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Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Bangalore's First 'Swachh Bharat' CSR Drive Initiated by Yatragenie.com (Paxterra) - Cleaning up Outer Ring Road From Sarjapur to Marathahalli Junction

BANGALORE, September 22, 2014 /PRNewswire/ --

Yatragenie.com, a bus-ticketing portal from Paxterra Software Solutions Pvt Ltd, believes in celebrating their success by sharing it with all those around and committed to Corporate Social Responsibility.

To support the 'Clean India' initiative of our Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi ji, Paxterra employees have volunteered to clean Bangalore Outer Ring Road, Sarjapur intersection to Marathahalli junction on 18 September from 7 AM to 12 noon.

About 800 employees of the company will participate in the event in the presence of honorable guests - Ms. Shanthakumari (Mayor of Bangalore City), Mr. Arvind Limbavali (Mahadevapura MLA) and Ms. Varalakshmi J (Councilor - Ward No 86).

Talking about the initiative, Mr Renil Komitla, President & CEO thanked our Prime Minister for bringing in such an initiative which will transform India. He reminded us of the saying: "You must be the change you wish to see in the world - Mahatma Gandhi," and requested every citizen of India to take the lead and be the change.

About Yatragenie.com

Yatragenie.com is a B2C online portal from Paxterra Solutions, offering best-priced bus tickets with a wide choice of 200+ operators covering most of the major Indian cities. They are poised to expand the SaaS services into airlines, hotels and logistics management by end of the fiscal year, 2014-15.

About Paxterra Software Solutions Pvt Ltd

Paxterra Software Solutions Pvt Ltd is one of the fast growing software companies with a workforce of 800 employees, most of them working from Bangalore headquarters with other offices in San Jose, California and Richardson, Texas. The company was founded by Mr. Renil Komitla (President and CEO) in 2008, with a strong portfolio of customer engagements from telecom, manufacturing, semiconductors, transportation, insurance, retail, oil and gas, sports, travel and tourism, hospitality, banking and entertainment industries.

For more information, visit www.paxterrasolutions.com.

Media Contact: Krishna Naik, manav@paxterrasolutions.com, +91-9035028039, Paxterra Software Solutions Pvt Limited - (Yatragenie.com)

SOURCE Yatragenie.com

Source: http://www.prnewswire.co.in/news-releases/bangalores-first-swachh-bharat-csr-drive-initiated-by-yatrageniecom-paxterra---cleaning-up-outer-ring-road-from-sarjapur-to-marathahalli-junction-275976161.html

ATTACK OF THE NON GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS – NGOs

by Tom DeWeese
September 23, 2014
NewsWithViews.com

Who are these None governmental Organizations (NGOs) shock troops and how do they operate? It’s a vast matrix composed of both the private NGO groups and representatives of the UN and representatives of a large number of US federal agencies – all working together behind the scenes, quietly making policy for the rest of us. And when I attempt to expose them, they vehemently deny there is any collusion – “pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.” Sorry, the truth is – this is how it works. No vote. No public input. Just the enforcement of an agenda through the willing participation of private groups and government officials who forgot their purpose was to represent, not dictate to us. The NGOs are the storm troopers necessary to make it all happen. The article below was first published in 2008, has been included in the American Policy Center’s “Stop Agenda 21 Action Kit,” and most currently the subject of one of APC’s Free monthly stop Agenda 21 instructional webinars – available in the webinar archives on the APC website, www.americanpolicy.org. Tom DeWeese

One rarely hears of it. Few elected officials raise an eyebrow. The media makes no mention of it. But power is slowly slipping away from our elected representatives. In much the same way Mao Tse tung had his Red Guards, so the UN has its NGOs. They may well be your masters of tomorrow, and you don’t even know who or what they are.

There are, in fact, two parallel, complimentary forces at work in the world, working together to advance the global Sustainable Development agenda, ultimately leading toward UN global governance. Those two forces are the UN itself and non-governmental organizations (NGOs.)

Beginning with the United Nations, the infrastructure pushing theSustainable Development agenda is a vast, international matrix. At the top of the heap is the United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP).

Created in 1973 by the UN General Assembly, the UNEP is the catalyst through which the global environmental agenda is implemented. Virtually all of the international environmental programs and policy changes that have occurred globally in the past three decades are the result of UNEP efforts.
But the UNEP doesn’t operate on its own. Influencing it and helping to write policy are thousands of non-governmental organizations (NGOs). These are private groups which seek to implement a specific political agenda. Through the UN infrastructure, particularly through the UNEP, they have great power.

The phrase “non-governmental organization” came into use with the establishment of the United Nations Organization in 1945 with provisions in Article 71 of Chapter 10 of the United Nations Charter. The term describes a consultative role for organizations that are neither government nor member states of the UN.

NGOs are not just any private group hoping to influence policy. True NGOs are officially sanctioned by the United Nations. Such status was created by UN Resolution 1296 in 1948, giving NGOs official “Consultative” status to the UN. That means they can not only sit in on international meetings, but can actively participate in creating policy, right along side government representatives.

There are numerous classifications of NGO’s. The two most common are “Operational” and “Advocacy.” Operational NGOs are involved with designing and implementing specific projects such as feeding the hungry or organizing relief projects. These groups can be religious or secular. They can be community-based, national or international. The International Red Cross falls under the category of an operational NGO.

Advocacy NGOs are promoting a specific political agenda. They lobby government bodies, use the news media and organize activist-oriented events, all designed to raise awareness and apply pressure to promote their causes which include environmental issues, human rights, poverty, education, children, drinking water, and population control – to name a few. Amnesty International is the largest human rights advocacy NGO in the world. Organized globally, it has more than 1.8 million members, supporters and subscribers in over 150 countries.

Today these NGOs have power nearly equal to member nations when it comes to writing U.N. policy. Just as civil service bureaucrats provide the infrastructure for government operation, so to do NGOs provide such infrastructure for the U.N. In fact, most U.N. policy is first debated and then written by the NGOs and presented to national government officials at international meetings for approval and ratification. It is through this process that the individual political agendas of the NGO groups enter the international political arena.

The policies sometimes come in the form of international treaties or simply as policy guidelines. Once the documents are presented to and accepted by representatives of member states and world leaders, obscure political agendas of private organizations suddenly become international policy, and are then adopted as national and local laws by U.N. member states. Through this very system, Sustainable Development has grown from a collection of ideas and wish lists of a wide variety of private organizations to become the most widely implemented tool in the U.N.’s quest for global governance.

The three most powerful organizations influencing UNEP policy are three international NGOs. They are the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the International Union for Conservation and Nature (IUCN). These three groups provide the philosophy, objectives and methodology for the international environmental agenda through a series of official reports and studies such as: World Conservation Strategy, published in 1980 by all three groups; Global Biodiversity Strategy, published in 1992; and Global Biodiversity Assessment, published in 1996.

These groups not only influence UNEP’s agenda, they also influence a staggering array of international and national NGOs around the world. Jay Hair, former head of the National Wildlife Federation, one of the U.S.’s largest environmental organizations, was also the president of the IUCN. Hair later turned up as co-chairman of the Presidents Council on Sustainable Development.

The WWF maintains a network of national chapters around the world, which influence, if not dominate, NGO activities at the national level. It is at the national level where NGOs agitate and lobby national governments to implement the policies that the IUCN, WWF and WRI get written into the documents that are advanced by the UNEP. In this manner, the world grows ever closer to global governance.

