Saturday 18 July 2015

Famous RTI Activists

RTI Activists

Satish Shetty

Satish Shetty had used the RTI Act to expose large scale land scams involving the leading real estate firm IRB Infrastructure and its subsidiary Aryan. In 2009, he filed a complaint that forged documents had been used by these firms to acquire large swathes of land in the Taje and Pimploli villages off the Pune-Mumbai highway. After investigations, 90 sale deeds were cancelled, and sub-registrar Ashwini Kshirsagar was suspended. The company blamed land brokers for the irregularities and the planned IRB township project was eventually scrapped.

Rinku Singh Rahi

Rinku Singh Rahi is a whistleblower bureaucrat, Provincial Civil Services (PCS) civil servant, fighting against corruption in Uttar Pradesh (UP) sponsored welfare schemes. He suffered an attempt on his life when local gangsters shot him six times, damaging his jaw and the vision of one eye, for exposing corruption. He has been fighting corruption in his own department and state-run schemes since 2009. He was denied access to information on his own department. Instead, an attempt on his life was made allegedly at the behest of Principal Secretary Navtej Singh, and other department officials during the Mayawati government. He started a hunger strike in Lucknow hoping the Akhilesh Yadav government would pay heed to his demands for a reply on his pending RTI application; a criminal investigation into the corruptions charges; and act against miscreants but instead was admitted to a psychiatric ward.

Chubatangit Jamir

Social and RTI activist, I Chubatangit Jamir, has been conferred with “The Best Citizens of India Award 2013” by International Publishing House, the world’s leading biography specialists, for his contribution in social works and RTI. Earlier in August, Chubatangit also received the Bharat Jyoti Award 2013 for “meritorious services and achievements in the field of Right To Information” at India International Centre, New Delhi. A social activist actively involved with RTI issues since 2006, he was also an investigator under Planning Commission for Nagaland Chapter (2012) on study of central department funds in North East Region.

Amit Jethwa 

Amit Jethwa was an Indian environmentalist and social worker, active in the Gir Forest area near Junagadh, Gujarat. He had filed several court cases against illegal mining in the protected area, naming Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) member of parliament, Dinu Solanki as one of the respondents. On 20 July 2010 he was shot dead by two assailants on a motorbike. On 6 September, Dinu Solanki's nephew Shiva Solanki has been arrested for allegedly having ordered gun-for-hire Pachan Shiva and one other to commit the killing.

Lalit Mehta

A civil engineer by qualification, he blew the lid off widespread corruption in NREGA in Palamu. He had become a threat to the contractor lobby and corrupt government officials. Social audit of NREGA that he undertook under economist Jean Dreze's supervision was proving to be the final nail in the coffin of the contractor lobby. But he was killed just a day before that. 

Tuesday 14 July 2015

Duties & Obligations of a Public Information Officer

Duties of a Public Information Officer

The word public authority is frequented in numerous publications. Who or what is this public authority? The simplest to way to understand it may be by glancing at the duties and scope of it. The public authority is given the responsibility of documenting and maintaining the basic structure of the organisation which may include details such as organisation design, list of employees, various procedures to be followed for different operations, rules and regulations to be followed, etc. It also enumerates policy formulation and its implement. Files the minutes of the different meetings and discussions of boards, councils, committees. Public authority prepares statements of employee’s and director’s compensation. Gives a detail account of the annual budget allocation along with subsidies and concessions received. All these details are by rule the responsibility of the public authority to consolidate and present in electronic form. The publications are updated on a yearly basis.

Second important office to understand is that of the Public Information Officer ( PIO ). It is the PIO who deals with requests from persons who seek information in the prescribed manner. The PIO shall either respond to the request expeditiously within a maximum of 30 days from the date of payment or reject the request for any of the reasons specified in section 8 and 9. In cases involving the life or liberty of a person, the PIO is deemed to respond within 48 hours of the request. If however the PIO does not respond within the stipulated time the request is considered to be rejected, in case of which the PIO must communicate with the requester the reasons for the same along with details regarding the appellate authority and timeframe within which he should act upon. The PIO provides the information in the format sort. In case the information is beyond his subject matter, the PIO shall transfer the case to the concerned authority within 5 days or may seek assistance of another officer. In matters where only partial access to information requested is granted, the PIO must provide the information only after severance of the record exempted from disclosure and communicate reason for partial access, designation of the granting or prohibiting authority and the revised fee. In cases dealing with information involving third party, the PIO shall intimate the concerned in written form within 5 days from the receipt of the request, at the same time accommodating his representation by 10 days of notice.

