New Delhi: India has cancelled the registration of nearly 9,000 charities for failing to declare details of donations from abroad, as New Delhi tightens surveillance on foreign-funded non-governmental organisations in the country.

The crackdown comes days after the government suspended the license of Greenpeace India and put US-based Ford Foundation on a security watch list, ordering government approval of any of its activities in the country.

A “cancellation order” issued by the home ministry and uploaded to its website late on Monday said the government had cancelled the registration of 8,975 associations because they did not declare details of their foreign funding for three years starting from 2009/10.

The order, dated April 6, did not name the groups whose licenses were cancelled but said they had not filed the “mandatory annual returns”.

The government on Tuesday came under attack from Congress and NGOs for its decision to scrap licenses of more than 9000 NGO’s for allegedly violating Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA), accusing it of being “revengeful” and targeting selectively.

Congress leaders said certain non-governmental organisations (NGOs) which were critical of government polices were on the firing line.

Senior Congress leader Verappa Moily said the present government is “very revengeful” and its actions amounted to curbing the movement of NGOs.

“The government is merely drawing inferences.this is not in the interest of the country. Creating an image that all the NGOs are not good is not good for the country,” he said and added that if there was an erring NGO, it should be prosecuted.

Greenpeace activist Priya Pillai, who was prevented from going abroad to the UK, said that her organisation had been publishing its accounts on its website.

“We are not being targeted for our accounts. The main issue why Greenpeace and some other NGOs are being targeted is because it has a voice of dissent. Because they have been working for tribal rights, land rights of communities and this has been an area of concern for the government.

“The government is not ready to listen to the voice of dissent in the country,” she said.

However, Minister of State Kiren Rijiju defended the decision, saying “action has been taken after getting specific inputs.”

He was responding to questions from reporters about Government cancelling licenses of the NGOs and freezing seven bank accounts of Greenpeace India for alleged FCRA violations.

The US-based Ford Foundation has also been put in the ‘watch list’ last week by the Home Ministry last week which directed that funds coming from the international donor should not be released by any bank to any Indian NGO without mandatory permission from it.

In its order, the Home Ministry said notices were issued in October last year to nearly 10,000 NGOs to file their returns for 2009-10, 2010-11 and 2011-12 within a month.

The NGOs were asked to specify the amount of foreign funds received, sources of such funds, for which purpose it was received and the manner in which such foreign contribution was utilised.

However, only 229 NGO’s filed their returns leading to cancellation of their registration issued under FCRA, the notification said.

Congress leader Rajiv Shukla asked the government to spare the NGOs who were working for good cause.

Congress MP Gaurav Gogoi criticised the government move claiming that the NDA regime has become intolerant to criticism.

“Government is trying to rein in critical voice. It has become intolerant which is not good,” he said.

BSP leader Mayawati said her party had no issues if the government was acting against those NGOs which were not following laid-down norms.