Other than treaties, how does UNEP policy become U.S. policy? Specifically, the IUCN has an incredible mix of U.S. government agencies along with major U.S. NGOs as members. Federal agencies include the Department of State, Department of Interior, Department of Agriculture, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the National Park Service (NPS) the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) and the Fish and Wildlife service. These agencies send representatives to all meetings of the UNEP.

Also attending those meetings as active members are NGO representatives. These include activist groups such as the Environmental Defense Fund, National Audubon Society, The Nature Conservancy, National Wildlife Federation, Zero Population growth, Planned Parenthood, the Sierra Club, the National Education Association, and hundreds more. These groups all have specific political agendas they desire to become law. Through their official contact with government agencies working side-by-side with the UNEP, their political wish lists become official government policy.

How can this be, you ask? How can private organizations control policy and share equal power to elected officials? Here’s how it works.

When the dust settled over the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, five major documents were forced into international policy that will change forever how national policy is made. More importantly, the Rio Summit produced the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED). UNCED outlined a new procedure for shaping policy. The procedure has no name, nor is it dictatorial. It is perhaps best described as “controlled consensus” or “affirmative acquiescence.”

Put in simple street language, the procedure really amounts to a collection of NGOs, bureaucrats and government officials, all working together toward a predetermined outcome. They have met together in meetings, written policy statements based on international agreements, which they helped to create and now they are about to impose laws and regulations that will have dire effects on people’s lives and national economies. Yet, with barely a twinge of conscience they move forward with the policy, saying nothing. No one objects. It’s understood. Everyone goes along. For this is a barbaric procedure that insures their desired outcome without the ugliness of bloodshed, or even debate. It is the procedure used to advance the radical, global environmental agenda.

The UNCED procedure utilizes four elements of power: international government (UN); national governments; non-governmental organizations, and philanthropic institutions.

The NGOs are the key to the process. They create policy ideas from their own private agendas. The policy idea is then adopted by one or more U.N. organizations for consideration at a regional conference. Each conference is preceded by an NGO forum designed specifically to bring NGO activists into the debate. There they are fully briefed on the policy and then trained to prepare papers and lobby and influence the official delegates of the conference. In this way, the NGOs control the debate and assure the policy is adopted.

The ultimate goal of the conference is to produce a “Convention,” which is a legally- drawn policy statement on specific issues. Once the “Convention” is adopted by the delegates, it is sent to the national governments for official ratification. Once that is done, the new policy becomes international law.

Then the real work begins. Compliance must be assured. Again, the NGOs come into the picture. They are responsible for pressuring Congress to write national laws in order to comply with the treaty. One trick used to assure compliance is to write into the laws the concept of third-party lawsuits.

NGOs now regularly sue the government and private citizens to force policy. They have their legal fees and even damage awards paid to them out of the government treasury. Through a coordinated process, hundreds of NGOs are at work in Congress, in every state government and in every local community, advancing some component of the global environmental agenda.

However, the United States Constitution’s Tenth Amendment bars the Federal Government from writing laws that dictate local policy. To by pass this roadblock, NGOs encourage Congress to include special grants to help states and communities to fund the new policy, should they want to “voluntarily” comply.

Should a community or state refuse to participate “voluntarily,” local chapters of the NGOs are trained to go into action. They begin to pressure city councils or county commissioners to accept the grants and implement the policy. Should they meet resistance, they begin to issue news releases telling the community their elected officials are losing millions of dollars for the community. The pressure continues until the grant is finally taken and the policy becomes local law. This practice has resulted in the NGOs gaining incredible power on the local level. Today, a great number of communities are actually run by NGO members as city and county governments are staffed by NGO members. They serve on local unelected boards and regional councils that the NGOs helped to create. Local representative government is slowly relinquishing its power to the NGOs.

Americans must begin to understand that the debate over environmental issues have very little to do with clean water and air and much more to do with the establishment of power. NGOs are gaining it, locally elected officials are losing it as the structure of American government changes to accommodate the private agendas of NGOs.

Tom DeWeese is one of the nation’s leading advocates of individual liberty, free enterprise, private property rights, personal privacy, back-to-basics education and American sovereignty and independence.

A native of Ohio, he’s been a candidate for the Ohio Legislature, served as editor of two newspapers, and has owned several businesses since the age of 23. In 1989 Tom led the only privately-funded election-observation team to the Panamanian elections. In 2006 Tom was invited to Cambridge University to debate the issue of the United Nations before the Cambridge Union, a 200 year old debating society. Today he serves as Founder and President of the American Policy Center and editor of The DeWeese Report

For 40 years Tom DeWeese has been a businessman, grassroots activist, writer and publisher. As such, he has always advocated a firm belief in man’s need to keep moving forward while protecting our Constitutionally-guaranteed rights.

The DeWeese Report , 70 Main Street, Suite 23, Warrenton Virginia. (540) 341-8911

E-Mail: admin@americanpolicy.org

E-Mail: ampolicycenter@hotmail.com

Website: www.americanpolicy.org

Source: http://www.newswithviews.com/DeWeese/tom252.htm

Monday, September 22, 2014

Government shoul not penalise companies that fail to spend on corporate social responsibility

The government should abandon plans to penalise companies that do not spend money on corporate social responsibility (CSR). The new Companies Act mandates companies of a certain size to either spend money on CSR or explain why they do not. The law makes it clear that the board of directors will provide the reasons for not spending the money. However, there is a view within the government that penalties should be imposed on companies that fail to spend for two or more years, ostensibly not to l ..

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/opinion/editorial/government-shoul-not-penalise-companies-that-fail-to-spend-on-corporate-social-responsibility/articleshow/43120534.cms

India needs to redefine the concept of giving

Different things set you thinking. At the time I met Arnold Palmer, he was 84 and thinking of how he was going to change people's lives. He has been giving back to golf for years and now he even gives back to society through a variety of philantrophic measures. He admits its golf that made him generous.

"Golf has been my vehicle for philanthropy. I have been able to give back to society all because of this sport. Golf has been my vehicle for travelling and getting to know people across the world. In the community of health and well being, golf has been the reason that afforded me the opportunity about how I could help with medicine or hospitals. These are getting better and better all the time and are doing everything to put people together and provide them quality services."

In the week when we had Bill and Melinda Gates discussing philanthropy and support for new causes, it's worth a re-look at how India Inc spends its 'social money.' Should corporations in India spend more money for society? Should they rework their models of giving?

Charitable giving is not new to India but it's not common for India's new-money owners. The Gates along with Warren Buffett have tried to get many to pledge more and more money but the selection
of the people seem to be the same set on most occasions. In today's world Azim Premjihas come to be the mascot of pledging for social causes and Nandan & Rohini Nilekani and S Gopalakrishnan
have also donated significant money.

In that sense the Tatas represent old money in India and their funds are spent in creating institutions that are built to last and mostly Tata-agnostic in functioning. If one excludes the donations to religious institutions, temples and trusts in general (for which by the way there is no good means to make a calculation) then we are not sitting on significant social contributions given the solid base of over 150 billionaires in India.

