FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026 – Regulation of Foreign Funding

  • Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026 introduced in Lok Sabha on 25 March 2026 by Ministry of Home Affairs to tighten control over foreign-funded NGOs and assets.

Issue in Brief

  • Bill proposes creation of a designated authority to seize, manage, and dispose assets of NGOs whose FCRA registration is cancelled, surrendered, or ceased.
  • Aims to enhance transparency, accountability, and national security safeguards, but raises concerns over executive overreach and property rights.

Relevance

  • GS II (Polity & Governance): FCRA, NGO regulation, Article 19(1)(c), Article 300A.
  • GS II (IR): Foreign funding and sovereignty.
  • GS IV (Ethics): Transparency vs civil society autonomy.

Practice Questions

  • Q1. Regulation of foreign funding is necessary but must balance democratic freedoms. Critically analyse. (250 words)
  • Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010 regulates acceptance and utilisation of foreign contributions to prevent threats to sovereignty, public order, and national interest.
  • Came into force 1 May 2011; amended in 2016, 2018, and 2020 to tighten compliance norms.
  • Currently ~16,000 NGOs registered, receiving ~22,000 crore annually in foreign contributions.
  • Establishment of designated authority to take control of foreign-funded assets upon cancellation or surrender of licence.
  • Provides for vesting (transfer) of assets created from foreign contributions to government-controlled authority.
  • Introduces prior Central Government approval for initiating investigations, centralising enforcement oversight.
1. Governance & Transparency
  • Government rationale: Prevent misuse of foreign funds for activities against national interest, including illegal conversions and financial irregularities.
  • Centralised asset management aims to ensure proper utilisation of funds and prevent diversion after licence cancellation.
2. Constitutional Concerns
  • Article 300A (Right to Property): Mandatory asset vesting without clear safeguards raises concerns about fairness, compensation, and due process.
  • Article 14 (Equality before law): Requirement of prior government approval for investigation may lead to selective enforcement and arbitrariness.
3. Delegated Legislation Issue
  • Bill criticised for excessive delegation, leaving key aspects (asset disposal, timelines, appeals) to executive rule-making, weakening legislative oversight.
4. Civil Society Impact
  • Increased regulatory control may create compliance burden and operational uncertainty for NGOs, especially in development, health, and education sectors.
  • Risk of shrinking civic space, affecting role of NGOs in governance and welfare delivery.
  • Potential misuse of powers for targeting dissenting organisations, raising concerns about democratic freedoms.
  • Lack of clear procedural safeguards and independent appellate mechanisms.
  • Centralisation may reduce autonomy of civil society institutions.
  • Clearly define procedural safeguards, timelines, and compensation mechanisms for asset vesting.
  • Establish independent appellate authority to ensure fairness and accountability.
  • Balance national security concerns with freedom of association (Article 19(1)(c)).
  • Ensure transparency in enforcement to prevent selective or arbitrary application.
  • FCRA regulates foreign contribution and foreign hospitality.
  • NGOs must obtain FCRA registration from Ministry of Home Affairs.
  • FCRA amended multiple times (2016, 2018, 2020, 2026) to tighten norms.

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