China Daily (Hong Kong)

NPO rules expected in 2014

- By HE DAN hedan@chinadaily.com.cn

The long-awaited rules for foreign nonprofit organizati­ons that want to register on the Chinese mainland are expected to be released next year, a senior official from the Ministry of Civil Affairs said.

A dual administra­tive system will be enforced for foreign NPOs, although China has simplified the registrati­on process for a limited number of domestic social organizati­ons.

“The government will carry out registrati­on work for the representa­tive offices of overseas non-government­al organizati­ons and provide guidance to them on how to operate legally,” said Li Liguo, minister of civil affairs, in a keynote speech on the ministry’s work plan in 2014 at a meeting in Beijing over the weekend.

Yu Yonglong, who is in charge of foreign-NPO administra­tion at the ministry, told China Daily that the State Council, China’s Cabinet, is reviewing three amended regulation­s on NPOs.

There are three management regulation­s for China’s three types of NPOs — foundation­s, non-enterprise work units and social associatio­ns. While regulation­s on foundation­s briefly stipulate that expatriate­s can establish foundation­s in China, and foreign foundation­s can set up representa­tive offices on the Chinese mainland, they do not stipulate the criteria for foreign applicants.

Yu said the amendment on social associatio­ns is expected to be released first, followed by the revised regulation­s on foundation­s and non- enterprise work units.

Twenty-six overseas foundation­s have registered their representa­tive offices with the ministry. The ministry’s annual check showed that these foundation­s spent more than 1 billion yuan ($165 million) on about 470 philanthro­pic programs in fi elds like technology, education and culture in 2012.

“Practices proved that registrati­on can protect bilateral communicat­ion and cooperatio­n. It is also a signifi cant way to strengthen supervisio­ns on foreign NPOs’ activities in China,” Yu said. “Registrati­on is a vital part of lawbased

The government will carry out registrati­on work for the representa­tive offices of overseas non-government­al organizati­ons and provide guidance to them on how to operate legally.” LI LIGUO MINISTER OF CIVIL AFFAIRS

administra­tion.”

He said that the dual administra­tion system will apply to the overseas NPOs’ branches and offices in China as required by the State Council in its plan for the transforma­tion of government functions.

In other words, foreign NPOs will have to be affiliated with a government­al agency or public institutio­n before they can register with civil affairs authoritie­s, he said.

The Ministry of Civil Affairs will be responsibl­e for registrati­on, financial auditing, annual checks and informatio­n disclosure related to foreign NPOs, while the NPOs’ supervisor­y agency will oversee their daily operations.

Wang Ming, president of the Nongovernm­ental Organizati­on Research Institute at Tsinghua University, urged the government to speed up its efforts to stipulate the dos and don’ts for internatio­nal NPOs and foreigners who plan to establish NPOs in China.

He said the vast majority of foreign NPOs either registered as for-profit organizati­ons or stay unregister­ed.

“There are tax issues for those registered with the commercial authoritie­s as companies, while those that are unregister­ed face legal risks,” he said.

Huang Haoming, vicechairm­an of the China Associatio­n for NGO Cooperatio­n, welcomed the government’s moves, given that more NPOs are entering China thanks to the country’s opening-up.

Given that China has gone through dramatic changes socially and economical­ly in the last three decades, the focuses of overseas NPOs on China has changed, he said.

“In the past, China was simply a recipient of aid, but now overseas NPOs increasing­ly look for a new model of cooperatio­n with China,” he said.

“Overseas NPOs may continue their involvemen­t in traditiona­l fields such as rural developmen­t, poverty alleviatio­n and environmen­tal protection, while more will be interested in labor rights, human rights and other areas,” he said.

Overseas NPOs will also want to assume more of an advocacy role to influence the decision- makers for social movements instead of providing direct assistance to the needy, he added.

More than 511,000 registered civil society organizati­ons were in China by the end of the third quarter of 2013, the ministry said.

Direct registrati­on for the limited scope of NPOs has been piloted in 26 provinces and five municipali­ties, which enabled more than 19,000 NPOs register directly with the civil affairs department­s, abandoning pre-examinatio­n and approval by other regulators.

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