5 Key Takeaways
- Amit Shah assured the FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026 will not be applied retrospectively, with a 12-month appeal window for attached properties.
- The Home Minister emphasized the Bill is not discriminatory against any religious community and acknowledged the church's contribution to nation building.
- The CBCI was asked to compile a list of NGOs whose FCRA registrations were unfairly cancelled, opening a review opportunity.
- Shah directed that all cases of aggression against the community be reported to police, with escalation to the MHA if FIRs are refused.
- The meeting also addressed the Manipur ethnic conflict, with the government urging church leaders to help broker peace.
Amit Shah Promises No Retrospective Application of FCRA Bill in Crucial Meeting with Church Leaders
In a 45‑minute meeting in New Delhi, the Union Home Minister assured the Catholic Bishops Conference of India that the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026 will not be applied retrospectively — while also addressing Manipur violence and directing that every instance of aggression against the community be reported to the police.
In a significant development that could ease months of mounting anxiety among religious and civil society organisations, Union Home Minister Amit Shah has personally assured the Catholic Bishops Conference of India (CBCI) that the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026 will not be applied retrospectively. The assurance came during a 45‑minute meeting in New Delhi on July 10, 2026, where the Minister also addressed the ongoing ethnic violence in Manipur, urged the church leadership to help broker peace, and directed that every instance of aggression against the community be reported to the police. The conversation marks the highest‑level attempt yet to clarify the government's intentions behind a piece of legislation that has sparked widespread concern about shrinking space for non‑governmental organisations.
Understanding the Context: What is FCRA and Why the Bill Matters
For decades, the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act – commonly called FCRA – has served as the gatekeeper for all foreign donations flowing into India's vast network of non‑profits, charitable trusts, and religious bodies. The law makes it mandatory for any organisation receiving money from abroad to register with the Union Home Ministry, declare the source, purpose, and utilisation of the funds, and renew that registration every five years. The underlying objective is to ensure that foreign money is not used for activities detrimental to national interest, including political interference, money laundering, or communal tension.
The original Act, first passed in 1976 and overhauled in 2010, has been amended several times. The latest iteration – the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026 – was introduced in the Lok Sabha on March 25, 2026. It immediately triggered a political storm. Opposition parties forced the deferment of its discussion and passage, and civil society groups, particularly Christian institutions that run schools, hospitals, and social service centres across the country, voiced fear that the Bill granted the state sweeping powers to seize and sell assets built with foreign contributions.
These institutions form the backbone of many underserved communities, especially in the tribal belts of central and northeastern India, where the state's presence remains thin. The prospect of a "designated authority" taking over their premises sent alarm bells ringing far beyond the church networks.
The July 10 Meeting: Who Attended and What Was Discussed
The July meeting was requested by the CBCI, the apex representative body of the Catholic Church in India, precisely to convey these apprehensions directly to the government. Led by Anthony Cardinal Poola, Metropolitan Archbishop of Hyderabad and President of the CBCI, the delegation included Anil Couto, Metropolitan Archbishop of Delhi, and several other senior church figures. On the government side, Union Home Secretary Govind Mohan and officials from the FCRA division of the Ministry were present alongside Amit Shah.
Jonathan Lalremruata, advisor to the CBCI, provided detailed insights into the conversation in an interview with The Hindu. He described a meeting that was cordial but candid, where the Home Minister did not shy away from the tough questions the church representatives put before him.
The Central Assurance: No Looking Back, a Full Year to Appeal
For many NGOs, the most frightening provision of the 2026 Bill revolves around the fate of assets created from foreign funds when an organisation's FCRA registration is suspended, cancelled, or simply not renewed. The Bill empowers the central government to appoint a "designated authority" – an officer with the powers of a civil court – to take over, manage, or even dispose of those assets. The authority can order their transfer or sale to the government or any other body. Critics argued that this clause, if applied to past registration cancellations, could overnight uproot schools, hospitals, and community halls that have stood for decades.
