO working in central India.Now they even set-up in NE in Tinsukia and Haflong
 
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KS

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^^ I've added a link in the previous post...;)
 

Raj30

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Media Crooks: Confederation of Indian Agitators

Confederation of Indian Agitators

As far back as I can remember we always wanted to establish and own a NGO. By 'we', I mean my friends and me who had just finished some education. Apart from our jobs we spent evenings devising 'Get Rich Quick' schemes. We spent a lot of time on what type of NGO to create. One idea was to make a NGO and build a temple in some popular street corner. The temple could get bigger slowly and the little coins and notes would flow and keep increasing by the day. Then we wouldn't have to work at all. But when it came to it we didn't have the guts to do something that illegal so we dropped it. (Good choice too. That 'communal' Narendra Modi destroyed a lot of illegal temples). Another one was to create a NGO to educate rural folks on fertiliser use. That could get us funds from Govt, NABARD and even fertiliser companies. But we couldn't tell fertilisers from cow-dung so we dropped that. There were many more. Seriously, all we wanted was lots of money and few big cars. We wanted to work 3 months and earn a year's money. What is so wrong about that? And we wanted to spend weekends at luxury resorts. We wanted luxury trips to foreign countries at others' expense and give speeches at seminars during spare time on the trip. How is all that unfair at all?

Turned out we weren't brainy enough for those schemes and are stuck to earning money the stupid way – the honest way. When we now chat sometimes we realise how foolish we were in missing an important bus. We could have had a NGO, gotten rich and have done nothing special. All we had to do was to gather a bunch of people and agitate. Did I hear you ask "agitate for what"? Oh come on, we are a constitutionally "socialist" democracy, we can agitate for anything. Street lamps, pot holes, factory workers, farmers, water shortage, floods, health, politics, slum dwellers, hunger, mal-nutrition, riots, justice, transport, trees, forests, flyovers, pollution, late trains, even dams and nuclear plants. Like a 5-Star restaurant we could create an À la carte menu for agitations. We could have been somebody, we could have been famous. And we were, still are, good public speakers. We could have given great speeches and great sound bites for TV. We could have even manufactured 'reality agitations' made for TV. Rajdeep Sardesai would have taken pictures with us with our autographs and proclaimed "Great images. Gnight". I could have written a book and won the Broker Prize instead of writing a blog.

We look at Arvind Kejriwal, Manish Sisodia, Teesta Setalvad, Medha Patkar and many more and regret our miserable lives. Back then a dream groom for parents was an IAS officer and he commanded a huge dowry. Now look at what 21st century has done. Even Harsh Mander gives up his IAS job and creates a NGO. Yeah, even Kejriwal gave up a govt job and created a NGO. Lately, Uday Kumar and Chittarupa Palit have managed better than anyone could dream of. They have introduced great new concepts to agitations. See? Even in this business there is room for innovation. The most inspiring of agitations has to be the Chipko Movement of the early 70s. This was one where villagers hugged trees to protect them from being felled by greedy de-foresters. The history of Chipko movement seems older and there are references to the movement from 1906, 1921 and 1940.


According to Wikipedia the Chipko movement is older than our freedom movement. "The first recorded event of Chipko took place in village Khejarli, Jodhpur district, in 1731, when 363 Bishnois, led by Amrita Devi while protecting green Khejri trees, considered sacred by the community, by hugging them, and braved the axes of loggers sent by the local ruler". Damn! Even in 1731 it was a woman. One should have known. And the tradition of that brave woman has been followed by many modern day women. Historians are still debating whether Amrita Devi owned a Pajero or a Toyota and if she had a Ph.D. from Cambridge, JNU or AMU. But historians do confirm she studied at the LSE (Luni School of Economics). I'm not kidding, Luni is a prominent town in Jodhpur district. And she spoke English as fluently as Lord Megmoron. For her brilliant efforts Amrita Devi was also appointed member of the MAC (Mughal Advisory Council). Yeah, it was known by that name then.