Unfortunately campaigns are still being launched and run by the Indian government. Despite the previous UPA government's mandatory 2% spend on CSR what is clear is that funding isn't really an issue the problem lies with execution of those monies. Now with the NDA government laying emphasis on corporate participation in civic services and public health, there can be some interesting new ideas that emerge as long as the execution of it lies with the private sector. What Bharti and TCS have done with about Rs 200 crore towards building toilets, is something that will up for a test after they have been built and run.

The solution may lie somewhere in between where it is neither the law which makes corporations spend nor is it a sole private sector or government responsibility. If the government uses serious private and public partnership in this front, the idea of CSR will take new meaning. Indians gave an average 3.1% of their income to charitable causes in 2011 — up from 2010 but far behind the 9.1% average in the United States, according to consultancy Bain & Company.

As we approach 2nd Minister will launch a Clean India campaign, it will be a test case to see if India is ready for a more viable and sustainable solution towards finding new ideas of social good. With more monies being directed towards such work both private sector and government have an opportunity to redefine the concept of giving.

Source: http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report-india-needs-to-redefine-the-concept-of-giving-2020549

CSR Funding for Indian NGOs

With the changing fund-raising scenario and potentials to enter into new partnership types, it is essential that NGOs do understand what they need to do to get funding through CSR partner-ships with companies. The NGOs need to understand the ‘Business case’ in CSR partnerships and contribute to mitigating the business-risks of the companies, in addition to helping them in building brand-equity. Philanthropic foundations also have different expectations from NGOs and new M&E approaches are highly focused on quality of output rather than believing in just numbers.

The recently approved the Companies Act 2013 mandates that companies of a certain size do spend 2% of their net profit on CSR projects. The Acts says that activities need to be implemented in project mode in partnership with NGOs/Firms/Agencies/Govt. Bodies. This opens new opportunities for NGOs to leverage their expertise and presence in remote areas to partner with companies for CSR projects. It is estimated that annually there will be INR 22000 crore inflow in development sector in India through CSR spending by 10000-12000 companies. Further, companies that are not registered in India are also spending huge money on CSR projects to create social equity and promote sustainable development.

NGO Requirements and Eligibility for CSR Funds

1. Identity:

· The NGO should exist and be registered under the appropriate law under which it is governed. It should comply with the provisions of the Act and other relevant laws.

· The organisation has been functioning for a minimum of one year from the date of registration.

· The physical address given by the organisation is verifiable.

· The organisation is registered as a trust or society or Section 25 company.

· Registration certificates and documents issued by the appropriate authority are available upon request.

2. Vision, aims, objectives, achievements:

· The vision, purpose and aims of the NGO should be explicitly stated and be reflected in the activities being undertaken.

· A vision, purpose or mission, which drives the organisation, is articulated beyond the registration documents in the form of activities and projects, etc.

· The organisation has a defined aim and a set of objectives.

· The organisation is able to show performance through defined indicators against stated objectives.

3. Governance:

· There must be a clear commitment towards good governance for the NGO to enhance its effectiveness, serve all stakeholders, and meet the needs of society and to ensure its accountability towards society in accordance with its charter of objects and purposes.

· The organisation has a governing board.

· The organisation follows a consultative and democratic decision-making process.

· There is disclosure of the details of board members viz, name, age, gender, position and occupation. All family affiliations should be indicated.

· The board has at least two meetings a year suitably spaced with quorum stipulated in its own articles of association, reviewing the functioning of the NGO, evaluating the projects undertaken by them and discussing the way forward.

· The organisation is not for profit and its resources are deployed only for accomplishing the objectives for which it has been formed.

· The organisation has attained recognition under Section 12A of the Income Tax Act. (80G of the Income Tax Act is preferable).

· Minutes of board meetings are documented and circulated.

· The board approves programmes, budgets, annual activity reports and audited financial statements.

· The board ensures the organisation’s compliance with applicable laws and statutory regulations.

· All pending legal disputes are declared.

4. Operations:

· Operations refer to the capacity to conduct programmes and administrative activities efficiently and effectively in the public interest. The NGO should have norms in respect to the nature of the programme it undertakes, the nature and style of its management; and the roles and responsibilities of its human resources including personnel and volunteers.

· The activities are in line with the vision, aim and objectives of the organisation.

· The organisation periodically reviews the progress of programmes.

· The accounts of the organisation are regularly maintained and those with an annual income above 50,000 INR are audited by the chartered accountant.

· The roles and responsibilities are defined for all personnel and volunteers.

· All personnel are issued letters of contract and appointment.

· An appropriate HR policy is in place.

5. Accountability and transparency:
· Accountability and transparency are key requirements of good governance and necessary for building trust among stakeholders. This works as a testimony to the fact that the organisation has been working efficiently and effectively.

A financial management policy has been developed and is adhered to.

· Signed audited statements are prepared annually and available on request: balance sheet, income and expenditure statement, receipts and payments account, schedules to these, notes on accounts and the statutory auditor’s report.

· Statement of accounts indicating whether constructed on a cash or accrual basis.

· There are no serious adverse notes on the veracity of the functioning of the organisation.

· There are no material transactions involving conflict of interest between a board or staff member and/or adverse comment and observation relating to operational issues or financial dealing in the record of public authority.

· The organisation’s annual report is distributed and communicated to stakeholders and others and is made available upon request every year, within eight months of the end of the organisation’s financial year.

· The annual report contains a description of the main activities, a review of the progress and results achieved in the year and information on board member names, positions, remuneration or reimbursement as well as brief financial details.

· The NGO shall disclose their funding details i.e. the sources of funds, annual revenue (O&M) and project expenditure. The organisation shall produce timely reports on the use and management of funds which should be made available on request.

· Dovetailing with government schemes will be preferred.

· The NGO should give out accurate information regarding their projects i.e. survey reports, target population, location, sustainability of the projects, their success ratio, etc on request.

The organisation should be ready to submit an affidavit by the authorised signatory attesting to the authenticity of the information given.

Online platforms for NGO fundraising in India

Please Enroll/Register your NGOs in this NGOs and NGO Platforms for CSR funds and fundraising for your NGO.

1. GiveIndia (http://www.giveindia.org): GiveIndia is a donation platform that allows companies to support a cause of choice from about 200 NGOs that have been scrutinised for transparency and credibility.

2. Voluntary Action Network India (http://www.vaniindia.org): Voluntary Action Network India works towards building a society where voluntarism and voluntary organisations play a dominant role in social cohesion, economic empowerment and nation-building.

3. Charities Aid Foundation (http://www.cafindia.org): CAF India provides strategic and management support to corporates, individuals and PSUs in order to ensure greater impact of their philanthropic and CSR investments.

4. Oxfam India (http://www.oxfamindia.org): The Oxfams are rights-based organisations that fight poverty and injustice by linking grassroots programming (through partner NGOs) to local, national and global advocacy and policy-making.

5. Confederation of Voluntary Associations (http://covanetwork.org): COVA works in the areas of communal harmony, peace and social justice through sensitisation of all sections of society and empowerment of the marginalised and the poor.

6. Partners in Change (http://www.picindia.org): PiC focusses on building sustainable partnerships between the corporate sector and social development initiatives in India. PiC’s goal has been to become an organisation that is recognised both by companies as well as civil society as a reliable facilitator for building partnerships for social development.

7. Credibility Alliance (http://credibilityalliance.org): Credibility Alliance’s mission is to build the credibility of the voluntary sector through the creation and promotion of the norms of good governance and public disclosure.

