Saturday, January 17, 2026

Tamil Nadu's bid to add 2 more members to RTI body

DT Next: Tamilnadu: Saturday, 17 January 2026.
The State government has constituted a search committee, headed by retired Justice KBK Vasuki, to identify eligible members for the body. An official notification said applications from eligible candidates would be received till January 27.
Amid activists' allegations of inefficiency of the Right to Information (RTI) agency and attempts to kill its purpose, the State government has initiated the process to bolster the Tamil Nadu Information Commission by appointing two additional Information Commissioners.
The State government has constituted a search committee, headed by retired Justice KBK Vasuki, to identify eligible members for the body. An official notification said applications from eligible candidates would be received till January 27.
At present, the Tamil Nadu Information Commission comprises the Chief Information Commissioner and five Information Commissioners Md Shakeel Akhter, P Thamarai Kannan, P Priyakumar, K Thirumalaimuthu, VPR Elamparithi, and M Natesan. The State government has decided to increase the strength by appointing two more commissioners.
The search committee is headed by Justice KBK Vasuki, with retired IAS officer MP Sivanarul and retired IPS officer K Radhakrishnan as members. The committee has invited applications from qualified and eligible candidates.
The State Information Commissioners will be appointed by the Governor on the recommendation of a committee comprising the Chief Minister, the Leader of the Opposition, and a Cabinet Minister nominated by the Chief Minister. The government is planning to complete the appointments ahead of the forthcoming Assembly elections.
According to the notification, aspirants must apply in the prescribed format, which can be downloaded from the State government website (www.tn.gov.in/job-opportunity.php). The completed application should be sent by post and by e-mail (chairperso2026@gmail.com) on or before January 27.
Applications should be addressed to Justice KBK Vasuki, President, Search Committee, Second Floor, No.108, Armenian Street, Parrys Corner, Chennai–600001.
Candidates from fields such as law, science, social service, management, journalism, mass media, administration, and governance are eligible to apply. After scrutiny, the search committee will forward a panel of names to the government.

Service Records Of Judicial Officers Exempt From RTI Disclosure In Absence Of Public Interest: Chhattisgarh High Court

Times of India: Ahmedabad: Saturday, 17 January 2026.
The SIC had ordered disclosure of service records information concerning three judicial officers in response to an RTI application filed by a private individual
The Chhattisgarh High Court has ruled that information relating to the service records of judicial officers including their educational or job-related certificates, complaints made against them, and details of departmental or other inquiries is exempt from disclosure under the Right to Information Act, 2005. The Chhattisgarh State Information Commission (SIC) had ordered disclosure of such information concerning three judicial officers in response to an RTI application filed by a private individual.
A Bench of Justice Sachin Singh Rajput held, “The information sought for is maintained by the petitioners being employer of the judicial officers can be treated as records pertaining to personal information of those judicial officers and publication of the same is prohibited under Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act, as this is the matter between the employer and the employee and are governed by the Service Rules, therefore, falls under the expression 'personal information' and disclosure of which has no relationship to any public activity or public interest."
The High Court further held, "The information sought pertains to judicial officers of the State of Chhattisgarh which have been kept safely and confidentially by their employer (High Court administration) and a bare perusal of the application made under Section 6 (1) of the RTI Act does not show that such information was required for any public purpose, rather it appears to have been sought for the personal use of the applicant."
Background
The RTI application was filed in 2017 seeking details of complaints lodged against three judicial officers, the inquiries conducted into those complaints, and the certificates they had submitted during their appointment process. In 2019, the State Information Commission directed the High Court administration to furnish the requested information.
Aggrieved by this direction, the High Court’s administrative side represented through the Registrar General and Public Information Officers approached the High Court by way of writ petitions. These petitions were allowed by a common order.
Finding
The High Court, however, rejected one of the preliminary objections raised by the petitioners. They had argued that the SIC’s order was invalid because it was passed by a single Information Commissioner, whereas the RTI Act envisages a multi-member commission. Disagreeing with this contention, the Court held that individual Information Commissioners are legally competent to hear and decide appeals independently. The RTI Act, the Court explained, permits internal allocation of work among commissioners, and a decision by a single commissioner cannot be treated as an overreach of jurisdiction.
The Court clarified, “each member of the State Information Commission and the Central Information Commission is equally competent to decide the issue involved on its own merits and there is no question of the Commissioner alone usurping the jurisdiction of the Commission and passing the order in his individual capacity, as argued by the counsel for the petitioners. ”
The Court also dismissed the argument that the SIC had ordered a “roving inquiry” into the conduct of judicial officers. It held that, "The State Information Commission has nowhere asked the petitioners in this case to create the information and then to provide the same to the applicant. Rather, being the repository of the record pertaining to the judicial officers, the information sought for can well be said to exist and accessible to the public authority as is provided under Section 6 of the RTI Act."
The High Court held that the requested material also falls within the protection of Section 8(1)(e) of the RTI Act, which exempts information held in a fiduciary relationship from disclosure.
The Court reasoned that documents such as complaints, certificates, and inquiry records are submitted by judicial officers to the High Court in confidence and are held by the Court in a fiduciary capacity. Such information, the Court held, cannot be disclosed unless the applicant clearly establishes an overriding public interest.
Finding that no such public interest had been demonstrated by the RTI applicant, the Court quashed the SIC’s directions .
Cause Title: High Court of Chhattisgarh & Others v. Rajkumar Mishra & Anr., [2026:CGHC:2344]
(Click here to read/download Judgment)

