Anti-CAA propagandist Harsh Mander's FCRA license suspended by MHA

Section 3(1)(b) of the FCRA states that no foreign contribution shall be accepted by any correspondent, columnist, cartoonist, editor, owner, printer, or publisher of a registered newspaper.

NewsBharati    21-Jun-2023 17:07:56 PM
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New Delhi, Jun 21: The Union Home Ministry has suspended the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) license of the autonomous think tank Centre for Equity Studies (CES). The Ministry said that CES co-founder activist-author Harsh Mander, a columnist for various publications, violated the provisions of the Act. With its FCRA license suspended for 180 days, CES will be unable to get fresh foreign contributions or utilize the existing donations without clearance from the Home Ministry.
 

Harsh Mander 
 
Section 3(1)(b) of the FCRA states that no foreign contribution shall be accepted by any correspondent, columnist, cartoonist, editor, owner, printer, or publisher of a registered newspaper. The publications listed by the Home Ministry’s order issued on June 14 include The Indian Express, The Hindu, The Wire, the Hindustan Times, The Quint, and Scroll. Scroll quoted the order as saying, “Harsh Mander, trustee, has accepted foreign contribution amounting to Rs 12,64,671 during the financial year 2011-’12 to 2017-’18 as professional receipts/ payments from the FCRA account of the association [Centre for Equity Studies] … This is in violation of Sections 3 and 8 of the Act and conditions of registration under Section 12(4)(a)(vi) of the Act.”
 
 
 
Section 8 states that any foreign contribution received under the Act shall be utilized only for the purposes for which the contribution has been received. Section 12(4)(a)(vi) says that a person registered under the Act should not use the foreign contribution for personal gains or divert it for undesirable purposes. The order further cited the report Labouring Lives: Hunger and Despair Amid Lockdown (2020) to say that CES used its foreign contributions to publish reports written by non-FCRA associations. The report was produced jointly by Delhi Research Group and Karwan-E-Mohabbat, a campaign for survivors of hate crimes run by Harsh, with the support of the German foundation Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung.
 
 
The Home Ministry rationalized this with the argument that “Utilisation of foreign contribution for such purposes is likely to prejudicially affect the sovereignty and integrity of India.”