New Delhi: The Supreme Court has turned down a plea for interim relief to allow the continuation of Foreign Contribution Regulation Act licenses which were valid until the end of September 30, 2021, of non-governmental organisations.
The Union government told the apex court that registrations of 11,594 NGOs, which applied within the cut-off date, have been extended.
Taking note of Solicitor General Tushar Mehta’s submission, a bench headed by Justice A.M. Khanwilkar refused to pass an interim direction that FCRA registrations of all organisations that were valid as on September 30 last year ought to be continued until further orders.
The bench, also comprising Justices Dinesh Maheshwari and C.T. Ravikumar, said the petitioners are free to make representation to the concerned authorities which may be considered on its merits in accordance with law.
The FCRA registration is mandatory for any association and NGO to receive foreign funding.
The apex court, which is seized of a plea filed by a US-based NGO seeking quashing of the Union government’s decision by which 5,789 entities lost their FCRA registration, was dealing with arguments regarding interim relief in the matter.
The bench said the petition would be listed after the judgement is pronounced on a batch of pleas, including those which have raised issues concerning the Foreign Contribution Regulation (Amendment) Act, 2020.
During the arguments, the bench asked Mehta whether the names of those who have applied for FCRA registration are displayed online in the public domain.
Mehta said he doesn’t have instruction regarding this. He said the petitioner organisation is based in Houston.
‘I don’t know what is the purpose of this PIL. Something is amiss’, the SG said, according to LiveLaw.
Senior advocate Sanjay Hegde, appearing for the petitioners, said they have the information which is available in public domain as per which there are around 6,000 NGOs whose registrations have not been extended for whatever reasons.
The bench told Hegde that the Solicitor General has submitted that those who have applied, their registration has been extended.
“If those 6,000 NGOs have chosen not to apply for registration, that means they do not want to continue in the present regime,” the bench observed.
“Please forget Houston-based,” Hegde said.
When Hegde said the court could make clear that for next two weeks or so, people can apply, the bench said, “That we will not grant here.”
The bench said the petitioners can make representation before the authorities which may be considered by them.
There were 22,762 FCRA-registered organisations till December 31, 2021. On January 1, the number came down to 16,829. These are considered “live” organisations.
The officials had said the FCRA licences of 18,778 organisations were expiring between September 29, 2020 and December 31, 2021.
Out of them, as many as 12,989 organisations have applied for renewal of the FCRA licence between September 30, 2020 and December 31, 2021.
Since 5,789 organisations did not apply for the renewal of the FCRA licence, they were deemed to have ceased to be registered organisations, an official had said.
In addition to them, renewal application of 179 organisations were also rejected by the Union home ministry. The decision has been criticised by several quarters, especially since the Missionaries of Charity, set up by Mother Teresa, had its renewal appeal rejected forcing it to suspend operations for a while.
“While some NGOs may be governed by foreign agendas, many of them have tried to provide localised safety net to the poor. Can all of them be tarred with the same brush without a chance to respond? Many of them have worked at the grassroots with the poor to raise their consciousness about their rights which in a democracy should be lauded since it deepens democratisation and checks authoritarianism of the rulers of the day. But the rulers don’t want that since they see it as a check on their agenda,” professor Arun Kumar wrote for The Wire.
(With PTI inputs)