nongovernment organizations

Locsin defends move to monitor foreign funding for NGOs

Reuters

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Locsin defends move to monitor foreign funding for NGOs

DEFENSE. The Philippines' Foreign Secretary Teodoro 'Teddyboy' Locsin Jr attends the 12th Asia-Europe Meeting Summit and EU-ASEAN Leaders' Meeting in Brussels, Belgium, on October 18, 2018.

File photo from Malacañang

'It is how a responsible government monitors where money comes from and goes to in the face of insurgent and terrorist-secessionist threats,' says Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr

The Philippines’ top diplomat on Wednesday, February 24, defended a new order requiring all international aid for non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to be cleared with the foreign ministry, saying the aim was to stamp out funding for terrorism.

“It doesn’t affect legit NGOs,” Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr said on Twitter.

“It is how a responsible government monitors where money comes from and goes to in the face of insurgent and terrorist-secessionist threats.”

Successive Philippine governments have for decades fought low-level communist and separatist rebellions, but the rise of Islamic State-inspired local extremism and the intensity of attacks has caused alarm.

But NGOs said the requirement, which was conveyed to diplomatic missions on February 5, might lead to a reduction in funding and threaten their survival.

The Philippines has a vibrant NGO sector, with 60,000 registered aid groups, according to the World Association of Non-Governmental Organizations, promoting the interests of farmers, women, and indigenous people, among many others.

Susan Ople, who heads an NGO fighting human trafficking, said the policy needs to be clarified.

“We’d like to know how to navigate these changing waters,” Ople told Reuters. “If Secretary Locsin said there is nothing to fear, let us be transparent and with each other.”

She hoped the policy would not interrupt assistance to long-standing NGOs as the coronavirus pandemic had already made it harder to secure funding.

Milwida Guevara, who heads the Synergeia Foundation, which works to improve quality of basic education, said a system by which the government regulates foreign funding was already in place.

“Why can’t they make the system work instead of making it very hard for NGOs who are doing many of the functions this government should be doing,” said Guevara, a former finance ministry undersecretary. – Rappler.com

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