But nobody, nobody beats Chittarupa Palit (Also spelt Chittaroopa sometimes) in leading agitations. She seems to be a protégé of Medha Patkar from the Narmada Bachchao Andolan (NBA). She gathered some villagers in Khandwa district of Madhya Pradesh and organised a Jal Satyagraha to protest some dam. She wanted lands and compensation for the displaced villagers. Noble! So she got some people to immerse themselves in water. Sometimes knee-deep, sometimes waist-deep, sometimes neck-deep, sometimes"¦.. But in all those 14-17 days of being sunk, Chittarupa was always fresh as fish to speak to the media. No matter what the courts say people like Medha, Chittarupa, Teesta, Uday Kumar are instant heroes on TV. Here's an excerpt from a Times of India report:

Welcome to the village which was in the eye of the storm with 'jal satyagrah' for the past three weeks"¦ It's a story of how the entire media was taken for a ride with the help of mobile phones, which came in handy for keeping tabs on TV crews. The spot shown on TV channels where the agitators protested is not the village proper but the banks of a canal running into the Narmada"¦When TOI inspected the place of demonstration after the water receded, the spot was found to be only two feet deep"¦ "We were sitting in water," said Mehtab Giri, a villager who joined the protest. "First, we laid bricks and stone slabs on which were placed iron doors used for sluice gates of the dam. This would help us sit comfortably during the protest"¦ "Whenever the media took shots, the second arrangement in the slightly deeper water was used. Agitators waded into water to show the level sometimes chin-deep and at others, neck-deep. When they stood up, it was hardly till their waist." And they weren't in water all the time; they frequently walked in and out of the canal""¦ there were only three people in the water most of the time"¦ The third was NBA worker Chittarupa Palit, who also walked out to brief the media and file documents. Others took turns. The evidence is all in the television shots""¦


Nice, isn't it? I wonder how Palit makes her living or where she gets her money from. She's living my dreams. That's alright, even Arvind Kejriwal rubbished the information that he was funded by Ford Foundation. He did agree that he received funds from them. So what! Even Amrita Devi of that Chipko thing received funds from Ford Foundation in 1731. That brings us to Dr. Uday Kumar, lead agitator against the Kudankulam Nuclear plant. This agitation seems to have received over 50 crores from various Christian Church organisations. Despite Supreme Court orders, despite govt assuring them about safety of the plant Uday Kumar started another round of agitations recently. This time, taking a leaf out of Chittarupa's book he drove the agitators into the sea for another round of aqua agitation. In the end the poor villagers may end up where they started before the agitations. Some even get killed when the agitations turn violent. "Nameless heads on frameless walls" as a famous artist said. The only ones getting rich and famous are those English-speaking urbanites who run this agitation industry. What's criminal? Agitations are fine but both Chittarupa Palit and Uday Kumar, in their 'possessed' frame of mind had endangered lives of people.

And, of course, based on this farcical agitation and fraudulent immersions, TV channels like TimesNow and CNN-IBN aired the "choreographed" images 24X7 .. 14 days in water, 15 days, 16 days, 17 days. And when the MP govt announced a package they even claimed "TimesNow Impact" and "CNN-IBN Impact". That's how foolish our media is and that's how they try to fool people. I don't grudge the packages given to the villagers by the MP govt. There's no harm in that. It's the methods of the NGO that should have been investigated and reported by these channels. Oh incidentally, both MP and TN are Non-Congress states. That is enough said.

In case you haven't heard, over the last decade or so there are many NGOs created whose job is to just channel funds. They are NGO 'fund raisers'. Some are even supported by banks. They collect funds from Indians, NRIs and others and channel those funds to the NGOs of the choice of the donor. Their earnings come from commissions from the funds donated. Pretty much like a Stock Broker isn't it? And these brokers are also passed off as NGOs rather than as commercial businesses. If you plan to start a NGO it might make sense to get yourself registered with one of the brokers.

My friends and I have decided to give it a final shot. Having failed to agitate over anything we have decided to establish the CIA. No, not that CIA. This is the 'Confederation of Indian Agitators'. This would act as the Apex body of all Agitation-NGOs. We will lobby to get the govt to make it mandatory for all Agitation-NGOs to first be registered with and recognised by CIA for any valid dialogue with them. You see, we then get membership fees, donations, foreign funds, Church funds, govt funds, private funds, hawala funds. And all that without ever having to agitate. Don't you dare steal this idea now!

Caution: The post is not a comment on all NGOs. Many of them are doing commendable work worthy of applause.
 

Tshering22

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Of course its a cause of concern.

