China passes law tightening controls on foreign NGOs

Published April 29, 2016
Han Yunhong, an official from the Public Security Bureau listens to questions during a press conference about a law regulating overseas non-governmental organizations held at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Thursday, April 28, 2016. China passed a much-debated law on foreign non-governmental organizations on Thursday in a move in which Beijing says would better serve the groups but critics are concerned would further restrict them by subjecting them to close police supervision. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan
Han Yunhong, an official from the Public Security Bureau listens to questions during a press conference about a law regulating overseas non-governmental organizations held at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Thursday, April 28, 2016. China passed a much-debated law on foreign non-governmental organizations on Thursday in a move in which Beijing says would better serve the groups but critics are concerned would further restrict them by subjecting them to close police supervision. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan

BEIJING: China passed a law on Thursday tightening controls over foreign non-governmental organisations by subjecting them to close police supervision, a move officials say will help the groups but critics charge is the latest attempt by authorities to clamp down on perceived threats to the ruling Communist Party’s control.

The law, adopted by the national legislature, states that foreign NGOs must not endanger China’s national security and ethnic unity. It grants police the power to question NGO administrators, search residences and facilities and seize files and equipment.

The move to pass such a law has drawn criticism from US and European officials and business and academic organisations. They are concerned it will severely restrict the operations of a wide range of groups, further limiting the growth of civil society in China and hindering exchanges between China and the rest of the world.

The law includes a clause that allows police to blacklist “unwelcome” groups and prevent them from operating in the country. Groups can be blacklisted if they commit violations ranging from illegally obtaining unspecified state secrets to “spreading rumours, slandering or otherwise expressing or disseminating harmful information that endangers state security.”

The Network of Chinese Human Rights Defenders denounced the law as “draconian,” saying it allows police to exercise “daily supervision and monitoring” of foreign NGOs.

The law will have “a profoundly detrimental impact on civil society in China,” it said.The group said the most alarming aspects include the ability of police to end foreign NGO-organised activities that they deem to “endanger national security,” a term that is not clearly defined.

Police will also be able to more closely monitor foreign organizations’ funding sources and expenses, “which has the chilling effect of intimidation,” the group said.

Published in Dawn, April 29th, 2016

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