8. Samhita (http://samhita.org): Samhita provides a platform for NGOs to showcase their work and attract donation.

9. Indian Confederation of NGOs (http://www.icongo.in): iCONGO is a collective of various credible, transparent and accountable NGO members registered as promoting members and privilege members.

10. GuideStar India (http://www.guidestarindia.org): GuideStar India is India’s leading provider of NGO information. Their portal provides a fully searchable

For information’s on Fundraising, Impact mapping, CSR partnerships and development sector events etc…, please visit: www.NGOBOX.org

For More information on CSR funding please visit:

http://csrforngos.blogspot.in or http://odishangos.blogspot.in or

For CSR Consultancy for your NGO please email at: pkgngo@gmail.com

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Nominations open for Commonwealth Youth Awards for Excellence in Development Work 2015

Fellowships

Do you know of a young person making a positive difference to the lives of other people in your community or country? The Commonwealth Youth Programme (CYP) is inviting nominations for the 2015 Commonwealth Youth Awards for Excellence in Development Work. We are looking for young people whose development work reflects the Commonwealth’s Plan for Youth Empowerment to:

1. Promote youth participation in decision making
2. Promote the economic empowerment of young people
3. Take action for equality between young men and women
4. Promote peaceful and democratic environments in which human rights flourish
5. Provide quality education for all
6. Improve access to information and communication technology
7. Promote health, development and values through sports and culture
8. Engage young people to protect the environment

Criteria for nomination:

The nominee must have been engaged in development work for more than 12 months, either in a professional or voluntary capacity;

The development work must be ongoing and taking place in a Commonwealth Country;

The nominee should not be older than 29 on 31 December 2015.

Individuals cannot nominate themselves in a personal capacity;

Nominees should give permission for their names to be put forward

The winners must agree to take part in publicity generated by the Commonwealth.

Deadline: 30 Oct. 2014

For more information visit the Link: http://www.yourcommonwealth.org/cya2015

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NGOs in India on tenterhooks after accusatory government report

The Indian government is scrutinizing NGOs after a leaked report blamed several foreign-funded NGOs for stalling development projects, hurting the economy.


NEW DELHI — India's 2 million nongovernmental organizations are prominent advocates on issues from women's rights to educational equality.

But over the past few weeks, the atmosphere for advocacy NGOs, and in particular those funded by foreign donors, has become decidedly chilly.

The home ministry is running a national investigation into the funding of all NGOs after the leak of a classified report last month which blamed a handful of foreign-funded NGOs for stalling development projects in India. The report, by an internal security agency, claimed that these group's activism resulted in a 2-3 percent decrease in India's economy.

Recommended: How well do you know India? Take the quiz.

Any NGO found violating current registration rules will have their bank accounts seized, registration canceled, and will be banned from receiving foreign funds, a senior home ministry official says. And in the July 10 federal budget proposal, the government included a series of amendments that would expand its power to withdraw tax benefits or cancel registration of NGOs.

Activists accuse the new government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi of looking for ways to stifle opposition, especially to infrastructure and power projects that may carry heavy environmental costs. Mr. Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party came to power in May on a pro-business platform.

“The government wants to ensure that nobody raises voices against any government projects,” says Achin Vanaik, a member of the anti-nuclear Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace, a network of over 200 Indian NGOs and advocacy groups.
Classified report

The controversial leaked report on NGOs was prepared for the new government by the Intelligence Bureau, an internal security agency.

It called out several international organizations, including Amnesty International, Action Aid, and the Netherlands' CORDAID for harming developmental projects relating to coal plants, oil exploration, nuclear plants, steel, and mining.

The report singled out Greenpeace India, which was mentioned 15 times. It alleges that Greenpeace India is using foreign funds to hurt economic progress by campaigning against power projects, mining, and genetically modified food. The home ministry has asked India's central bank to stop processing foreign contributions to Greenpeace.

Greenpeace, in a statement, has said that the organization has raised 61 percent of its budget in the last financial year from Indian supporters.

"Just because contributions are from foreign sources does not mean that they come with an agenda," says Bharati Sinha, a spokeswoman at Greenpeace India. "We believe that this report is designed to muzzle and silence civil society who raise their voices against injustices to people and the environment by asking uncomfortable questions about the current model of growth."

There are no official government figures on how many NGOs in India receive foreign funding. Public and private donors from the United States, the United Kingdom, Britain, and Germany are the top foreign funders to Indian NGOs, according to figures compiled by the Indian government.

In the year ending in March 2011, the most recent period for which data is available, about 22,000 Indian NGOs received a total of more than $2 billion from abroad, of which $650 million came from the US.
Past pressure

This is not the first time NGOs working on environmental or land rights issues have faced official ire. Modi's predecessor, Manmohan Singh, complained in 2012 that foreign-funded NGOs were blocking the expansion of Koodankulam, India’s biggest nuclear power plant. Demonstrations led by the People's Movement Against Nuclear Energy delayed construction on the project, which only started supplying power in 2013, six years after schedule.

The Indian government complains that only 2 percent of Indian NGOs file annual returns with the government. Government officials say this shows a lack of accountability and transparency and prevents them from knowing which NGOs are active and where.

This led the government to tighten the rules on NGOs over the past two years: In 2012, the government empowered senior income tax officials to cancel registrations of those NGOs who fail to file income tax returns. Last year, the government banned Indian Social Action Forum, a network of more than 700 NGOs across India, from receiving foreign funds. The conglomerate of NGOs mostly campaigns for indigenous peoples' land rights and against nuclear energy; nearly 90 percent of its funding comes from overseas.

Now, the new government may also review visa applications of foreign academics and researchers who work with Indian NGOs, according to local media reports.

Targeting civil society and NGOs will ultimately be counterproductive, says Parth J. Shah, who heads the New Delhi-based Centre for Civil Society. “It will create unwanted fraction between civil society and the government. Nobody is against prosperity and growth,” he says. “But for the benefit of few you cannot harm interests of a large section of your population.”

Source: http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2014/0721/NGOs-in-India-on-tenterhooks-after-accusatory-government-report?mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRokua3Bde%2FhmjTEU5z17OooXa%2B2hokz2EFye%2BLIHETpodcMTcFhNbHYDBceEJhqyQJxPr3DJNUN0ddxRhbkDQ%3D%3D

CBI director alleges perjury by Prashant Bhushan

New Delhi, Sep 20: CBI Director Ranjit Sinha Saturday moved the Supreme Court over the conflicting positions taken by NGO CPIL's counsel Prashant Bhushan and Kamini Jaiswal on the identity of the source that provided them the alleged original copy of the entry register maintained at the gate of his official residence.

Sinha in his application said that when Bhushan handed over on Sep 8 the alleged entry register to the apex court in a sealed cover, he said it was given to him the previous night (Sep 7) by some unknown people who had come to his residence.

The CBI director said Bhushan's statement was recorded by the court in its Sep 8 order as it took the register into its custody.

However, Sinha said that when the court on Sep 15 asked the NGO to disclose the identity of the source in a sealed cover, the NGO in another affidavit said the entry register was received from a "trustworthy and reliable source".

He said it was noteworthy that the affidavit did not refer to the fact orally submitted by Bhushan and also recorded in the court's order that on "the night of Sep 7, some unknown people had come to his residence and handed over the original entry register/guest register of the residential establishment of the director of the Central Bureau of Investigation".

