advertisement
With the government cracking the whip on NGOs for alleged violation of foreign funding rules, the Supreme Court has also taken a serious view of mushrooming of about 30 lakh such bodies across the country and many of them not filing Income Tax returns for years.
The apex court had ordered CBI to probe into charges of misappropriation of funds by many NGOs. The court wants to know if there was any regulatory body to look into the problem.
“This is a major problem. These are mind-boggling figures,” a bench headed by Chief Justice TS Thakur said, adding that “lakhs of societies are getting money from all over the world”.
“Is there any recommendation by the Law Commission to frame legislations for effective regulation and transparency in the funding of such NGOs. Whatever has happened in the past, like siphoning of money etc, is difficult to go into, but for the future, transparency has to be there,” the bench, also comprising Justice AM Khanwilkar, said while appointing senior advocate Rakesh Dwivedi as amicus to assist the court in the matter.
Meanwhile, the CBI counsel filed several reports, documents and CDs in compliance with the court’s earlier orders, giving the number of NGOs registered in various states, which showed Maharashtra had over five lakh voluntary bodies, Bihar 61,000 and Assam 97,000.
CBI also told the court that governments of Karnataka, Odisha and Telangana have still not complied with its earlier order.
Petitioner advocate ML Sharma sought time to make his submissions, after which the bench posted the matter for 23 September.
CBI had in September last year informed the apex court that less than ten percent of over 30 lakh NGOs functioning across the country had submitted their returns or balance sheets and other financial details to the authorities.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)