Sunday 12 July 2015

Grounds for Appeal & Rejection of RTIs

Grounds for Appeal & Rejection

The right to information is meant to empower the people with specific and useful information which helps them increase the level of accountability in the administrative system. But is there any scope for appeal if an applicant is not satisfied with the reply provided or if the answer is not the closure the applicant is looking for? Here’s more on that.

1. If an applicant is not supplied information within the prescribed time of thirty days or 48 hours, as the case may be, or is not satisfied with the information furnished to him, he may prefer an appeal to the first appellate authority who is an officer senior in rank to the Public Information Officer. Such an appeal should be filed within a period of thirty days from the date on which the limit of 30 days of supply of information is expired or from the date on which the information or decision of the Public Information Officer is received. The appellate authority of the public authority shall dispose of the appeal within a period of thirty days or in exceptional cases within 45 days of the receipt of the appeal.

2. If the first appellate authority fails to pass an order on the appeal within the prescribed period or if the appellant is not satisfied with the order of the first appellate authority, he may prefer a second appeal with the Central Information Commission within ninety days from the date on which the decision should have been made by the first appellate authority or was actually received by the appellant.

Certain intelligence and security organisations specified in the Second Schedule, are exempted from providing information excepting the information pertaining to the allegations of corruption and human rights violations.

The List of 22 exempted organizations is given below:

  • Intelligence Bureau, Ministry of Home Affairs
  • Directorate of Revenue Intelligence, Ministry of Finance
  • Central Economic Intelligence Bureau, Ministry of Finance
  • Directorate of Enforcement, Ministry of Finance
  • Narcotics Control Bureau
  • Aviation Research Centre
  • Special Frontier Force
  • Border Security Force, Ministry of Home Affairs
  • Central Reserve Police Force, Ministry of Home Affairs
  • Indo-Tibetan Border Police, Ministry of Home Affairs
  • Central Industrial Security Force, Ministry of Home Affairs
  • National Security Guard, Ministry of Home Affairs
  • Research & Analysis Wing of The Cabinet Secretariat
  • Assam Rifles, Ministry of Home Affairs
  • Sashastra Seema Bal, Ministry of Home Affairs
  • Special Protection Group
  • Defence Research and Development Organisation, Ministry of Defence
  • Border Road Development Organisation
  • Financial Intelligence Unit, India
  • Directorate General Income Tax (Investigation)
  • National Technical Research Organisation
  • National Security Council Secretariat



Wednesday 8 July 2015

Grounds of Rejection of an RTI

Grounds of Rejection


It is imperative to know the grounds on which an RTI can be rejected.  The RTI Act lays down the grounds on which and RTI can be rejected under Section 8(1), Section 9, Section 11 and Section 24. 

An Application can be rejected if it is incomplete in any respect.

Section 8(1)

Under Section 8(1), an application can be rejected in case of disclosure of information which:

a) would prejudicially affect the sovereignty and integrity of India, the security, strategic, scientific or economic interests of the State, relation with foreign State or lead to incitement of an offence;

b) has been expressly forbidden to be published by any court of or the disclosure of which may constitute contempt of court;

c) would cause a breach of privilege of Parliament or the State Legislature;

d) includes commercial confidence, trade secrets or intellectual property, which would harm the competitive position of a third party, unless the competent authority is satisfied that larger public interest warrants the disclosure of such information;

e) would endanger the life or physical safety of any person or identify the source of information or assistance given in confidence for law 
enforcement or security purposes;

f) would impede the process of investigation or apprehension or prosecution of offenders;
 
g) is information available to a person in his fiduciary relationship, unless the competent authority is satisfied that the larger public interest warrants the disclosure of such information;

h) is information received in confidence from foreign Government;
Cabinet papers including records of deliberations of the Council of Ministers, Secretaries and other officers;

i) The explanations given by the Council of Ministers to not provide the information has to be made public after the completion of the matter.

