After a decade of the implementation of the national Right To
Information (RTI) Act, it is necessary to reflect on some of its key
achievements and the threats it faces.
It has spread across the country, and there is no district that has
not received RTI applications. It has empowered the ordinary citizen to
get respect as an individual from the government and its officials.
Citizens are becoming the monitors of their government. This year the
number of RTI applications is likely to be over 6 million and the total
number in the last decade may be over 25 million.
However, we should also consider the main threats to the RTI, which
could lead to its regression. Most people in power develop a dislike for
the RTI. Everyone pays lip service to transparency, but when it applies
to their actions, there is a reluctance to share information. They
forget that the citizen is sovereign in her own right. All positions in
Parliament, the bureaucracy and the judiciary derive their legitimacy
from ‘we the people’, who gave ourselves the Constitution. In the
initial years of the RTI, public information officers gave information
reasonably since the threat of personal penalty scared them. Now
techniques have been evolved to deny information. The decisions of the
information commissions and judiciary have also contributed to this.
Another disturbing issue is the judiciary’s approach to transparency.
The Supreme Court had declared that it is a fundamental right flowing
from Article 19 (1) (a) of the Constitution, before the advent of the
RTI Act in many landmark judgments. In the last five years it appears
that the decisions of various courts are expanding the grounds on which
information can be denied. Out of 16 apex court judgments analysed by
this writer, only one gave an order to furnish information. This
judgment had the following statement: ‘The Act should not be allowed to
be misused or abused, to become a tool to obstruct the national
development and integration, or to destroy the peace, tranquillity and
harmony among its citizens. Nor should it be converted into a tool of
oppression or intimidation of honest officials striving to do their
duty.’ No evidence has been forthcoming for such a strong castigation of
a fundamental right. The exemptions in the RTI Act are in line with
Article 19 (2), which lists the reasonable restrictions that can be
placed on the freedom of expression. Many judgments are expanding the
exemptions, in a manner which is not in consonance with the law or the
Constitution.
Information commissions were created by the RTI Act to interpret and
safeguard the RTI, but their performance has been largely
unsatisfactory. They should be giving decisions within 2-3 months;
instead many take over a year. Their own accountability is poor.
Recently it has come to light that the Central Information Commission
has been reducing its pendency figure by rejecting over 90% of appeals
on technical grounds. The penalty provisions are used rarely, removing
the fangs of the law. The solution lies in evolving a transparent
process for selecting commissioners and getting the commissions to be
transparent and accountable.
There is a possibility of a true democracy which can lead to good
governance and respect for the citizen. Citizens must continue their
efforts at spreading the usage and spirit of the RTI, and also to
counter the threats. If citizens want a better future and governance
they will have to take this responsibility.http://www.hindustantimes.com/analysis/rti-empowers-the-citizen-but-threats-can-make-act-opaque/story-nzZvXZYRaqKkTg5lg7CWzN.html
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