We saw what happened in Kudankulam protests.

We saw how NGOs can be used for political purposes by external elements.

How come it should not be of concern to us?

Heck, I think the worst NGO-affected zone is NE in the country where rampant political activities go on in the name of "charity" and "service".
 

JBH22

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Social Activist / NGO watch thread

NGO's are increasingly viewed as a force to reckon with sometimes used by foreign countries for subversive activities the recent strings of colored revolutions is known to be engineered by the CIA. As always India is seldom untouched by world affairs, subsequently we have seen a rise in all cliques of social activist with various agendas sometimes these are against national interest.

Please use this thread to post all social activist and NGOs with dubious activities.:namaste:
Starting with the two known activist which I'm sure many on DFIans like

1-Medha Patkar


Recent "social work" -

1-Narmada Bachao Andolan (it all boiled down to demonise Modi by tagging him as someone out to decimate tribals)
2- Protest against Tata Singur Plant played pivotal role for TATA to move out from WB


The Kettle Hits Back | Madhu Purnima Kishwar
Medha Patkar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Who is Medha Patkar: A short biography of Medha Patkar | Read and Digest

2-Arundhati Roy


Battle turf is at maligning Indian rule in Kashmir be it lies or sympathise with separatists and maoist.

Arundhati Roy Calls For End To Indian ‘Occupation’ Of Kashmir ~ FRONTLINE KASHMIR:toilet:
 

Shirman

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Re: Social Activist / NGO watch thread

In "Madhu Kishwar's article on Modi in Outlookindia" Thread Ive just mentioned abt Teesta Setalwad and Sabrina Hashmi. And by the way @JBH22 nice Thread. Keep it up Bro.....:thumb:
 
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W.G.Ewald

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Re: Social Activist / NGO watch thread

If you want to lament, this thread will be useful. If you want to do something about NGOs, look at where their funding comes from.
 

JBH22

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Re: Social Activist / NGO watch thread

If you want to lament, this thread will be useful. If you want to do something about NGOs, look at where their funding comes from.
Not to lament but to identify key "social activist" and NGOs who have dubious activities in India.
 

W.G.Ewald

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Re: Social Activist / NGO watch thread

Not to lament but to identify key "social activist" and NGOs who have dubious activities in India.
The evangelists (I assume) you refer to advertising continually on American TV, showing pictures of starving, sick and homeless children. They ask for donations and no doubt rake in the money. What needs to be investigated is how that money is spent in India and elsewhere.
 

JBH22

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Re: Social Activist / NGO watch thread

The evangelists (I assume) you refer to advertising continually on American TV, showing pictures of starving, sick and homeless children. They ask for donations and no doubt rake in the money. What needs to be investigated is how that money is spent in India and elsewhere.
I am not targeting evangelist as such in this thread,but instead so called "social activist" in India who most of the time fight for issues that the masses cannot connect to. The social work done by these people often lean to propaganda work and less of social work aka manipulation of public perception using lies,dubious funds all posing as people who promote democratic values.
As to evangelist there are rumors of them funding separatist movements in North east India and in South India many have published articles,books considered blasphemous for Hindus.

In short subversive actions of social workers are things to keep watch and I really believe that we should emulate the Russians in muzzling these NGOs to prevent movements who might not be in national interest.
 

Raj30

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Re: Social Activist / NGO watch thread

Foreign Funding of NGOs | OPEN Magazine
Foreign Funding of NGOs


In 1976, at the height of the Emergency imposed by Indira Gandhi, India's Parliament enacted a piece of legislation called the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act. It prohibited political parties and 'organisations of a political nature', civil servants and judges, as also correspondents, columnists and editors/owners of registered newspapers and news broadcasting organisations— and even cartoonists—from receiving foreign contributions.

The very fact that the Act makes a specific reference to cartoonists should be hint enough of the establishment's paranoia vis-à-vis the 'invisible hand' of foreign powers back then. During a Rajya Sabha debate on the proposed bill on 9 March 1976, the term 'CIA' (Central Intelligence Agency) was mentioned at least 30 times by different legislators, while 'Lockheed Martin' (a military aerospace corporation) came up at least six times in the context of alleged instances of Americans pumping dollars into governments worldwide to buy influence during the Cold War.