Further, matters which come under the exemptions specified shall also be not disclosed. 

Information which would cause unwarranted invasion of the privacy will not be disclosed unless the Central Public Information Officer or any other appellate authority is satisfied that it is in public interest to disclose the information.

Section 9

Under Section 9, an application can be rejected if:
Without affecting to the provisions of section 8, a Central Public Information Officer or a State Public Information Officer may reject a request for information which would involve an infringement of copyright subsisting in a person other than the State.

Section 11

Under Section 11, an application can be rejected if:
Where a Central Information Officer or a State Public Information Officer intends to disclose the information supplied by a third party and has been treated as confidential by that third party, then the officer within five days from the receipt of the request, give a written notice to such third party of the request and invite the third party to make a submission in writing or orally, regarding whether the information should be disclosed, and such submission will be considered while taking a decision about disclosure of information:
Provided that except in the case of trade or commercial secrets protected by law, disclosure may be allowed if the public interest in disclosure outweighs in importance any possible harm or injury to the interests of such third party.

Section 24

Security and Intelligence organizations are exempted from this Act
But the information pertaining to the allegations of corruption and human rights violations shall not be excluded under this and in the case of information sought for is in respect of allegations of violation of human rights, the information shall only be provided after the approval of the Central Information Commission and such information shall be provided within forty-five days from the date of the receipt of request.

The Central Government may include or exclude any intelligence or security organization by a notification in the official gazette and nothing specified in this section will be applicable to such organisations. But information in relation to corruption and human rights violation shall not be excluded and information sought in respect of violation of human rights will be provided after the approval of the State Information Commission.

  

Monday 6 July 2015

Monetary Aspects of RTI

Monetary Aspects


Section 6(I) of the RTI act deals with the fee structure and charges levied on the applicant and other conditions with regard to such.

Every application is charged with a fee of Rs.10/-. Such application is to not exceed a maximum of five hundred words excluding the annexes and the addresses of the authority and the applicant, however no application may be rejected on account of exceeding the word limit alone.

Fee Structure

The fee structure is as follows:

A) Each paper obtained of size A3 or lower costs Rs.2/- per page.

B) For larger sizes the actual cost of the photocopy is charged.

C) Samples and models obtained are also charged at actual cost.

D) Discs or Floppy discs cost Rs.50/- per disc.

E) Publications are issued at the rate of Rs.2/- per copy per page.

F) Inspection of the records is free for the first hour and every subsequent hour draws Rs.5/- per hour.

G) In case of information sent through post, the postal charges are added to the total fee from the applicant.

Mode of Payments

The following modes of payment are accepted:

A) In cash, addressed to the concerned Public Authority, against a proper receipt issued.

B) By DD, cheque or Indian Postal Order addressed to “ Accounts Officer of the Public Authority ”.

C) Or by Electronic means, addressed to the “ Accounts Officer of the Public Authority ”, if such facility is available.

It must be noted that there is an exemption to the payment of fee to all persons belonging to the below poverty line category, provided that such a certification issued by an appropriate Government authorising the status is filed along with the application.

Friday 3 July 2015

Procedure to File RTIs

How and where to file an RTI


“Nothing could be more axiomatic for a democracy than the principle of exposing the process of government to relentless public criticism and scrutiny.” (Francis E. Rourke, 1960, p. 691).

The RTI came into existence in 2005 and its main aim is to empower the citizens with information about the institutions that influence and control them and at the same times make these institutions accountable to the public for their actions so as to ensure transparency in their functioning. RTI is a part of the fundamental rights of every citizen under article 19 and the importance of the right to know has been expounded by the Supreme Court as early as in 1976 in the case of Raj Narain vs. State of UP.  The court said that that people cannot speak or express themselves unless they know. In a democratic country it becomes all the more important because people are the masters and they need to be informed of the way in which the government is serving them. To ensure that the objective of this act is not defeated the procedure of filing an RTI is also very simple and easy so as to enable even a layman to enforce its rights of having the required information.

