New guideline for U.S. charities overseas may make them targets.Because a new U.S. Treasury U.S. Treasury Created in 1798, the United States Department of the Treasury is the government (Cabinet) department responsible for issuing all Treasury bonds, notes and bills. Some of the government branches operating under the U.S. Treasury umbrella include the IRS, U.S. guideline "suggest that charitable organizations are agents of the government," workers for U.S. charities overseas could be targets for terrorist groups. A group of 40 U.S. charities asked the Treasury Department to withdraw its new Anti-terrorist Financing Guidelines: Voluntary Best Practices for U.S.-based Charities. The group is affiliated with the Council of Foundations. In its place they propose that the Treasury endorse the group's own Principles of International Charity, which includes eight principles The Eight Principles are one of the basic ways Chinese medicine has to diagnose. It uses the following eight divisions of symptoms:
The guidelines propose that charitable organizations: * engage in additional information-gathering activities; * report individuals "suspected of activity related to terrorism" to the Treasury or the FBI; * link more closely with the U.S. government. They argue that collection of more information on more individuals and organizations would impose financial and administrative burdens on non-profits and hinder their charitable activities: They claim that the information itself will have little utility in preventing the diversion of charitable funds to terrorist purposes. The group complains that the government is potentially undermining the trust between U.S. charities and foreign recipients and creating additional concern about extremist groups targeting humanitarian workers. They point out that the revised Guidelines do much more than offer guidance to charities that might be helpful in achieving compliance with sanctions administered by the Office of Foreign Assets Control The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) is an agency of the United States Department of the Treasury under the auspices of the Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence. OFAC administers and enforces economic and trade sanctions based on U. . The publication of the revised Guidelines in the Federal Register may give government agencies cause to defer to the Guidelines as if they were mandatory, even though they continue to be labeled "voluntary." The Working Group responded with its own Principles of International Charity document. It specifies eight fundamental principles, including the observance of all applicable U.S. and foreign legal requirements and the adoption of further practices, as deemed appropriate by individual charities, that may provide additional confidence that resources and services are provided for exclusively charitable purposes. The group argues: "The foundation of the relationship between a service provider and the community can also be shaken if inquiries by the organization are perceived as undertaken on behalf of a government or as intelligence gathering. The consequences to humanitarian workers when charitable assistance is confused with military or intelligence operations The variety of intelligence and counterintelligence tasks that are carried out by various intelligence organizations and activities within the intelligence process. Intelligence operations include planning and direction, collection, processing and exploitation, analysis and production, may be deadly to staff and may undermine the effectiveness of the programs they deliver." Among the organizations supporting the statement are: Maryland Association of Nonprofit Organizations, Save the Children, U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops; Islamic Society of North America The Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), based in Plainfield, Indiana, USA, is an umbrella group that describes itself as the largest Muslim organization in North America. ; Charles Stewart Mott Foundation Charles Stewart Mott Foundation is a charitable foundation founded in 1926 by Charles Stewart Mott of Flint, Michigan. Mott was the leading industrialist in Flint through his association with General Motors. ; Grantmakers Without Borders A number of NGOs have adopted the "Without Borders" tag, inspired by Doctors without Borders.
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