Pointing to the shift in stand of the petitioner NGO and its counsel, Sinha in his application Saturday said it was clear that the identity of the source referred to by Bhushan was in the "active knowledge" of the petitioner NGO and its counsel.

"All these contradictory/false statements have been deliberately and intentionally made to cause a circumstance to exist with the objective of misleading" the court and hence "Bhushan is punishable under various sections of the IPC including section 193" that provides for punishment for false evidence.

Sinha also denied that he made any attempt to bail out former telecom minister Dayanidhi Maran in the Aircel-Maxis deal case.

Seeking registration of a first information report, Sinha said the NGO's plea that he should stay away from participating in the 2G investigation and trial was "clearly mischevious and based on untruth facts in which mis-statements have been deliberately made so as to obtain a favourable order from the court".

Source: http://news.oneindia.in/india/cbi-director-alleges-perjury-by-prashant-bhushan-1526144.html

Hrithik Roshan, Varun Dhawan & Kunal Kapoor Raise Funds for J&K Flood Victims

Hrithik Roshan has reached out to his fans & followers asking them to help raise funds for the rescue and aid of the victims of floods in the state of Jammu & Kashmir. The Krrish 3 star has collaborated with Ketto.org that has set up an online campaign featuring a letter of appeal by the actor to raise funds that will be routed to J&K through CARE India. The campaign aims to achieve a target of Rs 10 lacs over the next 1 month and has already reached close to 3 lacs. Joining the efforts is actor Varun Dhawan who has set a target of 3 lacs and has managed to generate half the amount with another 29 days to go.

Ketto.org is a crowdfunding platform dedicated to raising funds for social causes and charities in India. Bollywood actor Kunal Kapoor is one of the co-founders of this portal that enables people to browse campaigns or start and promote a campaign. Kapoor has set up a parallel campaign that aims at raising Rs 5 lacs for the flood victims.

The funds being raised by Hrithik, Varun & Kunal will be used to distribute survival kits that would include basic amenities to the flood victims by CARE India. Specializing in disaster preparedness and response CARE has largely been working towards ending poverty and social injustice through organizing programs in health, education, livelihoods in India.

View Hrithik Roshan’s Campaign on Ketto.org:

Source: http://thecsrjournal.in/hrithik-varun-dhawan-kunal-kapoor-raise-funds-for-jk-flood-victims

Saturday, September 20, 2014

6 NGOs from Delhi to participate at UBM India's Giving Back - NGO India 2014

New Delhi: UBM India will be hosting Giving Back – NGO India 2014, its annual CSR event on the 25th and 26th of September at the Nehru Centre in Mumbai. This is the 3rd edition of the initiative that provides for free exhibit space, promotion and exposure to the over 120 NGOs from all over the world. The event will witness the presence of eminent personalities and dignitaries from the industry, addressing the conference. Kajal Aggarwal is the Brand ambassador for NGO India 2014.

The theme for Giving Back – NGO India 2014 is Sustainability, given the importance of the growing need in incorporating the practice within the Indian Corporate environment. With the new Companies Law, it is becoming increasingly important to lay down a clear vision and mission path for the private and public sector companies to manage their CSR activities. The event, through discussions and interactions, will provide valuable insights and discuss key issues and challenges to build a strong CSR platform and model.

NGOs from every area of concern - Healthcare, Care for the Elderly, Children's Rights, Women's Empowerment and Restoration - will be participating in the event including Goonj, Atmashakti Trust, Ayushi Jan Sewa Welfare Foundation, SERVE SAMMAN, Sarthak Prayas and HAMRAAH FOUNDATION amongst others. Eligibility of NGOs has been determined through a stringent 10-point due diligence process which has been conducted by Guidestar India.

There will be a high content led conference with speakers from companies like Aditya Birla, Coca Cola, Tata Group, HSBC, Aircel, Jindal Steel, Thomson Reuteurs etc. TATA Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) will be conducting a parallel workshop at the event. The event will address panel discussions/sessions on topics including:

· How and Why of CSR

· NGOs – For profit or not for profit?

· Role of NGOs in social inclusion

· Role of corporate in inclusive development

· GRI’s sustainability reporting guideline G-4

· CHANGE MAKERS - NGOs that made a difference

Commenting on UBM India’s CSR initiative-Giving Back- NGO India , Mr. Joji George, Managing Director, UBM India said,”As part of our commitment to create and promote sustainability among organizations and its impact on society, UBM India initiated three years back, Giving Back- NGO India, a platform for dialogue and action amidst NGOs, corporates and policy makers. In the past two years, close to 170 NGOs, addressing various causes from child education, women empowerment, poverty eradication to environment sustainability, were provided complementary exhibition space at the Bombay Exhibition Grounds. Last year, participation of over 2600 attendees and 300 corporate visitors from the top 500 companies of India, has successfully made this initiative, an industry event. The UBM India team and the participating NGOs are keen to turn yet another leaf of success with this year’s edition and look forward to participation of fraternity icons and industry representatives to further encourage and help the common cause of, together, giving back to the society.”

Source: http://indiaeducationdiary.in/Shownews.asp?newsid=31276

'Use CSR money for animal welfare'

PUNE: Union minister for women and child development Maneka Gandhi made a pitch for companies to use their mandatory corporate social responsibility (CSR) funds for welfare of animals.

"The government has now made it mandatory for all companies that have a turnover of Rs 1,000 crore or more to spend 2% of its net profit on CSR activities," Gandhi said at a function held in the city on Thursday to inaugurate an animal hospital run by People For Animals (PFA).

Appealing to religious sentiment, Gandhi said that commercial interests were responsible for a lot of cruelty done to animals. "Once a cow stops giving milk, it is immediately sold to butchers. A Hindu sells the cow, a Sikh or Hindu truck driver transports the animals to a slaughter house where a butcher eventually kills them. Alternative use of cow dung has tremendous business potential and it should be explored," Gandhi said. She cited an example of how one of her friends designed a Rs 15,000 machine that could be used to convert cow dung into firewood.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/pune/Use-CSR-money-for-animal-welfare/articleshow/42840114.cms

Seminar on CSR held

AHMEDABAD: Oakbrook Business School organized a seminar on 'Management challenges and becoming a socially responsible organization'.

Noted among those present were Dr Arbind Sinha, faculty, MICA; Bharat Joshi, manager, Blind People's Association; Sushma Oza, CEO, Adani Foundation; R S Pandey, chairman, GHCL Foundation; and Anil Patel, Area Manager, Ford India.

The first session was on the topic 'Decoding and demystifying social responsibility' where speakers shared their experiences and told the students to look forward to a career in CSR as it is an emerging field.

In the next session on 'Understanding and implementing social initiatives', speakers talked about the various initiatives their respective organisations have taken. They said that any company, even a start-up, can do CSR activity.

They added that CSR does not mean to contribute monetarily; it also means to provide skills, training and help in raising the required fund for a particular initiatives. They gave examples of charity walks and blood donation drives.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/City/Ahmedabad/Seminar-on-CSR-held/articleshow/42951047.cms

Need more night shelters in the capital: NGO to Delhi HC

New Delhi: The Delhi High Court was on Friday informed by some NGOs that more permanent night shelters were required in the city as homeless people could still be seen sleeping on roads and also in view of the approaching winter even as they alleged that its orders on upkeep of such facilities were not being followed.