The sentiment of the times was captured by the following statement made during that debate by Khurshid Alam Khan, father of India's present Minister for External Affairs: "The CIA's doings all over the world have very clearly indicated as to what could be done by foreign money and foreign interference."

In 2010, a different parliament, with opposition members who had not been imprisoned like those in 1976, unanimously voted to update the law by passing the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA). In fact, the Parliamentary Standing Committee that examined the bill was headed by the BJP's Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha Sushma Swaraj, and it had no major objections.

This time round, there was no talk of the CIA or Lockheed Martin. Instead, concern was focused on the increasingly influential role of Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) as institutions of civil society in India. The term 'NGO' found at least 40 mentions during the Rajya Sabha debate on the 2010 bill. The main concern of the Upper House appeared to be a lack of transparency among NGOs receiving foreign contributions. Hence the calls to strengthen the monitoring regime, although several MPs expressed worry that the new law would give the Centre too much discretionary power to crack down on dissenting NGOs.



+++
Worries about the 2010 Act's overreach were validated last year when the Government used it to clamp down on NGOs involved in anti-corruption and anti-nuclear protests. As part of that exercise, at least four NGOs were booked under the FCRA for allegedly diverting foreign funds to aid the organisation of protests against the Koodankulam nuclear power plant in Tamil Nadu. Their bank accounts were frozen. The protests, however, did not end.

Perhaps the most ironic use of the FCRA was when the Ministry of Home Affairs reportedly held back potential funding from the US-based Ford Foundation for the Mumbai-based Institute for Policy Research Studies (IPRS), a thinktank that runs Parliamentary Research Service (PRS).

Incubated at the Centre for Policy Research (CPR), a Delhi-based thinktank, PRS was spun off and institutionalised as IPRS in 2010 as a Section 25 non-profit company with a registered office in Mumbai. The main aim of PRS was to provide non-partisan legislative research services to parliamentarians, most of whom are starved of resources to conduct independent research required to hold the Executive accountable in Parliament. The service's popularity among MPs was obvious from the fact that several of them reportedly made individual representations to the Home Ministry against blocking foreign funds for its parent institute.

The tragedy of why Parliament does not have a public-funded service like PRS is a debate for another day, but choking the IPRS of foreign funds raises a question of hypocrisy since the Central Government routinely collaborates with a wide range of civil society thinktanks that receive funds from the West.

Let's start with the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER). According to its filings with the MHA, accessible on the FCRA website (FCRA), ICRIER has received over Rs 11.5 crore in foreign donations from a range of international institutions such as the Asian Development Bank, World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF) and Sasakawa Peace Foundation between 2007 and 2012. This council, currently headed by Dr Isher Judge Ahluwalia, wife of Planning Commission Vice-chairperson Dr Montek Singh Ahluwalia, appears to have a cosy relationship with the present establishment. When the Government was in a fix over the contentious General Anti- Avoidance Rules (GAAR) of taxation, for example, it delegated the task of ironing out its problems to a four-member committee headed by Dr Parthasarathi Shome, a well-known economic policy expert at ICRIER. There are several other projects on which the Council's faculty collaborates closely with the Government of India.

That thinktanks are well networked goes without saying. In fact, ICRIER and PRS were involved in quite a controversy during last year's Parliament vote on Foreign Direct Investment in India's multi-brand retail sector. As reported by India Today, ('Foreign Direct Instruction for our MPs?' 6 December 2012), IPRS had organised a 'close-door' meeting at Delhi's Constitution Club the day before the vote, where MPs were briefed on the benefits of FDI by Professor Arpita Mukherjee of ICRIER. Some MPs had publicly labelled this a 'lobbying' effort.

Another example of close collaboration between the Centre and a thinktank that gets significant foreign funding is the one between the Government and the CPR, headed by Dr Pratap Bhanu Mehta. Between 2007 and 2012, according to its filings with the MHA, this thinktank received foreign funds of over Rs 40.8 crore from a range of donors such as the Ford Foundation, Google Foundation, International Development Research Centre, Economic and Social Research Council, Hewlett Foundation and IKEA Social Initiative.