Friday, January 16, 2026

Who Paid for Electoral Bonds Printed after Supreme Court Verdict? RTIs Flag Unanswered Questions

Moneylife: National: Friday, 16 January 2026.
A fresh set of replies received under the Right to Information (RTI) Act by transparency campaigner commodore (Cmde) Lokesh Batra (retd) has raised new questions over who ultimately bore the cost of printing high-value electoral bonds after the Supreme Court struck down the scheme in February 2024 and why key bills remain unpaid or unaccounted for more than a year later.
The RTI responses, received from the department of economic affairs (DEA) under the Union ministry of finance (MoF) and the Indian Security Press (ISP) at Nashik, relate specifically to the printing of 8,350 electoral bonds (EBs) of ₹1 crore denomination each, which were printed after the Supreme Court’s landmark judgment dated 15 February 2024.
Cmde Batra had sought point-wise information on the total amount levied on the government towards printing electoral bonds, including goods and services tax (GST), the date of the final bill for the 8,350 high-value bonds printed after the judgment, the date of payment, and details of any correspondence between the government and ISP Nashik regarding the final bill.
In its RTI reply dated 31 December 2025, DEA stated that an amount of ₹1.90 crore, inclusive of GST, had been levied on the government towards the printing of electoral bonds, along with ₹6,720 for a 'device to verify mask-a-print security'.
However, the ministry also admitted that the final bill for printing the 8,350 electoral bonds of ₹1 crore denomination 'has not been received by the government of India till date', rendering questions on the date of payment inapplicable.
DEA further says that no information existed on any communication or notings exchanged with ISP Nashik on the pending bill.
In parallel, information sought from the Nashik ISP, the government-owned security printer, shows that the press had indeed printed and supplied the 8,350 electoral bonds of ₹1 crore denomination in February 2024. In earlier disclosures and subsequent RTI proceedings, ISP indicated that its cost for printing these 8,350 bonds was about ₹3.72 lakh, a fraction of the total amount cited by the DEA for printing electoral bonds overall.
In a detailed RTI application and subsequent appeal filed on 22 June 2025, Cmde Batra specifically asked ISP to disclose the date on which the final bill for these bonds was forwarded to DEA, the date of receipt of payment, or alternatively, whether the cost had been borne internally by ISP from its own budgetary head. The appeal notes that more than a year had elapsed since the bonds were printed on 21 February 2024, yet no clarity had emerged on billing or payment.
The RTI replies, read together, point to a puzzling gap in the official record. While the DEA confirms that over ₹1.90 crore has been levied for printing electoral bonds in total, it simultaneously states that the final bill for the specific batch of 8,350 bonds of ₹1 crore denomination printed after the Supreme Court judgment has not been received. On the other hand, ISP confirms printing and supply but offers no public clarity on whether it has been paid for this specific job or has absorbed the cost itself.
Cmde Batra has questioned why no reminder appears to have been issued by the government to ISP Nashik for submission of the final bill, and whether the cost has effectively been written off, likening it to a non-performing asset. “After all, this is taxpayers’ money. The government must come out with a clear answer,” he says.
The issue assumes significance against the backdrop of the Supreme Court’s strong observations on transparency in the electoral bond scheme. In February and March 2024, the apex court had directed full disclosure of electoral bond details and criticised selective sharing of information, leading to eventual disclosure by State Bank of India (SBI) to the election commission.
Earlier RTI disclosures, reported by Moneylife in April 2024, had shown that the Union government spent nearly ₹14 crore on electoral bonds over the years, including commission paid to SBI, printing costs, and GST. Of this, around ₹1.90 crore was attributed to printing and supply charges paid to ISP Nashik for over 6.82 lakh bonds printed between 2018 and February 2024.
However, the latest RTIs introduce a new and narrower question: who paid or who is yet to pay for the printing of electoral bonds authorised and executed after the scheme had effectively been struck down by the Supreme Court.
With both the DEA and ISP pointing to gaps in billing and payment records, the matter underscores continuing opacity in the financial unwinding of the now-scrapped electoral bond scheme, even as public authorities insist that no further information is available on record.

Jammu Kashmir: Govt Directs Departments to Upload All RTI Applications on Online Portal

Kashmir Life: Srinagar: Friday, 16 January 2026.
Jammu and Kashmir authorities have issued strict instructions to all Central Public Information Officers (CPIOs) to ensure that all Right to Information (RTI) applications, including those received offline, are uploaded onto the Union Territory’s Online RTI Portal.
The directive, issued by the Public Works (R and B) Department on January 12, 2026, comes after observations that several CPIOs were not uploading offline applications, causing inaccuracies in the RTI database and inconvenience for applicants.
The Online RTI Portal, launched on December 10, 2024 by the General Administration Department, allows citizens to submit RTI requests, track their status, and receive responses electronically without visiting government offices in person. It also maintains a comprehensive record of all applications received by CPIOs and appeals handled by First Appellate Authorities (FAAs).
Officials have been directed to upload offline RTI applications received via speed post, hand delivery, or other means, enabling applicants to track their requests using the IPO Number or Postal Consignment Number. Nodal officers at the Public Authority level have also been instructed to monitor compliance regularly.
The move is part of the UT administration’s effort to improve transparency, maintain accurate RTI records, and streamline citizen access to information under the RTI Act, 2005.