"The Minister assured us that the provisions of the Bill will not be applied in retrospect. And if a property has been attached, the affected party will get 12 months to appeal."
— Jonathan Lalremruata, Advisor to the CBCI
At the meeting, Amit Shah directly addressed this fear. That promise of a one‑year window to contest any attachment gives substantial breathing room and, if enshrined in the final legislation, would significantly soften the Bill's edge.
This was not a blanket endorsement of the existing structure; the CBCI continued to oppose the designated authority clause altogether, arguing it could still be invoked unfairly in the future. But the promise of non‑retrospective application means that assets built over years of legitimate work will not suddenly vanish because of a registration lapse tomorrow.
Not Against Any Religious Community: The Numbers
Amit Shah was equally emphatic that the Bill is not discriminatory. In the last financial year, he informed the delegation, total foreign donations into India stood at around ₹17,000 crore. Of this, roughly ₹3,000 crore – a little under 15% – was destined for Christian bodies. A government source clarified later that the largest recipients of foreign donations are not Christian NGOs but organisations from other communities.
"The Minister asserted that the Bill was meant to regulate foreign funding and it was not against any religious community," Lalremruata said. Shah went a step further and "acknowledged the church's contribution to nation building" – a statement that many in the delegation read as a significant symbolic gesture. It recognised the long‑standing presence of the church in education, healthcare, and social uplift, especially in remote regions where government infrastructure is still catching up.
The Home Minister also asked the CBCI to compile a list of NGOs whose FCRA registration, in their view, had been cancelled or suspended in an unfair manner. The delegation interpreted this as an opening – a chance to revisit what they believe are arbitrary administrative decisions that have hampered genuine welfare work.
What Are the FCRA Amendment Rules, 2026?
While the Bill grabs headlines, a parallel set of rules notified on June 22, 2026 has already come into force and is causing immediate compliance headaches for thousands of organisations. Known as the FCRA Amendment Rules, 2026, these norms mandate every NGO to specify the exact list of activities it will pursue under five permitted categories: social, political, educational, cultural, and religious. Organisations must also declare the precise geographic area in which they will operate. Any deviation from this self‑declared charter can invite punitive action, including suspension.
When it comes to religious activities, the rules spell out 16 categories that are allowed – "conduct of religious education, moral instruction, satsangs, discourses, and meditation retreats," among others – but explicitly bar "proselytisation." The term is not defined anywhere in the Rules or the parent Act, and it was this vagueness that the CBCI flagged forcefully in its memorandum to the Home Minister.
CBCI argued that "proselytisation" has no relevance to FCRA‑regulated activities, which are primarily developmental and humanitarian, and that the absence of a clear definition makes the provision ripe for misuse. A priest giving a religious talk could be accused of crossing the invisible line; a school run by a minority institution could find its activities suddenly classified as prohibited. The church body demanded that the term be omitted altogether from the Rules.
Manipur Violence: An Ethnic Conflict, Not a Communal One
Beyond the legislative concerns, the CBCI delegation took up the continuing violence in Manipur that has upended hundreds of thousands of lives since ethnic clashes erupted between the tribal Kuki‑Zo and the Meitei communities on May 3, 2023. The conflict, which has cost over 200 lives and displaced more than 60,000 people, has now spread to include confrontations between Kukis and sections of the Naga community, making the crisis even more complex.
"The ongoing tension in Manipur is an ethnic conflict and it should not be given a communal angle."
— Union Home Minister Amit Shah
At the meeting, Home Minister Shah was categorical. The framing matters because the moment a conflict is branded "communal," it invites a different set of political and social reactions, often hardening positions on the ground. By reiterating the ethnic nature of the strife, the government is signalling that its strategy – however challenged – will focus on inter‑community negotiation rather than religious polarisation.
