Delhi HC seeks Govt’s response on Oxfam India’s plea against non-renewal of FCRA registration

Centre has shut down all available options for Oxfam India to seek renewal of their registration

Centre has shut down all available options for Oxfam India to seek renewal of their registration
Centre has shut down all available options for Oxfam India to seek renewal of their registration

The Centre refused to renew Oxfam India’s registration in December 2021

The Delhi High Court sought the Union government’s response to a plea filed by Oxfam India – a non-profit organization – challenging the government’s decision not renewing its registration under the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA).

The MHA was directed by a single-judge bench of Justice Pratibha M Singh to file a response within four weeks’ time. The bench listed the matter for the next hearing in April.

Representing the MGA, Additional Solicitor General (ASG) Chetan Sharma stated that the government had sufficient material against the NGO, and the decision to suspend its FCRA was based on the same.

Oxfam India was represented by Senior Advocate Ramesh Singh, who stated that they are not being allowed by the government to use Rs.21 crore, which was in their account before the suspension of FCRA registration.

The government had refused to renew Oxfam’s registration in December 2021. A revision application was filed against the order in January 2022, and the petitioner had come to court after months of no decision from the government.

In November 11, 2022, the High Court had ordered the Centre to decide the status of the application in six weeks’ time. The application was then rejected by the MHA through an order passed on December 1 the same year.

Advocate Prabhsahay Kaur, who had moved NGO’s plea argued that by virtue of the dismissal of the petitioners application, the Centre has shut down all available options for them to seek renewal of their registration, amounting to depreciating their work in India.

The plea read: “Rejection of the petitioner’s renewal has not only impacted the petitioner, but also adversely affected, and continues to affect on each day, multiple social projects running in 16 states, impacting 1 lakhs of people in the country, such as flood relief, COVID-19 relief, women support centres, providing nutritious meals to underprivileged children, capacity building and training workshops for multiple stakeholders, etc.”

Oxfam has reported to the court that due to the non-renewal of their FCRA license they were forced to shut down seven regional offices and had to lay off nearly 180 of its 252 employees in the country.

[With Inputs from IANS]

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