The two major questions which have to be addressed when it comes to the procedural aspect of RTI are as follows-
a)How to file an RTI?,
b)Where To file an RTI,
c)On what grounds can the RTI Be rejected?
First of all one can get the entire act on the website of Department of Personnel and Training www.persmin.nic.in and they can even be accessed on the RTI website http://righttoinformation.gov.in/rtiact.html.
The two important questions of how to file an RTI and where to file an RTI are discussed below.

How to file an RTI?

There is no specific procedure of filing an RTI application. . Your application can even be on a simple plain paper However, many states and some ministries and departments have prescribed formats. You should apply in these formats. Please read rules of respective states to know. Applicants however need to ensure that their contact details including name and correspondence address appear on the application.

Where To file an RTI?

Citizens can exercise their right to information by filing an application with a Central Public Information Officer (CPIO). All the administrative levels of the government will have a CPIO who will give the required information to people who file an application or a query under the RTI Act.

But the applicants should not file the application under the portal
https://rtionline.gov.in/, for public authorities under the State Governments, including Government of NCT Delhi because if done so their application would be returned without the refund amount.
Another vital point of which the people should have the knowledge of is that who will be providing them with the relevant information when they file an RTI. So with regards to this one or more officers in every government department have actually been  designated as public information officers (PIO) who are given the function of nodal officers. They have to collect the information which are sought by the people from various wings of their concerned department and they provide you the requested information. Besides that certain officers have also been appointed as the Assisted Public Information Officers to aid in the task of supplying the relevant information.

To locate the concerned public information officer one can refer to the list of PIO’s/APIO’s and Appellate authorities for all center and state department ministries available online at www.rti.gov.in. Finally after the filing of the application you should receive the information within 30 days. In case you have filed your application with Assistant PIO then information has to be made available within 35 days. In case the matter to which the information pertains affects the life and liberty of an individual, information has to be made available in 48 hours.

Thus since the procedure of filing an RTI application is not at all cumbersome, it should be availed by all the citizens because it empowers us an individual and at the same it also helps to ensure that the institutions of the government which are meant to serve us are working  efficiently. Therefore this right has actually helped to fill the communication gap between the public authorities and the individual and it has been all the more easier by the simple procedure of filing an RTI.

Wednesday 1 July 2015

Purview of 'Information'

Purview of ‘Information’

The Right To Information Act, 2005 has given much more power to its people than any other law. Its basic aim is to provide for setting out the practical regime of right to information under the control of public authorities, in order to promote transparency and accountability in the working of every public authority.
Our previous articles so far have dealt with what RTI really is, and the salient features of the RTI Act. To put in a nutshell what information really is – it means any material in any form including records, documents, memos, e-mails, opinions, advices, press-releases, circulars, orders, logbooks, contracts, reports, papers, samples, models, data materials held in any electronic form and information relating to any authority under any other law for the time being in force.
However, we do not have absolute right to information in respect of each and every activity. There are some areas where the Government can withhold information and deny the same to people by giving cogent reasons. The golden principle is that, the information which cannot be denied to the Parliament or a State legislature shall not be denied to the people as well. There are some areas that have been kept out of the purview of this law in view of security and integrity of the country and other such important matters.
Several such disclosures are provided in Section 8 of the Right To Information Act, 2005. The same has been reproduced below along with some illustrative questions:
A)    Information, disclosure of which would prejudicially affect the sovereignty and integrity of India, the security, strategic, scientific, economic interests of the State, relation with foreign State or lead to incitement of an offence.

·        Can surveillance of telephone be treated as confidential?
 In a particular case, S. C. Sharma had asked for a copy of the order through which the Ministry of Home Affairs had authorized the CBI to intercept telephone calls under the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885. The commission examined the issue and held that the specific cases of interception and surveillance by the authorized agency have to be kept highly confidential because of the very nature of the surveillance operation. Its security implications are undisputed.

B)   Information which has been expressly forbidden to be published by any court of law or tribunal or the disclosure of which may constitute contempt of court.

