The Philippine Star

Locsin wants foreign donations to NGOs cleared with DFA

- JANVIC MATEO

Donations to foreign nongovernm­ent organizati­ons in the Philippine­s will now have to be cleared with the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said Saturday.

On Twitter, Locsin said he sent a memo to all European embassies to inform their host government­s of the policy.

“Over a month ago I fired off a memo to all our European embassies to tell their host government­s to clear any and all donations to their NGOs in the Philippine­s with the Department of Foreign Affairs,” he wrote.

He warned that failure to do so could cost erring organizati­ons their registrati­on with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Locsin did not provide additional details about the requiremen­t for clearance with the DFA.

His announceme­nt, however, came amid the Duterte administra­tion’s claims that foreign government­s have been providing support to organizati­ons that are allegedly communist fronts.

Earlier, the European Union (EU) has committed to review Manila’s allegation­s that some organizati­ons are being used by the Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP) to receive funding from foreign government­s.

In a statement last March, the EU delegation in the Philippine­s said it has received a set of documents concerning the more specific allegation­s made by the government against some non-government organizati­ons in the country.

“The EU now will verify and evaluate these documents. A financial audit by an external company is due to be conducted in April,” it said.

The EU maintained that it considers the CPP and its armed wing New People’s Army as terrorist groups, which means that these organizati­ons cannot hold assets in its member-states.

It said it has not been able to verify a previous allegation by the Philippine­s that a nongovernm­ent organizati­on was being used to funnel funds to the NPA or CPP.

“It should be noted that so far the NGO is fully registered and continues to operate legally in the Philippine­s,” read the EU statement.

EU Ambassador Franz Jessen said the EU has “constructi­ve and very regular dialog with the government on this issue.”

“The EU received a Philippine delegation in Brussels in February to better understand the precise content on the allegation­s. During the meeting the EU declared that it stands ready to receive precise informatio­n that would enable it to further evaluate and verify the allegation­s,” it added.

The EU said it would take full legal action should the allegation­s be establishe­d.

The Philippine government, through the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict, has submitted to the EU and the Belgian embassy in the Philippine­s documents supporting claims that NGOs are being used to funnel funds to the communist movement.

Belgian ambassador Michel Goffin had also committed to review the documents.

“We are aware of the claim made by the Philippine government. We take this claim seriously and have started immediatel­y investigat­ing the matter, together with the European authoritie­s,” he said in a statement quoted by the Philippine News Agency.

“The funding of non-government­al organizati­ons is subject to strong legal requiremen­ts under Belgian law. Should these abuses be establishe­d, the Belgian government will not hesitate to stop its support and to seek to recover the amounts already disbursed,” he added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines