Context:
- The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026 was introduced in Lok Sabha but deferred amid opposition concerns.
- The Bill seeks to tighten regulation of NGOs receiving foreign funds.
Key Highlights:
- Government Initiative / Policy Details
- Amends the FCRA Act, 2010, which regulates foreign funding to NGOs.
- Proposes creation of a ‘Designated Authority’ to manage assets of NGOs whose registration is suspended/cancelled.
- Expands definition of ‘key functionary’, increasing accountability.
- Requires prior Central Government approval before any investigation into FCRA violations.
- Data / Institutional Details
- Around 16,000+ NGOs registered under FCRA.
- Annual foreign funding inflow: approx. ₹22,000 crore.
- Since 2015, 18,000+ NGOs lost registration.
- As of April 2026, about 14,965 NGOs remain active.
- Stakeholders
- NGOs, civil society organizations, Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), State governments, minority institutions.
- Significance / Concerns
- Aims to ensure national security, transparency, and accountability.
- However, raises concerns of executive overreach and centralisation of power.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- FCRA Act, 2010:
- Regulates foreign contributions to individuals/NGOs.
- Ensures funds do not affect sovereignty, public interest, or security.
- History:
- Originally enacted in 1976, replaced in 2010.
- Amended in 2016, 2018, 2020.
- Registration Requirement:
- NGOs must register with MHA to receive foreign funds.
- Designated Authority (Proposed):
- Can manage, transfer, or sell NGO assets.
- Has powers equivalent to a civil court.
- Key Functionary:
- Includes trustees, directors, office bearers responsible for compliance.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Concerns and Criticism
- Executive Overreach:
- Central government gains excessive control over NGOs.
- Federalism Issues:
- Requirement of central approval for investigation limits State autonomy.
- Chilling Effect on Civil Society:
- Fear of harassment or arbitrary cancellation may restrict NGO functioning.
- Asset Seizure Concerns:
- Designated authority can transfer/sell NGO assets, raising issues of property rights and misuse.
- Burden of Proof Shift:
- Broader liability makes multiple functionaries accountable, even indirectly.
- Impact on Minority & Rights-based Organizations:
- Allegations of targeted scrutiny and interference.
- Government Justification
- Prevent misuse of funds for anti-national activities.
- Enhance financial transparency and accountability.
- Address legal gaps in asset management post-cancellation.
- Governance & Security Link
- Balancing national security concerns with democratic freedoms.
- Ensuring foreign influence does not distort policy or social harmony.
- Way Forward
- Ensure clear safeguards against misuse of authority.
- Maintain judicial oversight and transparency in decision-making.
- Protect legitimate NGO activities and democratic space.
- Strengthen compliance mechanisms instead of excessive control.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS Paper 2: Polity, Governance, Civil Society, Federalism
- GS Paper 3: Internal Security (Foreign Funding Regulation)
- Prelims: FCRA provisions, Amendments, NGO regulation