The NGOs also raised the issues of lack in uniformity in the amount paid to them for managing shelters apart from insufficient water and medical facilities at such places and the need for waiving the Rs 6/per shift entry fee for adult men and children above the age of 16 years.

The Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board (DUSIB) said that it has received several plots in the city and is in the process of constructing permanent shelters there, apart from the 184 night shelters - permanent and temporary - it has already set up.

After hearing the contentions of the government and the NGOs, a bench of Chief Justice G Rohini and Justice Rajiv Sahai Endlaw said it will pass detailed orders on September 24.

The court said that, meanwhile, the government and NGOs can file any further affidavits that they want to.

The NGOs said they would be filing a list of the shelters which do not have functional facilities before the next date.

During the hearing, the NGOs submitted that temporary night shelters are not enough to cater to the homeless people in the capital and sought more permanent shelters.

They have specifically sought setting up of night shelters at Meena Bazaar where an existing shelter had been demolished a few years back and the site was lying vacant.

They have also sought more family shelters in the city with medical facilities for pregnant and lactating women.

The NGOs also said that while DUSIB claims to pay Rs 53,000 per month towards upkeep of bigger shelters, some of them are only getting Rs 35,000.

They have also alleged non-compliance of court orders by the authorities, including DUSIB. (More) PTI HMP PPS SJK RT

DUSIB on its part submitted that it is difficult for it to provide medical amenities for pregnant and lactating women at all shelters and said that the one at Sarai Kale Khan has such facilities.

On the issue of non-functional toilets in the shelters, DUSIB said in temporary shelters the toilets are connected to a septic tank which is cleaned periodically by the civic authorities, while those in permanent shelters are connected directly to the sewer.

The toilets are to be kept clean by the NGO managing the shelter as well as its inmates.

Meanwhile, Delhi government informed the court that all the de-addiction centres run by it in the city are functional.

The submission came in response to the allegation of NGO Shahri Adhikar Manch Begharon Ke Liye that out of the 32 de-addiction centres in the city only three are functional.

The Railways also intervened in the issue to say that night shelters should not be set up within the 15 meter buffer zone on either side of the tracks to prevent any harm to the life of the people.

The court is hearing a case it took up on its own after media reports highlighted the absence of enough and proper night shelters for the homeless in the city.

PTI

Source: http://zeenews.india.com/news/delhi/need-more-night-shelters-in-the-capital-ngo-to-delhi-hc_1472929.html

Won’t reveal source of Ranjit Sinha visitors’ logbook, NGO tells SC

NGO CPIL informed the Supreme Court on Thursday that it won’t disclose the identity of the whistleblower, who leaked the visitors’ logbook at CBI director Ranjit Sinha’s Delhi residence and other pertinent CBI documents.

Filing an affidavit in repose to the court’s query on Monday, CPIL, a petitioner in the 2G scam cases, said it has passed a resolution deciding not to reveal who leaked the damning documents against Sinha.

Averse to taking cognisance of the controversial visitors’ logbook at CBI director’s house, the court had ordered for disclosure of the whistleblower’s identity.

Turning down an argument that the revelation of the whistleblower was not relevant, a bench of Justices H L Dattu and S A Bobde held that informing the court about the whistleblower was imperative in view of the Supreme Court Rules, which obligated every person filing an affidvait to disclose the source of information.

“We want to know about the authenticity of the whistleblower. It has serious consequences on reputation of persons and also on the (2G) trial court. Give us the source of infortmation. How did all this information get leaked out is important. We have to satisfy ourselves first,” it told advocate Prashant Bhushan, arguing for NGO CPIL.

CPIL had filed an affidavit in the court, seeking removal of Sinha for allegedly compromising investigations into 2G and Coal block cases.

Bhushan had handed over the original visitors’ logbook at Sinha’s Delhi residence, which purportedly showed frequent visits by some of the accused in the 2G and Coal block cases among others. He had claimed two unidentified persons had visited his house and gave him the document.

The court had fixed the matter for Monday next.

Source: http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/wont-reveal-source-of-ranjit-sinha-visitors-logbook-ngo-tells-sc/

Friday, September 19, 2014

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I am not perfect, but I walk in the footsteps of the one who is


DISCUSSION IS RIGHT AND BETTER SOLUTION


STOP DOWRY


Change of Venue of Music for Peace Concert


To
The Chief Executives
All The Civil Society Organisations
Odisha

Sir/Madam,

Thank you very much for all your support and cooperation for organising the programme on Observation of UN International Day of Peace and Music for Peace Concert scheduled to be held on September 21st, 2014 at Utkal Mandap, Bhubaneswar.

We want to bring it to your kind information that due to adverse weather prediction by metalogical department predicting thunder storms and heavy rain on September 21st, 2014, we have changed our venue of the above programme to KIIT Convention Centre Auditorium.

Kindly make necessary changes in your engagement ,note the change of the venue and we request you and your team to reach KIIT convention Centre Auditorim before 6 PM on 21st September, 2014.

Inconvenience caused to you is regretted.

Dr M.R.Mishra
Country Coordinator
MasterPeace India
Bhubaneswar
tel- 7854872808.



3 Day workshop on Resource Mobilization @ New Delhi from 10-12 October 2014

Dear Friends,

Greetings from INCPL!

INCPL is proud to announce a 3 day workshop on Resource Mobilization. A large number of NGOs in India shut down every year due to lack of funding and insufficient staffing levels. This is because good intentions and motivation are not enough to run an NGO. To ensure smooth running of the NGO and to achieve desired results one needs funds from various sources.

This workshop aims at developing the capacity of NGOs in effective resource mobilization by using well defined methodology, participatory learning approach and hands-on practice session. Please find attached the brochure with further details.

In case of any further queries please call us at 91-11-65440004 or email us at info@incpl.com .

Regards,

INCPL Team
http://incpl.com/



2-Week International Certificate Course on Community Based Microfinance (CBMF) for Financial Inclusion: 8th to 20th December 2014

Sadhikartha Foundation (a not-for-profit company promoted by APMAS) and Coady International Institute, Canada announces admission to certificate course in Community-Based Microfinance for Financial Inclusion at Hyderabad. The course aims to enhance knowledge of community-based microfinance models and approaches and builds practical skills to apply them. The Course duration is from 8th to 20th December 2014.

Sadhikaratha Foundation, a not for profit company promoted by APMAS, in partnership with Coady International Institute Canada, offers 2-week CBMF Certificate Course at Hyderabad, India.

Community-Based Microfinance (CBMF) for Financial Inclusion 8 - 20 December, 2014, Hyderabad, India

The 2-week CBMF course shifts the focus from microfinance to learning about community based approaches for delivering financial services that are inclusive. Participants will study models such as Village Savings and Loans, Self-Help-Groups, financial Cooperatives and Credit Unions and learn about innovations such as mobile banking, bank linkages, networking/federating and value-chain finance.

For more information and online application and

to find out more about APMAS, Sadhikaratha Foundation and COADY,

please visit our website at www.apmas.orgwww.sadhikaratha.org www.coady.stfx.ca.

or E-Mail: apmascoadycourse@gmail.com

Regards,
CS Reddy
President, Sadhikaratha Foundation
CEO of APMAS, Hyderabad

NGO refuses in SC to reveal whistleblower on CBI Director

New Delhi: The NGO, which accused CBI Director Ranjit Sinha of protecting accused in coal and 2G scams and sought his removal, today refused to reveal name of whistleblower who provided it documents against the top cop, saying it could endanger many lives.