Information on complaints against judicial officers can't be disclosed under RTI Act: Chhattisgarh High Court

Bar and Bench: Chhattisgarh: Friday, 16 January 2026.
The Court observed that such information would constitute "personal information" and is part of the judicial officers' service records held by their employer in a fiduciary capacity under Section 8 of the RTI Act.
The Chhattisgarh High Court has held that information relating to the job certificates of judicial officers, complaints made against them, and details of departmental or other inquiries against them is not liable to be disclosed under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, 2005 [High Court of Chhattisgarh & Ors. v. Rajkumar Mishra & Anr.]
Justice Sachin Singh Rajput made the observation while setting aside directives issued by the State Information Commission (SIC) to disclose such information pertaining to three judicial officers. A private individual had sought this information under the RTI Act.
The Court ruled that such information is part of the judicial officers' service records and would constitute "personal information" under Section 8 of the RTI Act, the disclosure of which has no connection with any larger public interest.
"The information sought for is maintained by the petitioners being employer of the judicial officers can be treated as records pertaining to personal information of those judicial officers and publication of the same is prohibited under Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act, as this is the matter between the employer and the employee and are governed by the Service Rules, therefore, falls under the expression 'personal information' and disclosure of which has no relationship to any public activity or public interest," it said.
The Court opined that such information appears to have been sought only for the RTI applicant's personal use, which cannot be permitted.
"The information sought pertains to judicial officers of the State of Chhattisgarh which have been kept safely and confidentially by their employer (High Court administration) and a bare perusal of the application made under Section 6 (1) of the RTI Act does not show that such information was required for any public purpose, rather it appears to have been sought for the personal use of the applicant," it said.
The RTI applicant had filed his RTI application in 2017, seeking details of complaints received against three judicial officers in the State, enquiries made against them and the certificates they submitted to secure their jobs.
In 2019, the Chhattisgarh State Information Commission (SIC) directed the disclosure of such information.
This was challenged in writ petitions filed by the High Court's administrative side, through its Registrar General and Public Information Officers. On January 14, the High Court passed a common order allowing these petitions.
Notably, the Court rejected certain arguments made by the petitioners (High Court administration) regarding whether a second appeal under the RTI Act could be decided by a single State Information Commissioner or must be examined by a coram of several members, since the law envisages a multi-member commission.
The petitioners argued that the SIC order could not have been passed by a single member.
The Court disagreed, holding that individual Information Commissioners are empowered to hear and decide appeals, and that the RTI Act allows for an internal allocation of work among its members.
"Each member of the State Information Commission and the Central Information Commission is equally competent to decide the issue involved on its own merits and there is no question of the Commissioner alone usurping the jurisdiction of the Commission and passing the order in his individual capacity, as argued by the counsel for the petitioners ... The broad language of the RTI Act indicates an intention to grant the CIC comprehensive authority to ensure the effective and efficient functioning of the commission," the Court said.
The Court also rejected an argument that the SIC had essentially allowed the conduct of a 'roving enquiry' against judicial officers.
"The State Information Commission has nowhere asked the petitioners in this case to create the information and then to provide the same to the applicant. Rather, being the repository of the record pertaining to the judicial officers, the information sought for can well be said to exist and accessible to the public authority as is provided under Section 6 of the RTI Act," it said.
The Court, however, eventually disagreed with the SIC on whether such information can be disclosed.
It noted that the information sought would also fall under Section 8(1)(e) of the RTI Act, which protects information held in a fiduciary relationship from being publicly disclosed.
It held that complaints, certificates, and inquiry records submitted by judicial officers are held by the High Court in this fiduciary capacity and cannot be disclosed unless a clear public interest is shown.
The High Court found that the RTI applicant had not shown any overriding public interest. It, therefore, set aside the SIC's orders for the disclosure of such information.
Advocates Amrito Das, Abhijeet Mishra and Yashraj Verma appeared for the petitioners (High Court administration)
The Chhattisgarh State Information Commission (CSIC) was represented by advocate Shyam Sunder Lal Tekchandani.
[Read Order]

Thursday, January 15, 2026

When institutions falter, the defence of RTI falls to citizens : By Shamsul Bari and Ruhi Naz

The Daily Star: Bangladesh: Thursday, 15 January 2026.
While 2025 was a year marked by despair over the paralysis of Bangladesh’s right to information (RTI) regime, the beginning of 2026 has brought a welcome note of resistance and resolve. One may recall that the departure of all three information commissioners in September 2024 effectively rendered the Information Commission defunct, leaving RTI users frustrated and the law itself dangerously adrift. Yet, rather than surrendering to institutional inertia, RTI activists who persisted in using the law throughout 2025, however hesitantly, began the new year with a clear and defiant pledge: transparency and accountability will not wither through neglect.
At a meeting held in Dhaka on January 8, activists from across the country, joined by prominent representatives of leading civil society organisations, announced plans to form a citizens’ platform to coordinate collective action, support embattled RTI users, and confront the persistent intransigence of public authorities who continue to treat the RTI Act of 2009 with derision. This moment of mobilisation is significant because the RTI regime stands at a critical juncture today. For around 17 years, Bangladesh’s RTI law has survived not because of robust institutional enforcement but because of the quiet perseverance of a relatively small yet committed group of users—journalists, activists, and ordinary citizens—trained and supported by a handful of dedicated NGOs. Their steady engagement demonstrated that access to information could improve service delivery, expose maladministration, and strengthen democratic participation. It was never a mass movement; it was a living one.
That fragile ecosystem has been severely shaken in recent times. With the Information Commission inactive, oversight mechanisms have effectively vanished. Public officials, already inclined towards secrecy, now face little consequence for ignoring requests, delaying responses, or invoking exemptions indiscriminately. Predictably, RTI applications have declined and successful disclosures have become rare. A law that exists only on paper risks becoming a symbol rather than a tool.
Yet, the response of RTI activists at the dawn of 2026 signals an important truth: transparency is not solely an institutional function; it is also a civic practice. Laws alone do not guarantee accountability; citizens do, too. When oversight bodies fall silent, organised public pressure becomes indispensable. The proposed citizens’ platform reflects this understanding. Its objective is not confrontation per se, but rather coordination, sharing strategies, offering legal and moral support to users facing obstruction, and reminding public authorities that the right to information is neither suspended nor negotiable.
This development also invites broader reflection on why RTI regimes struggle not only in Bangladesh, but also globally. Across countries, similar patterns recur: bureaucratic resistance rooted in colonial-era secrecy; weak record management; overbroad exemptions; under-resourced oversight bodies; and political cultures uncomfortable with scrutiny. Even mature democracies struggle with delayed disclosures and administrative gatekeeping. The lesson from this is sobering but instructive: transparency requires constant vigilance. This is more so in Bangladesh where an interim government that came to power riding on popular support for democracy and people’s power seems to have fallen into familiar patterns of resistance to transparency and accountability.
Bangladesh’s experience underscores another uncomfortable reality. While governments often champion transparency rhetorically, commitment tends to waver when disclosure becomes inconvenient. The absence of information commissioners for more than a year is not a technical oversight; it reflects a deeper ambivalence towards accountability. Restoring the commission with qualified, independent, and adequately supported members is therefore essential, a task that the interim government was well-placed to perform but failed to do. However, restoration alone will not suffice unless accompanied by a clear political signal that the RTI Act truly matters.
In this context, the emergence of a citizens’ platform serves as a corrective to the state’s failure. But civil society and citizens cannot, and should not, permanently fill an institutional vacuum. However, history shows that reform is often propelled from below. In the absence of formal enforcement, collective civic action by an alert citizenry can keep the law alive, prevent further erosion, and build pressure for institutional revival.
The timing is also crucial. As Bangladesh approaches another political transition, commitments to democratic governance will inevitably be tested again. Political parties, policymakers, and public officials should recognise that a functioning RTI regime is not a threat but an asset. Transparency enhances trust, improves policy outcomes, and strengthens the legitimacy of public institutions. Conversely, neglecting RTI fuels suspicion, alienation, and cynicism—costs no society can afford.
The activists who gathered in Dhaka on January 8 have issued a quiet but powerful reminder: that rights, once granted, cannot be allowed to lapse through indifference. Their determination to organise, support one another, and persist despite institutional paralysis deserves not only admiration but also support from civil society, the media, and all citizens who value accountable governance.
The RTI story for Bangladesh in 2026 is still being written. It can either become a lullaby of a democratic promise quietly allowed to fade, or a testament to how citizens can revive a stalled reform through collective resolve. The choice lies not only with the state, but with all of us. Transparency, after all, is not merely a legal entitlement; it is a shared civic responsibility.
The forthcoming national election provides a timely opportunity for political parties to renew their pledge to the people for better governance, an objective that can best be achieved with the active participation of citizens ready to unearth the failings, inaction, negligence, misdeeds and outright corruption of public officials entrusted with serving the public interest, through the effective use of the RTI Act. But for the citizens’ resolve to be fully unleashed, political parties aspiring to form the next government must make their commitment unmistakably clear: that they are genuinely prepared to promote a participatory democracy in which citizens are encouraged to act as vigilant watchdogs of good governance.
No other law matches the scope of the RTI Act in enabling this vital democratic purpose. To demonstrate their seriousness, political parties must commit that, if voted to power, they will immediately fill the three vacant information commissioner posts with independent, competent, and politically neutral individuals. Equally important is a clear pledge to make the law more citizen-friendly by removing provisions that obstruct transparency and deter accountability.
(Dr Shamsul Bari and Ruhi Naz are chairman and deputy director (RTI), respectively, at Research Initiatives, Bangladesh (RIB). They can be reached at rib@citech-bd.com.
Views expressed in this article are the author's own.)

CIC takes note of 'abandoned' DoPT-linked RTI portal advises CGHS to take corrective steps

The Week: New Delhi: Thursday, 15 January 2026.
A large number of RTI applications directed at the CGHS are landing on an abandoned "parallel" portal "inadvertently" opened by the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT), leaving the applicants without any replies and prompting the Central Information Commission (CIC) to order immediate corrective measures.
In a series of orders in the first week of January, Information Commissioner Jaya Varma Sinha was informed by the Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS) that its headquarters "neither received the instant RTI Application nor received the First Appeal at the initial stage on their online CGHS portal" as the applicants had filed those on "some other portal which has inadvertently been opened by the DoPT" and which remains abandoned.
The CGHS added that "their office has sent many requests to close the abandoned portal".
Many RTI applicants who had sought various information from the CGHS in 2024 had not received any response from the public authority, prompting them to approach the CIC with their appeals.
Taking note of the recurring issue, the CIC issued an advisory under section 25(5) of the Right to Information (RTI) Act, stating that there exists "a parallel RTI portal for the Respondent Public Authority, which has been abandoned, but few applicants are still filing RTI applications on that portal".
The commission advised the CGHS to initiate steps, in consultation with the DoPT, for the removal of the abandoned portal and transferring the pending RTI applications to the active system so that those can be dealt with in accordance with the Act.
The CIC noted that the lapse surfaced only after hearing notices were issued by it.
"Upon receipt of the hearing notice from the Commission, the Respondent ... has provided the relevant information in terms of the provisions of the RTI Act to the Appellant," one of the orders said.
In one appeal related to a proposal to open a CGHS health centre in Punjab's Patiala, the CGHS told the CIC that the RTI application and the first appeal were "not received on online-RTI portal CGHS Delhi (Registration Code-CGHSD)" and were received only along with the CIC notice. The applicant was later informed that the health centre was approved.
In another matter concerning queries on reimbursement and complaints under the Ayushman Bharat scheme, the CGHS submitted that the information sought "does not pertain to CGHS" and reiterated that the RTI application and the first appeal were filed on the abandoned portal.
(This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)

Two decades of RTI Journey: Promise & the Practice

Garhwal Post: Dehradun: Thursday, 15 January 2026.
By Dr BP Maithani
In our democratic journey, the Right to Information (RTI) Act of 2005 was hailed as a landmark administrative reform. It represented a shift in the relationship between citizens and the state  turning secrecy and silence in public administration into a regime of disclosure and accountability. The enactment of the RTI Act was believed to be signalling a welcome change in the thinking of our policy makers as it accepted the need to move from the culture of secrecy to greater openness. The right to information had the widest possible reach, covering the legislative, judiciary and executive branches of the governments as well as non-government institutions receiving government grants and subsidies. The access to information was extensive with maximum possible disclosure and minimum exemptions. Few exemptions allowed under section 8 of the Act were also not absolute as they could be subjected to public interest test – overriding exemptions if the benefit of disclosure of information outweighed the harm caused to the public authority or the protected interest. It was thus one of the most progressive laws ever passed by parliament with stringent penalties for failing to provide the required information or preventing access to information in any way. The Act also imposed obligations on public authorities to disseminate maximum information suo-motu with a view to reducing the cost to the citizens and the work load of the public authorities. In the words of the then Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, “The independent appeal mechanism along with extensive disclosure obligations and the provision of punitive action added teeth to the right, making RTI a potent instrument for good governance.” Right to Information was seen as a “sunshine law” that could open up the vaults of public power.
There was curiosity mixed with apprehension in different quarters. The government of Uttarakhand was prompt in initiating preparatory action immediately after the RTI Bill was passed by the Parliament. A taskforce was constituted in the nodal department to make systematic arrangements for creating required institutional infrastructure for handling RTI requests of the citizens. The commitment of the high ranking officers was total who had volunteered to be designated as Public Information Officers (PIOs), and First Appeal Authorities (FAAs). Initially, the Chief Secretary and the Principal Secretaries were designated as First Appeal Authorities and the Secretaries/ Additional Secretaries as Public Information Officers. The then Chief Secretary, Dr RS Tolia, took voluntary retirement one year ahead of his active service and was appointed as the first Chief Information Commissioner in the Uttarakhand Information Commission. However, the euphoria did not last long. As soon as the citizens started exercising their new found right under this law, the public authorities started feeling the heat emanating from the information seekers and the dictates of the independent appellate authority, the State Information Commission. The pressure mounted over time as more and more users of RTI started seeking information inconvenient to public authorities, disturbing their established “work culture”. The feel good factor turned to souring of relations and soon the public authorities became defensive and reactive.
This led to the dilution of the commitment in the implementation of the RTI Act as senior officers started relinquishing the responsibilities as PIOs and FAAs by delegating the responsibility to the junior officers down to the level of section officers and undersecretaries, thereby degrading the RTI implementation process. The main reasons for not being able to cope with the challenge was noncompliance of the mandate of maintaining the official records duly catalogued and indexed in a manner which would have facilitated the supply of requisite information in time, the mind-set of not revealing in-house secrets to outsiders and of course the fear of exposing the irregularities committed under the opaque regime. This set the new phase in the administration of RTI regime marked by tightening of the grip on both the demand and the supply sides of RTI management. The demand constrained was created by increasing threats, intimidation, assaults and killing of RTI activists. RTI activists seeking public interest disclosures are socially boycotted, mocked, abused and serially threatened. Two decades on, the brutal reality of RTI implementation is that more than 100 RTI activists have been killed in the country, 187 assaulted, 191 harassed or threatened. These are the figures which are reported in the national dailies based on the report of crime record bureaus. There must be many more such cases which go unrecorded and reported. For example, 4 RTI activists killed by criminals in Uttarakhand do not find mention in any report and are not known to the people even in Dehradun. This was evident from the RTI debates conducted by the RTI Club in the Universities and colleges where the students highlighted killing of RTI activists in Bihar, Maharashtra, etc., but not in Uttarakhand. For the sake of record, it would be appropriate to mention here the names of RTI martyrs of Uttarakhand who were murdered for exposing corruption in the state. They are (1) the late Jagdish Prasad Chauhan of Ferupur Village Haridwar on 14-02-2012, (2) the late Raj Kumar Raheja of Karanpur village, Kashipur on 12-08-2013, (3) the late Gajpal Singh of Kandola village, Pauri on 8-08-2014, and (4) the late advocate Rajesh Suri of Dehradun on 30-11-2014.
Section 27 of RTI Act authorises the appropriate governments to make rules to carry out the provisions of the Act. But the rule making power of the state governments is limited largely to fixing of the fee for seeking information and prescribing the procedure for hearing and deciding appeals by the information commissions. The Uttarakhand government while exercising its rules making power, notified the new Rules in 2012 which totally distorted the whole process of seeking and supplying information under the Act. The four page rules prescribed initially in 2005 were expanded to 15 pages of guidelines making the procedure cumbersome and difficult to carry out the provisions of the Act. It created the stalemate in the implementation of RTI because State Information Commissioners resolved not to adopt the new rules prescribed by the state government which were against the very spirit of the Act. It took one full year of intense lobbying by the Uttarakhand RTI Club and the State Information Commission, including judicial intervention to get the Rules amended in 2013 to restore implementation process. It is not that this type of antipathy towards RTI Act is prevalent in Uttarakhand only. The situation in other states is much worse.
A study conducted by Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative shows that against the notional Rs 10 application fee charged by the central government and 24 state governments, Arunachal Pradesh charges a whopping Rs 500 application fee for information related to tenders, bids, quotations or business contracts and Rs 50 for other information. Sikkim charges Rs 100, Haryana, Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh Rs 50, and Odisha, Maharashtra and Gujarat charge Rs 20 application fee for seeking information. Similarly, while the central government and 23 state governments do not charge any fee for filing first appeal, some state governments namely Sikkim, Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh charge Rs 100, each, Odisha Rs25 and Maharashtra Rs 20. Then there are States where State Information Commissions are virtually defunct and states where pendency of second appeals has mounted so much that it will take years for the appellants to get their chance of hearing. This situation has arisen mainly because the Information Commissions are grossly understaffed due to administrative neglect. In Uttarakhand also the State Information Commission could not function for months for want of the requisite Information Commissioners two times during the last five years. The state of apathy is such that the activists are forced to file public interest litigations in the courts to get the vacancies filled in the Information Commissions. In 2023, advocate Anjali Bharadwaj had to file PIL in the Supreme Court seeking filling up of 8 vacancies out of 11 sanctioned posts in the Central Information Commission, which were lying vacant for a long time. As a result, the pendency of second appeals had risen from 3134 on 1 November 2023 to 20,437 on 1 December 2024. When responses are delayed for years the right becomes illusory. By 2024-`25, appeals and complaints pending across states and central information commission have reportedly soared in to hundreds of thousands.
Legislative amendment is another pet tactic of bureaucrats` and politicians to get rid of the inconvenient RTI queries. The first unsuccessful attempt to weaken the grip of RTI was made early in 2006 when ‘opinion’ and ‘advice’, read file notes, were sought to be excluded from the definition of information. Under the bureaucratic pressure the cabinet had decided to remove file notes as an item of information but due to strong resistance from the civil society organisations, the cabinet decision was not notified. The political class too has not been happy with the way the RTI Act became a potential tool in the hands of citizens to demand accountability from public authorities. In 2010, RTI activists Anil Bairwal and Subhash Chandra Agrawal had separately sought information from some political parties about the donations received by them. Barring CPI, all other parties responded saying that they did not come under the purview of RTI Act and hence they were not obliged to provide the requisite information. The duo filed appeals with the Central Information Commission against the denial of information which resulted in the landmark ruling of the CIC in 2013 declaring that the political parties fall under the ambit of the RTI Act because formation and operation of the political parties is regulated by the Election Commission which is a public authority. Besides the political parties are also substantially financed directly and indirectly by the government it said. This raised a storm in the political circles creating an awkward situation in which the lawmakers themselves opposed the idea of being governed by the law made by them. In view of the strident opposition of political parties the government decided to amend the RTI Act to keep political parties out of its purview stating that any association or body of individuals registered or recognised as political party under the Representation of the Peoples Act 1951 shall not be treated as Public Authority as defined under section 2(h) of the RTI Act 2005.
The political class was not satisfied with this liberty from RTI. In a discussion in the Rajya Sabha in 2016, some members asked if the government would consider amending RTI Act since it was passed in a hurry in 2005 and is being misused by citizens who with no locus standi (Paanwala, Chaiwala) end up asking the government questions about the country`s missile system or international relations. It was also said that RTI was preventing the officials from taking decisions and some RTI activists have made it a business. Some MPs while venting ire against RTI Act reportedly went to the extent of suggesting that the Act was passed under US pressure. No wonder that the government effected a major degrading amendment in 2019 in the RTI Act. With this amendment, the central government downgraded the status of the Chief Information Commissioners and Information Commissioners and gained discretion to determine the tenure, salaries and conditions of service of the central and state information commissioners thus diminishing their autonomy and increasing potential executive interference.
More recently, the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act 2023 stealthily dilutes the core of the RTI Act. Earlier, the RTI Act empowered citizens to access information about public official`s credentials, assets and conduct if public interest so warranted. The DPDP Act has amended some overlapping provisions especially section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act in a way that broadens exemptions under the cover of personal data. The new Act creates a blanket exemption for personal information without an overriding public interest test even if the person is known to be corrupt. DPDP Act imposes fines up to Rs 250 crores for wrongful disclosure of personal data. The fear of such harsh penalties will deter any PIO or appellate authority to disclose requisite personal information of the erring person. The RTI Act is based on the principle that, in democracy, the government holds information as a custodian and all information by default belongs to citizens. The DPDP Act weakens this premise by giving primacy to data protection and privacy often overriding transparency. It thus undermines the basic democratic principle of the rule of the people. It is unfortunate that the dilution of RTI Act through legislatively amendments is being effected at a time when we pride ourselves to be living in new India and when the country is aspiring to be a developed nation by 2047. One of the indicators of a developed society is good governance, free of corruption and characterised by equality, transparency and accountability. Our ranking in the Transparency International`s corruption index last year was 96 against previous year`s 93. This shows that we are moving in the opposite direction.
The two decades of RTI Act presents a story of both promise and challenge. Originally the law was transformative. It empowered citizens to access information about working of the state, strengthened accountability and opened the governance. But over time, this promise has been undermined by institutional neglect and legislative dilution. Yet all is not lost. The basic structure is intact. What is needed is a renewed commitment both in law and practice.
(The writer is President, RTI Club, Uttarakhand. Views expressed are personal)

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Punjab and Haryana HC stays probe against RTI activist, three journalists over CM helicopter post : Written by Manraj Grewal Sharma

The Indian Express: Chandigarh: Wednesday, 14th January 2026.
Court grants interim relief, issues notice to Punjab government in FIR linked to social media query on official helicopter use
The Punjab and Haryana High Court on Monday granted interim relief to a law student–RTI activist and three journalists, staying further investigation in an FIR registered against them over a social media post questioning the use of Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Singh Mann’s official helicopter during his absence abroad.
Justice Vinod S. Bhardwaj issued notice of motion to the State of Punjab, returnable on February 23.
The petitioners, namely, Manik Goyal, a law student and RTI activist, and journalists Baljinder Singh alias Mintu Gurusaria, Maninderjeet Singh and Mandeep Singh Makkar, had approached the High Court under Section 528 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Suraksha Sanhita, 2023, seeking quashing of FIR No. 67 of 2025. The FIR was registered on December 12, 2025, at the Cyber Crime Police Station, Ludhiana, under Sections 353(1), 353(2) and 61(2) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023.
The case arises from a social media post made by Goyal on December 9, 2025, flagging the movement of the Chief Minister’s helicopter, bearing registration number VT-PSG, on December 8. At the time, Chief Minister Mann was on an official visit to Japan from December 1 to 10.
According to the petitioners, the FIR “originates from a bona fide public query” raised by Goyal regarding the use of the helicopter on a date when the Chief Minister was “admittedly out of India on an official foreign delegation”.
The petition states that the information shared in the post was sourced from FlightRadar24, a publicly accessible and lawful flight-tracking platform. By entering the helicopter’s registration number, Goyal observed that on December 8 the aircraft undertook multiple sorties within Chandigarh, flew to Amritsar, travelled onward to another location and then returned to Chandigarh. The post, the plea says, merely shared publicly available data and raised issues of transparency in the use of public resources.
The issue subsequently triggered wider discussion, with the three journalist-petitioners raising similar questions on their respective platforms and interviewing Goyal. The petition alleges that instead of clarifying the matter, the State chose to initiate criminal proceedings.
It further points out that there is no private complainant in the case. The FIR, it says, was registered solely on the complaint of a police officer, Inspector Satbir Singh, and does not disclose any grievance raised by a member of the public. The plea also claims that while the FIR acknowledges that the helicopter flew on the relevant date and was used by a person holding a constitutional post, it conceals the identity of that person and the purpose of the flight.
The petitioners argue that even if the allegations in the FIR are accepted at face value, no cognisable offence is made out. They contend that raising questions, sharing publicly available information and participating in public debate are protected under Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution, and that the FIR is intended to stifle dissent and independent journalism.
The plea also refers to Goyal’s earlier attempts to seek information through RTI applications filed in 2024 regarding government expenditure on helicopters and aircraft since March 2022, which were rejected on the ground of security exemptions under Section 24 of the RTI Act.
Senior advocate R.S. Bains argued the case for the petitioners, assisted by advocate Loveneet Thakur.
The interim order stays all further proceedings in the FIR until the next date of hearing.