Environmental policy is another area in which foreign-funded thinktanks have a significant impact. The Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), headed by Sunita Narain with a governing board that has Ela Bhatt, BG Verghese, Dr MS Swaminathan and Dr NC Saxena among others, has received over Rs 67.7 crore in foreign funds between 2006 and 2012. The CSE's main donors, according to FCRA records, include the Denmark- based Dan Church Aid, Germany-based Evangelischer Entwicklungsdienst EV, Heinrich Boll Foundation and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency. Other donors include the Commission of European Communities and Government of India.

Going by the media coverage that CSE receives, it is safe to say that this thinktank has a profound influence on India's environmental policy. An indication of its ties with the Government is the fact that the two had their own 'side-event' at the recently concluded Doha talks on climate change.

The other green thinktank with generous foreign contributions that works closely with the Government is The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI). Consider this: the International Bioenergy Summit of 2012 held in New Delhi was organised by TERI and sponsored by the Department of Biotechnology (DBT). According to its FCRA filings, TERI, with a staff of over 900, has received about Rs 155.9 crore between 2006 and 2012 from a vast variety of donors.

In the field of health policy, one of the most influential thinktanks is the Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI). Since it was founded in 2006, it has received a total of Rs 219 crore in funds, its biggest foreign donor being the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and biggest Indian donor being the Government of India. Other foreign donors, according to FCRA filings, include the National Institutes of Health (of the US government), Welcome Trust, International Development Research Centre and MacArthur Foundation.

A public-private initiative, the PHFI is expected to shape India's approach to public health policy over the next decade. An example of its influence on India's health policy is the fact that its secretariat has been thanked and praised in a report of the High Level Expert Group constituted by the Planning Commission to frame a new policy on 'universal health coverage' for all Indians.

On matters of internet policy, the Centre for Internet and Society (CIS), a Bangalore-based thinktank focused on internet governance and intellectual property issues, has been a member of some key government committees, like the one under Justice AP Shah to study privacy laws in India. The CIS also receives foreign funding. According to its website, it has received over Rs 8.3 crore in funds, a significant portion of it from foreign donors like the UK-based Kusuma Trust, which was founded by Anurag Dikshit, an Indian businessman who made a fortune selling his stake in a popular online gambling website. He eventually donated most of his wealth to the Kusuma Trust, which funds various charities across the world.

In the human rights space, there is the famous Lawyers Collective, which, apart from its human rights advocacy, also provides legal aid to members of disadvantaged communities. Although this collective does not appear to work all that closely with the Government, it is interesting to note that it was founded by Indira Jaising, who is currently one of the Centre's Additional Solicitor Generals. Since 2006, according to its FCRA filings, the organisation has received around Rs 21.8 crore in foreign funds from the Ford, Levi Strauss and Open Society foundations and from the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, among others.

Another thinktank that deserves a mention is the Centre for Civil Society (CCS), which was founded by Dr Parth J Shah and has a 'Board of Scholars' with Isher Judge Ahluwalia, Jagdish Bhagwati, Lord Meghnad Desai and Swaminathan Anklesaria Aiyar, among others, as members. While it is not clear from its website whether it works closely with the Government, it was ranked 51st in a recent global survey of thinktanks by University of Pennsylvania. According to a CCS press release, these rankings were 'based on not just our research and analysis, but also on our engagement with policy makers and ability to influence policy decisions'. The CCS's rank was quite a surprise, given its modest resources. According to its FCRA filings, between 2006 and 2011, it received about Rs 6.2 crore from foreign donors such as the Atlas Economic Research Foundation, John Templeton Foundation and International Policy Network. As per its audited accounts, available on its website, donations from Indian donors were equally modest.

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The above examples demonstrate the influence of foreign funded thinktanks on almost every major aspect of Indian policy today, be it economic or environmental, related to public health or internet governance.

Is this good or bad for India as a country? Given that most sectors of the economy are now open to foreign investment, does it make sense to regulate and restrict foreign funds for such thinktanks under laws like the FCRA?

The answer depends on what Indian society expects of them. Do we expect them to be completely independent of donors in their views? Would an organisation like the CSE still get foreign funds from European donors if it were to readily welcome genetically modified (GM) food in India? In such circumstances, how independent should we expect these thinktanks to be in the arena of policy?

Absolute objectivity—or at a least public perception of it—is an absolute myth. No matter who funds a thinktank, be it foreigners or Indians, it is impossible to be seen as such. The more pressing issue is of transparency. Are Indian policymakers aware of the details of foreign funds received by these thinktanks?