Referring to various incidents in which whistleblowers were killed after their identities were made public, including the case of Satyendra Dube, Centre for Public Interest Litigation (CPIL), the NGO, submitted that revealing the source of information would “not only be a breach of trust on it’s part but would also tantamount to putting them under serious risk of bodily harm, harassment or victimization”.

“In light of the developments that have taken place in the instant case a meeting of members of governing body of CPIL was held on September 17. The said members unanimously resolved that the identity of the source would not be disclosed,” the NGO said in its affidavit through advocate Prashant Bhushan.

The NGO submitted that allegations against Sinha are genuine and can easily be verified from CBI’s own records and the Court may also seek the assistance of Anand Grover, the Special Public Prosecutor in 2G case.

“As far as the meetings stated in the entry register are concerned, they can easily be verified by examining the ITBP and CBI guards who were stationed at the residence of the CBI Director, whose list has already been handed over to the Court along with a copy of the original entry register,” it said.

“In India, several whistleblowers have unfortunately been killed after their identity was revealed. The case of Satyendra Dube shocked the nation. He had complained to the PMO about the wrongdoings done by his seniors in NHAI and had specifically asked the PMO not to reveal his identity. The letter was written on November 11, 2002 and Dube was murdered on November 27, 2003 because his identity was made public by the PMO,” the affidavit said.

It said Parliament has recently enacted a Whistleblower Protection Act 2011 which also mandates concealing the identity of the whistleblower unless he himself makes his identity public or gives a no-objection to disclosure of his identity.

The NGO submitted that in many cases including Jain dairy, Radia tape, 2G case, the apex court ordered investigation without asking the source of the information and same can be done in the present case also.

“This Court has therefore entertained even letters as PILs, has entertained newspaper reports as evidence and even taken up several cases on its own motion based on newspaper reports or information from other sources. “Whenever the conscience of this Court has been satisfied regarding certain allegations, it has called upon the authorities to produce records and has also directed probe in several such cases,” it said.

The affidavit was filed in compliance of apex court’s order which had on September 15 asked the NGO to reveal in a sealed envelope the name of the whistleblower from whom it got CBI documents and guest list of the Director’s residence.

Source: http://www.indiatvnews.com/news/india/ngo-refuses-in-sc-to-reveal-whistleblower-on-cbi-director-42145.html

NGO refuses to disclose whistleblower’s identity

New Delhi, Sep 18: The NGO CPIL Thursday declined to disclose the identity of the whistleblower who disclosed the alleged interference by CBI Director Ranjit Sinha in 2G investigation and prosecution and meeting the accused in 2G and coal scam case.

The CPIL, in its affidavit filed Thursday, said that its governing body in its meeting Sep 17 decided not to reveal the identity of the whistleblower who took off the lid on the alleged interference in 2G matters by the CBI director.

The NGO said this in response to the Sep 15 order of the apex court in which the Supreme Court, citing its rules, had asked the NGO to disclose the identity of the whistleblower who gave it the information on the basis of which the averments and allegations have been made against the CBI director.

Source: http://www.india.com/news/india/ngo-refuses-to-disclose-whistleblowers-identity-151667

Narendra Modi-led government plans to penalise CSR defaulters under Companies Act 2013

By Rajat Arora

The Narendra Modi-led government will not let companies get away easily if they do not spend the mandated 2% of their profits on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) activities as specified by law. The government is planning to add more teeth to the Companies Act 2013 by introducing the penalty clause for companies that miss this target spending repeatedly. At present, non-compliance of CSRrule isn't penalized by the Companies Law, and those unable to spend the stipulated amount can get away with some justification.

Source: http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2014-09-18/news/54068278_1_mandatory-csr-spending-csr-activities-act-2013

Mandatory corporate CSR opens the door for Lions Clubs International in India

— By FPJ Bureau, September 18, 2014 12:11 am

Mumbai : The Lions Clubs International (LCI) is ready and has firmed up plans to rope in Indian corporates that would be allocating 2 per cent of their three-year average annual net profit on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) activities in each financial year. Called the Lions Club International Foundation Development Division, the special cell at the LCI office in Worli, would help corporate, government bodies, NGOs and philanthropists to partner with Lions who will help them in identifying and successfully implementing projects for various social needs.

“We have the credentials, experience and the force “said Neville Mehta, International Secretary, LCI (ISAAME-India, South Asia, Africa and the Middle East). He was speaking at a Press meet called to welcome Joe Preston, International President, LCI. Preston on his part said that had a good meeting with leading Indian corporate on Tuesday and offered them the plan of being a conduit to CSR work in India.

With 46,000 clubs and 1.35 million members across 209 countries, Lions Clubs is the world’s largest service club organization.

“We have 2, 23,000 members and 6300 clubs in India which is the second largest in the world after the US. India is also the largest recipient of LCI grant getting $82 million in the last 40 years. We want to scale up our work in India. We do have limited resources and therefore we are planning to team up and partner with government, corporate and other bodies to take on major issues in which India needs help” said Preston explaining his rationale of India visit.

Mehta said that the LCI was in the business of doing good and what stood out was the fact each Rupee donated to LCI was ploughed back into doing social work. “Lions do not charge any processing fees for administration or management of the Foundation which ensures that every Rupee spent by the partner will be maximized towards the cause”, he said adding that LCI was a “zero expense foundation”.

LCI has been at the forefront of providing help for social causes and disaster management relief. During the recent flooding that has uprooted lakhs in Jammu and Kashmir, LCI has so far donated $20,000 and is in the process of releasing more funds. What is credible about the entire process of providing relief is that LCI does not outsource any of its work and Lions at the local level undertake the work. The funds or material is released after a proper application. Once the money is spent, the entire project expenses are audited in the India office before the report is sent to the headquarters in US.

In Mumbai, LCI has undertaken extensive social work especially in the health and education sector. Within the health sector, the LCI has provided help in the ophthalmology department to various hospitals including Nair, Kartar Singh, Tarachand Bapa, St. Elizabeth and Rukmini hospitals in Mumbai and many others across India. “By 2020, LCI intends to minimize the number s of people having ophthalmology problems in India”, said Mehta.

Source: http://freepressjournal.in/mandatory-corporate-csr-opens-the-door-for-lions-clubs-international-in-india

Kajal Agarwal now face of Giving Back – NGO India 2014

Actress Kajal Agarwal, popular for her work in southern cinema and Bollywood, has been chosen as the brand ambassador of Giving Back – NGO India 2014, a unique corporate social responsibility initiative conceptualised by UBM India.

The third edition of the initiative, which will be held here Sep 25 and Sep 26, will aim to provide free exhibit space, promotion and exposure to over 120 NGOs from all over the world.

“Today, there is a considerable amount of awareness and attempt towards building a sustainable India, amongst various sections of society including the film industry. What Giving Back – NGO India does, is bring these sections of society together and consolidate the attempts into a concrete and collective course of action,” Kajal said in a statement.

“Being a member of the Indian film fraternity, I am happy to draw people’s attention and sensitise them towards the social issues faced by the Indian society,” she said.

Actors Vivek Oberoi and Kunal Kapoor will also be present at the inaugural session.