Shah acknowledged that the government is making "sincere efforts to bring the situation under control" and urged the CBCI to leverage its influence to broker peace in the region. The church has deep roots in the northeastern states, running some of the oldest educational institutions and maintaining a pastoral presence that stretches into villages affected by the conflict. The Home Minister effectively sought to enlist the church as a partner in de‑escalation.
"File an FIR" – A Direct Instruction on Aggression Cases
One of the persistent grievances of minority communities, especially in parts of northern and central India, has been the reluctance of local police to register cases when churches, prayer halls, or individuals face aggression. The CBCI raised this issue point‑blank, telling the Minister that police often refuse to file a First Information Report (FIR), the essential legal document that sets a criminal investigation in motion.
Amit Shah's response was unambiguous. "The Minister asked us to ensure that a First Information Report is filed in all such cases of aggression," Lalremruata said. "When we told him that the police refuses to register our complaints, the Minister asked us to report the matter to the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA)." Shah also recalled a couple of specific incidents where his personal intervention had helped secure justice for members of the community.
This is a significant procedural assurance. By directing the church to escalate police inaction directly to the MHA, the Home Minister created a channel for grievance redressal that bypasses recalcitrant district or state‑level authorities. It remains to be seen how effectively this promise translates into practice, but for community members who have felt unheard for years, it represents a concrete step towards accountability.
The Wider Fallout: Meghalaya's Chief Minister Raises Similar Concerns
The CBCI delegation was not the only voice to approach the government with concerns about the FCRA regime. On July 5, just five days before the church leaders' meeting, Meghalaya Chief Minister Conrad Sangma also met with Amit Shah and laid out strikingly similar anxieties. Meghalaya, a Christian‑majority state where the church runs a large share of educational and healthcare institutions, is particularly sensitive to any regulatory change that could disrupt the flow of foreign contributions.
Sangma highlighted how the proposed changes could directly affect the functioning of religious, educational, and charitable institutions that have "long complemented government efforts in education, healthcare, and community development." For a state like Meghalaya, where rugged terrain and limited government resources make church‑led services indispensable, the FCRA Bill is not an abstract policy debate but a question of daily survival for many institutions.
The parallel meeting suggests that the government, while determined to tighten oversight of foreign funds, is also listening – at least to a degree. The coming months will reveal whether the Bill undergoes substantial modifications before it returns to the floor of Parliament.
What Happens Next
The FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026, remains in legislative limbo. After the uproar in the Lok Sabha, the government deferred its discussion and passage, and no date has been fixed for bringing it back. The assurances given by Amit Shah to the CBCI are politically significant, but they are not yet law. The church leadership and other civil society organisations will be watching closely to see how many of the verbal promises find their way into the final statutory language.
On the administrative front, the meeting has set in motion at least two concrete processes. The CBCI will submit its list of NGOs whose registration cancellations it considers unjust, giving the government an opportunity to review those cases on their merits. And the MHA has opened a door – however narrow – for direct reporting of police refusal to register FIRs in cases of aggression against the community.
For tens of thousands of NGOs that depend on foreign contributions to run schools, hospitals, and social programmes, the next few months will be a period of careful scrutiny. They will have to navigate the new compliance landscape of the 2026 Rules – specifying their activities, declaring their geography, and avoiding the undefined terrain of "proselytisation" – while simultaneously hoping that the most feared provisions of the Bill are either watered down or permanently abandoned in the face of sustained engagement.
The meeting on July 10, 2026, may well be remembered as the moment when the Union government and one of India's largest religious minorities opened a direct channel on a law that touches the lives of millions of ordinary beneficiaries across the country. Whether that channel leads to lasting legislative change or remains a temporary pressure valve depends on what happens when the Bill returns to Parliament.
In the meantime, the government's message is clear: foreign funding will be regulated tightly, national interest will remain the paramount concern, but the institutions that have built schools and hospitals brick by brick over generations will not see their assets seized overnight – at least, not without a full year to plead their case. That assurance, if honoured, could mark a turning point in one of the most contentious regulatory debates of recent years.
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