The problem is only 50% of the 46K odd NGOs which receive funds submit accounts. The Govt. should make sure that the compliance is better. That may be the way to go, instead of cutting of the head for a headache.
On Tue, Jun 17, 2014 at 10:33 AM, Madhav Nalapat <mdnalapat@gmail.com> wrote:
Certainly Roy would not be averse to transparency
The report says that about 5% of NGOs have questionable motives.That
does not represent the wholesale condemnation news reports suggest.
The fact is that in key sectors,a very few NGOs have played havoc with
efforts at growth.At the same time,others have done yeoman service in
for example exposing the pharma majors in their efforts at gouging the
poor.We need a Sunita Narain,while avoiding others with concealed
corporate agendas
Madhav Nalapat
On 6/16/14, roy.laifungbam <roy.laifungbam@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> ----------------------------------this is a surprising discussion when we
> have failed to address transparency in governance at state level so far.
> Just because, some civilian agency with no accountability at parliament,
> leaks a report to whip prevailing public sentiment regarding a report that
> had little merit and minimal professional rigour, why are we stimulated like
> Pavlovian experimental dogs? I find this discussion not just ridiculous but
> also steered by vested ideological interests.
- Tridib Roy Chowdhury
(+91 99809 33409)
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