Source: http://indianexpress.com/article/entertainment/bollywood/kajal-agarwal-now-face-of-giving-back-ngo-india-2014

DFID Announces New Funding Finder and International development funding

A new international development funding finder tool is now live on the GOV.UK website. The tool helps charities and NGOs identify the most relevant funds and allows users to search by sector, country, amount of money required and type of organisation. Results include any DFID-funded grant, fund or business support that relates to international development work.

View the tool and search for funding here: https://www.gov.uk/international-development-funding

Poorest Areas Civil Society programme: India

The PACS programme in India seeks to support civil society organisations working in the most backward and poorest districts.

Overview

The purpose of the PACS programme was to build capacities of Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) in the most backward and poorest districts of India so they can better help the poor realise their entitlements. The PACSprogramme concentrated on the 100 poorest districts with the lowest social, economic and political indicators across the states of Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh and Maharashtra.

Initiated in 2001, PACS supported a network of CSOs working on areas aimed at increasing the capacity of poor people to demand and use political, economic and social and human rights instruments and services to improve their lives.
How to apply

Poorest Areas Civil Society programme: India (PACS) website at: http://www.pacsindia.org

Funds:OpenCountries:IndiaSector:Empowerment and accountabilityEligible organisations:Non-governmental organisations (NGOs)


Thursday, September 18, 2014

Brahmapur (Odisha) City Bus Time Table


Every Child has the Right of Right to Education


Every child has the inherent right to life


State shall take measures do diminish infant and child mortality, and ensure appropriate pre-natal and post-natal care for mothers


Every child has the right to be registered immediately after birth


States shall take measures to ensure that parents are supported in the use of basic knowledge on child nutrition


RBI's Recent Simplified KYC Measures for Public Awareness

The Reserve Bank of India has recently released a note along with a poster and a booklet comprising a few common questions relating to Know Your Customer (KYC) norms for opening bank accounts. The objective of this is to bring awareness among the general public about the KYC simplification measures taken by the Reserve Bank in the recent times with a view to helping the common man in opening bank accounts.

Measures taken for simplification:

1. Single document for proof of identity and proof of address

There is now no requirement of submitting two separate documents for proof of identity and proof of address. If the officially valid document submitted for opening a bank account has both, identity and address of the person, there is no need for submitting any other documentary proof.

Officially valid documents (OVDs) for KYC purpose include: Passport, driving licence, voters’ ID card, PAN card, Aadhaar letter issued by UIDAI and Job Card issued by NREGA signed by a State Government official.

To further ease the process, the information containing personal details like name, address, age, gender, etc., and photographs made available from UIDAI as a result of e-KYC process can also be treated as an ‘Officially Valid Document’.

2. No separate proof of address is required for current address

Since migrant workers, transferred employees, etc., often face difficulties while submitting a proof of current address for opening a bank account, such customers can submit only one proof of address (either current or permanent) while opening a bank account or while undergoing periodic updation. If the current address is different from the address mentioned on the proof of address submitted by the customer, a simple declaration by her/him about her/his current address would be sufficient.

3. No separate KYC documentation is required while transferring accounts from one branch to another of the same bank

Once KYC is done by one branch of the bank, it is valid for transfer of the account to any other branch of the same bank. The customer would be allowed to transfer her/his account from one branch to another branch without restrictions and on the basis of declaration of his/her local address for communication.

4. Small Accounts

Those persons who do not have any of the ‘officially valid documents’ can open ‘small accounts’ with banks. A ‘small account’ can be opened on the basis of a self-attested photograph and putting her/his signature or thumb print in the presence of an official of the bank. Such accounts have limitations regarding the aggregate credits (not more than Rupees one lakh in a year), aggregate withdrawals (not more than Rupees ten thousand in a month) and balance in the accounts (not more than Rupees fifty thousand at any point in time). These small accounts would be valid normally for a period of twelve months. Thereafter, such accounts would be allowed to continue for a further period of twelve more months, if the account holder provides a document showing that she/he has applied for any of the officially valid document, within twelve months of opening the small account.

5. Relaxation regarding officially valid documents (OVDs) for low risk customers

If a person does not have any of the ‘officially valid documents’ mentioned above, but if is categorised as ‘low risk’ by the banks, then she/he can open a bank account by submitting any one of the following documents:

(a) identity card with applicant's photograph issued by Central/State Government Departments, Statutory/Regulatory Authorities, Public Sector Undertakings, Scheduled Commercial Banks, and Public Financial Institutions;

(b) Letter issued by a gazetted officer, with a duly attested photograph of the person.

6. Periodic updation of KYC

Time intervals for periodic updation of KYC for existing low/medium and high risk customers have been increased from 5/2 years to 10/8/2 years, respectively.

7. Other relaxations

i. KYC verification of all the members of Self Help Groups (SHGs) is not required while opening the savings bank account of the SHG and KYC verification of only the officials of the SHGs would suffice. No separate KYC verification is needed at the time of credit linking the SHG.

ii. Foreign students have been allowed a time of one month for furnishing the proof of local address.

iii. In case a customer categorised as low risk is unable to submit the KYC documents due to genuine reasons, she/he may submit the documents to the bank within a period of six months from the date of opening account.

Please click here for original version of RBI note : http://rbidocs.rbi.org.in/rdocs/PressRelease/PDFs/IEPR410PK0814.pdf

Hindustan times, Mumbai dated 17th Sept, 2014

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Local NGOs in India invited to submit concept Notes for USAID’s QDDM Project

Deadline: First Round of Concept Notes is 26 September 2014 but the program is open for applications till 2015

The United States Agency for International Development Mission India (USAID/India) is requesting concept notes from local NGOs registered in India to receive funding for providing a range of programs and services for vulnerable populations especially woman and children under the ‘Quality Data for Decision Making’ (QDDM) Project.

This funding program “targets India’s vulnerable, marginalized, and underserved populations spread across rural areas, urban slums, and tribal pockets – including those currently outside the realm of effective service provision for reasons related to economics, gender, and social inclusion (notably females across the life cycle).

USAID has a total budget of 6 million dollars for a period of 4 years to provide funding support for NGOs implementing the projects under this program.

USAID/India’s Country Development Cooperation Strategy (CDCS) for the period 2013-2017 has adopted new solutions and approaches such as:

§ Building Locally-Led Alliances and Multi-Stakeholder Platforms

§ Establishing Linkages with Priority National Programs

§ Promoting Game-Changing Innovations and Proven High Impact Solutions

§ Strengthening Health Systems

§ Utilizing Appropriate Frameworks and Tools for Reaching Scale

This grants program is in accordance with the policy set out by the Government of India’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MOHFW) which is committed to enhancing the use of quality data (HMIS – Health Management Information Systems) to improve the status of RMNCH+A (Reproductive, Maternal, New Born, Child & Adolescent Health).

The overall goal of the program is “Increased access to quality, proven high impact RMNCH+A services by improving data quality and enhancing evidence-based decision-making.” and the specific purpose is to facilitate evidence-based decision-making using improved quality and use of data.

NGOs should have a minimum of 3 years of experience implementing related programs and projects and they should be able demonstrate institutional and management capacity to manage donor funds. Organizations with less than 3 years’ experience may apply but they still need to demonstrate their capacity in implementing the project Applicant NGOs can enter into a partnership with an international partner to provide technical assistance for the project.

For more information, visit this link : http://www.grants.gov/applicants/download-application-package.html?oppId=204643