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Why the RTI Act is in danger

Last updated on: May 14, 2015 10:04 IST

RTI act

'The prime minister has taken pre-emptive action by not appointing a Chief Information Commissioner at all to render it dysfunctional.'

'The bureaucracy is also hardening its stand and in most cases has realised that the commissioners are not really committed to transparency,' says former Central Information Commissioner Shailesh Gandhi.

The Right to Information Act has caught the imagination of people and the way it has spread is being appreciated and admired around the world. A great change has come in India in the last decade in the power equation between the sovereign citizens and those in power.

This change is just beginning and if we can sustain and strengthen it, our defective elective democracy could metamorphose into a truly participatory democracy within the next one or two decades. We have just begun this journey towards a meaningful Swaraj.

I believe the media -- visual, print and social -- and RTI have been a fortunate heady mix. They have the potential of actualising the promise of democracy. However, there are also signs of regressive forces which could stymie these promises.

I am going to refer to the two biggest dangers to RTI:

Most established institutions are unhappy with the RTI Act. When the power equation changes between those with power and the ordinary citizen, resistance is to be expected. Everyone in power generally feels transparency is good for others, whereas they should be left to work effectively. It is implied that transparency is a hindrance to good governance.

We have travelled some distance away from the statement made by a seven-judge bench of the Supreme Court in the S P Gupta vs President of India & others (1982): 'There can be little doubt that exposure to public gaze and scrutiny is one of the surest means of achieving a clean and healthy administration. It has been truly said that an open government is clean government and a powerful safeguard against political and administrative aberration and inefficiency.'

Former prime minister Manmohan Singh -- harried by the uncovering of various scams by RTI - said at the Central Information Commission's convention in October 2012: 'There are concerns about frivolous and vexatious use of the Act in demanding information the disclosure of which cannot possibly serve any public purpose.'

The present prime minister has taken pre-emptive action by not appointing a Chief Information Commissioner at all to render it dysfunctional. The bureaucracy is also hardening its stand and in most cases has realised that the commissioners are not really committed to transparency.

This coupled with the long wait at the commissions and the stinginess of the commissions in imposing penalties is slowly making it difficult to get sensitive information which could aid citizens to expose structural shortcomings or corruption.

A former Chief Justice of India said in April 2012, 'The RTI Act is a good law, but there has to be a limit to it.' I am amazed at the suggestion that there should be a limit to RTI.

The limit has been laid down in the law by Parliament in terms of exemptions. Any interpretation beyond what is written in the law will be a violation of citizen's fundamental right to information.

A greater danger comes from the selection of information commissioners as a part of political patronage. Most have no predilection for transparency or work. Their orders are often biased against transparency and in many places a huge backlog is being built up as a consequence of their inability to cope.

Consequently, a law which seeks to ensure giving information to citizens in 30 days on pain of penalty gets stuck for over a year at the commissions. Most of these commissioners do not work to deliver results in a time-bound manner and lose all moral authority to penalise public information officers who do not work in a time-bound manner. Commissioners are slowly working less and less.

In the Central Information Commission, six commissioners had disposed 22,351 cases in 2011, whereas in 2014 seven commissioners disposed only 16,006 cases!

Whereas civil society and media are rightly critical of the government for not appointing the balance four commissioners, at the current rate of disposal even 11 commissioners will not dispose over 25,000 cases a year.

In 2014, the CIC received 31,000 cases and presently has a pendency of over 38,000 cases. It is evident that at this languorous pace of working the RTI will slowly become like the Consumer Protection Act -- mainly in existence for the commissioners.

Citizens must wake out of their slumber and focus on getting commissioners who will dispose over 6,000 cases each year and give clear signals that they will not tolerate tardiness from public information officers or commissioners.

Eternal Vigilance is the price for democracy. We have a very useful tool to make our democracy meaningful and effective. It will work and grow if we struggle to ensure its health.

We need to put pressure on various institutions so that they restrain from constricting our right, ensure a transparent process of selection of commissioners and adequate disposal of cases at the commissions. If we are lazy this right will also putrefy.

Shailesh Gandhi is former Central Information Commissioner.

Shailesh Gandhi