Three NGOs have been banned in the ongoing clampdown on civil
society organisations accused of operating outside the law and financing
terrorism.
Muslim for Human Rights (Muhuri), Haki
Africa and the Agency for Peace and Development, have been deregistered
and barred from operating in the country after the sector regulator, the
NGO Coordination Board, cancelled their licences Thursday.
The
three were among organisations gazetted by the Inspector General of
Police, Mr Joseph Boinnet in April, on suspicion of supporting
Al-Shabaab activities. The decision to publish their names was taken
after the April 2 terrorist attack on the Garissa University College in
which 148 people were killed.
Muhuri was accused of
illegally operating 13 different bank accounts while Haki Africa was not
duly registered. “None of these bank accounts, 12 in NIC Bank and one
in Gulf African Bank, have duly been consented to by the NGO board,”
said the letter that announced the NGOs’ deregistration.
“The
other organisation, Haki Africa, where some members of this NGO
(Muhuri) are members, also hold bank accounts in the same bank.”
Under the NGO Act, all non-profit organisation are required to furnish the NGO Board with bank statements of all the accounts they operate as well as the names of all the signatories.
Under the NGO Act, all non-profit organisation are required to furnish the NGO Board with bank statements of all the accounts they operate as well as the names of all the signatories.
Mr Khelef Khalifa is the Muhuri chairman while Mr Hussein Khalid is the executive director of Haki Africa.
In
addition, the Board announced that Haki Africa officials would be taken
to court tomorrow or Tuesday next week to answer to charges of opening
and operating bank accounts without obtaining the necessary authority.
They face up to 18 months in jail for running the organisation without
registration.
COMPLY WITHIN TWO WEEKS
The
action follows a notice issued early this month to the organisations
asking them to comply with the law within two weeks. According to the
board, none of them complied.
The Board also accused
the Agency for Peace and Development (APD) of changing its registered
office bearers three months after being given licences, to evade
vetting. It was also accused of lying about its area of jurisdiction.
“Despite
your organisation indicating in its registration documents that it only
operates within Kenya, the board has determined that the NGO largely
operates in Kismayu, Lower Juba, Gedo and Afmadow in Somalia. This only
serves to point out that the organisation issued false information to
the government,” said the board statement.
APD is
further accused of misrepresenting its annual revenue. It reportedly
disclosed that it had received between Sh130,000 to Sh295,000 instead of
about Sh300 million since 2011.
The bulk of the money
was allegedly sent to individuals in Somalia, raising questions about
what the finances were supposed to do at a time when Kenya was fighting
Al-Shabaab in Somalia.
“Unless you apply afresh and meet all the legal requirements, you remain deregistered,” reads one of the letters to APD.
According
to the records seen by the Nation, the Danish government, the UNDP, the
US, the UK and the Norwegian governments were listed among some of the
donors of the three organisations.
Last week, the Norwegian embassy said it would not stop funding Haki Africa despite a protest letter from the Kenyan Government.
No comments :
Post a Comment