Take, for example, a recent Parliamentary Standing Committee report that expressed serious reservations about GM food. The Committee repeatedly quotes with approval the deposition of Dr Vandana Shiva against GM food. A little-known fact about Dr Shiva is that her organisation, Navdanya, according to its FCRA filings, has received a total of Rs 16.7 crore between 2006 and 2012 in foreign donations from mainly European organisations (some of which also contribute to the CSE) like Bread for the World, Diakonie Emergency Aid, Hivos Foundation, Evangelischer Entwicklungsdienst EV, RSF Innovations in Social Finance, and even from the European Union itself.

Would a Parliamentary Standing Committee headed by an MP of the CPM, a party that is always suspicious of the 'foreign hand', show the same deference to Dr Shiva's views if its members knew of Navdanya's European donors, several of which are also Christian churches?

In an op-ed article in The Indian Express ('Do not disagree', 29 February 2012), Dr Pratap Bhanu Mehta while criticising the FCRA, states, 'Of course, NGOs should be transparent and accountable in terms of their sources of funding.' Yet, the CPR, of which Dr Mehta is president, only discloses the names of its donors in its annual report, and that too without revealing the amounts received from each. Similarly, Navdanya offers no information on either of its websites, Indian and Italian (navdanyainternational.it), on any of its funding. Other thinktanks like the PHFI and CIS offer a more detailed breakup of their different sources of funding, while some like the CSE and CCS provide only a roll of donor names and a figure of cumulative funding with no breakup of individual contributions. So, while these thinktanks are forced to disclose their foreign funding sources to the MHA under the FCRA, why do they not volunteer exhaustive information on their own websites?

An amusing facet of this is that the Central Government and Corporate India are more transparent (even if forced to be) than these civil society institutions, thanks to the Right to Information Act, 2005, and the extensive disclosure requirements under the Companies Act, 1956. Of companies in particular, information is accessible over the internet on the MCA21 website of the Ministry of Corporate Affairs. This contrast is amusing because some of these thinktanks never tire of demanding transparency of the State and corporate sector.

For several thinktanks, it is often hard to figure out something as basic as the nature of the legal entity through which they conduct their activities. Are they societies, associations or trusts? More pertinently, why is the Government not pushing for a stricter transparency regime? A major stumbling block may be the fact that these thinktanks are set up under state laws and it is difficult for the Central Government to coordinate a nationwide transparency regime. However, given that most are beneficiaries of income tax exemptions, it may be possible for the Centre to use the Income Tax Act to demand comprehensive disclosures. Since they enjoy tax benefits, they might also qualify as 'public authorities' under the Right To Information Act, 2005.

Another reason that disclosure of funding is important is to inform the analysis of people who usually see NGOs as selfless entities dedicated to nothing but a higher cause. While this may be true of some NGOs, many leaders of these set-ups have personal stakes in ensuring certain outcomes. After all, future donor grants often depend on sustaining one's influence in the policy space. Many of the institutions described in this article have been regular recipients of funds from the same sources year after year.

Another question is the volume of funds coming in and where it will leave India's public institutions that were originally meant to aid policymaking with unbiased intellectual inputs. How are cash-strapped Indian universities to compete with these well-funded thinktanks? Government-run institutions of higher learning are supposed to have an inbuilt guarantee of academic independence, but would their scholarly voices be drowned out by those backed by bigger resources?

Also, given the frequency with which a few foreign funders appear on donor lists, is it time to worry about their influence on Indian policies? After all, generous funding lets the faculty of these thinktanks jetset around the world to attend conferences, organise seminars in India and network with officials at a level that most public universities cannot afford. How does this impact our civil society discourse? Should Parliament limit the amount that a single foreign entity can donate, or are we better off sticking to a regulatory regime that only insists on a set of disclosure norms?

On a concluding note, let us not forget that a large part of the credit for the RTI Act of 2005—the country's most empowering piece of legislation since the Constitution of 1950—goes to the advocacy efforts of the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan (MKSS), a farmers group in Rajasthan that does not accept institutional funding from either India or overseas. Bank interest on its corpus and donations by individuals are the MKSS's only sources of funding. Together, the two gave it Rs 30 lakh for the financial year 2010-11, details of which are available on its website.
 

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