·        In a recent judgement the Ministry of Railways has been specifically directed by the High Court not to place the enquiry report of a Godhra investigation report prepared by the committee on their behalf, before the Parliament.

C)   Information, the disclosure of which would cause a breach of privilege of Parliament or the State Legislature.

D)   Information including commercial confidence, trade secrets or intellectual property the disclosure of which would ham the competitive position of a third party, unless the competent authority is satisfied  that larger public interest warrants the disclosure of such information
·         Can details of loans granted by banks be given?
No. The commission has held in the case of Jasvinder Singh Rana vs. Bank of Baroda that disclosure of such information would cause unwarranted invasion of privacy of individual / third party, as per Section 8(1) (j). In this case it was found by the commission that the exemption from disclosure of information under section 8(1) (d) and (j) had been correctly applied by the appellate authority.

E)    Information available to a person in his fiduciary relationship, unless the competent authority is satisfied that the larger public interest warrants the disclosure of such information
·         Can evaluated answer sheets be shown and is it covered under fiduciary relationship? No, the evaluated answer sheets cannot be shown as they are covered under fiduciary relationship. The commission has held the following in the case of Treesa Irsh vs. Kerala Postal Circle:  “we find that in case of evaluated answer papers the information available with the public authority is, in his fiduciary relationship, the disclosure of which is exempt u/s 8(1)(e). Therefore, we hold that the 66 CPIO was justified in rejecting the request of the appellant for a copy of the evaluated answer paper.”
·         Is conducting of examination treated as a confidential activity?
 Yes. The commission has held in the case of Neeraj Kumar Singhal vs. Northern Railways that conduct of examinations and for identifying and short-listing the candidates in terms of technical competence, right attitude etc is a highly confidential activity. Therefore, answer-sheets should not be disclosed. However, the award of marks need not be kept secret

F)    Information received in confidence from foreign Government
This has been done as per international protocol

G)   Information, the disclosure of which would endanger the life or physical safety of any person or identify the source of information or assistance given in confidence for law enforcement or security purposes.

H)   Information which would impede the process of investigation or apprehension or prosecution of offenders.

·         Does disclosure of information when court case is at advance stage amount to impeding the process of investigation?
 This issue has been examined in a number of cases by the commission. The judgements delivered reveal that the commission has evaluated each case on merits and the stage at which it was. It has observed that in cases, which are at advance stage of prosecution or where the disclosure of information can lead to blocking the progress of case or will amount to setting the clock back, the information need not be provided. One such decisions is as under
 In the case Ashok Kumar Aggarwal vs. Ministry of Finance it was found that when the Court had duly seized of the matter and prosecution had started in this case, the exemption from disclosure of information under Section 8(1)(h) of the Act had been correctly applied by the Appellate Authority of the Department of Revenue.

I)      Cabinet papers including records of deliberations of the Council of Ministers, Secretaries and other officers are exempted.
·        However, the decisions of Council of Ministers, the reasons thereof, and the material on the basis of which the decisions were taken shall be made public after the decision has been taken, and the matter is complete, or over. Thus one can seek the material on the basis of which decisions have been taken by the cabinet. However, those matters, which come under the exemptions specified in this section, shall not be disclosed
J)      Information which relates to personal information, the disclosure of which has no relationship to any public activity or interest, or which would cause unwarranted invasion of the privacy of the individual
·        Annual immovable property returns cannot be given to third party. In the case of Mukesh Kumar vs. Ministry of Finance, the commission held that the information requested for (annual immovable property return of third person) is in the nature of personal information, the disclosure of which may cause unwarranted invasion of privacy of the individual officer and hence its denial by CPIO is correct.
·        The annual performance appraisal report can’t be given as they are exempted under section 8(1)(j). In case of Tapas Dutta vs. Indian Oil Corporation Ltd, it was held by the commission that the assessment reports by the superior officers were personal and confidential information and therefore exempted under Section 8(1) (j) of the RTI Act.

K)   Notwithstanding any of the exemptions listed above, a public authority may allow access to information if public interest in disclosure outweighs the harm to the protected interest