Fare calculation method a ‘Trade Secret’, railways tells CIC as RTI appeal dismissed : Yellarthi Chennabasava

TMV: Article: Wednesday, 14th January 2026.
The Indian Railways has informed the Central Information Commission (CIC) that its methodology for calculating passenger train fares is a trade secret and falls under commercial confidence, and therefore cannot be disclosed under the Right to Information (RTI) Act.
The CIC’s observation came while disposing of an RTI appeal seeking detailed information on the base fare calculation mechanism, including dynamic pricing and Tatkal bookings, for train tickets and specifically for the Paschim Superfast Express.
In its reply, the Railway Board said fares are class-based, with variations arising from the facilities provided in different classes. However, it maintained that the classification and methodology of fare fixation are considered intellectual property and trade secrets , making them exempt from disclosure under Section 8 of the RTI Act, which protects sensitive information such as national security, trade secrets, and personal privacy.
Railway officials cited earlier CIC rulings that upheld the non-disclosure of pricing methodology, emphasizing that Indian Railways functions as a commercial utility while simultaneously fulfilling social obligations in the national interest . The Railway Board’s Chief Public Information Officer (CPIO) added that disclosure of detailed pricing mechanisms was not justified in public interest, since any profit earned is transferred to the public rather than retained for private gain.
While the Railways refused to disclose its internal formulas, it provided general information on fare policies , including that fares are determined according to travel class, are influenced by Tatkal and dynamic pricing, and are guided by commercial considerations balanced with public interest.
The CIC noted that the appellant had already received all disclosable information and that authorities are not required to create or interpret data beyond existing records. Finding no infirmity in the Railway Board’s response and noting the appellant’s absence during the hearing, Information Commissioner Swagat Das said no further intervention was required and dismissed the appeal.

PM Cares Fund has right to privacy under RTI Act even if it is govt entity: Delhi High Court : Prashant Jha

Bar and Bench: New Delhi: Wednesday, 14th January 2026.
There cannot be any difference between the privacy rights of a public or a private trust under the RTI Act, the Court remarked.
The Delhi High Court on Tuesday remarked that even if the PM Cares Fund is run or controlled by the government, it would not lose the right to privacy under the Right to Information Act (RTI Act) [Girish Mittal v CPIO Dy Commissioner of Income Tax].
A Division Bench of Chief Justice Devendra Kumar Upadhyaya and Justice Tejas Karia clarified that it is not talking about the right to privacy flowing from Article 21 of the Constitution, but the right available to third parties under Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act, which bars disclosure of personal information.
“Even if it is State, merely because it is State, it does it lose its right to privacy… How can you say that? Merely because there is an entity discharging certain public functions, or if it is managed, supervised and controlled by the government, it is still a juristic personality. How can you deny such a right [right to privacy] conferred on it merely because it is a public authority,” the High Court remarked.
Chief Justice Upadhyaya explained that the RTI Act forbids information to be provided about third parties and there cannot be any difference between the privacy rights of a public or a private trust under the Act.
“Suppose there is a society or a trust running a school or a football club. Would that society have a right to privacy [under RTI Act] or not… Can you say that without notice to that trust, this information can be given to you? You can't different between the third parties. It can be a private individual, trust, body, society or a cooperative society. It can be anything. Public or not, that would not differentiate, as far as third-party rights under the RTI Act is concerned,” the Court stressed.
The Bench made the remarks while hearing an appeal seeking disclosure of information and documents submitted by the PM CARES Fund while seeking exemption under the Income Tax Act.
The Central Information Commission had allowed the plea and directed the Income Tax Department to disclose the information sought.
However, a single judge of the High Court set aside the CIC directive.
In January 2024, the single-judge ruled that CIC does not have the jurisdiction to direct furnishing of information provided for in Section 138 of the Income Tax Act. It added that Section 138 (2) of the Income Tax Act prevails over Section 22 of the Right to Information Act (RTI Act).
The RTI applicant Girish Mittal then moved the Division Bench against the single-judge directive.
Today, advocate Pranav Sachdeva appeared for Mittal to argue the case. He said that PM Cares Fund is not covered under the exemption granted in Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act and that a public charitable trust established by the government cannot have the right to privacy under this statute.
“Privacy of individuals is to be protected. But this sort of entity [PM Cares Fund] will not have any privacy,” he said.
Sachdeva added that the protection under Section 138 of the Income Tax Act would not apply to the PM CARES Fund, and even if it did, it would be overridden by Section 22 of the RTI Act.
After hearing Sachdeva, the Court listed the case for further hearing on February 10 when Additional Solicitor General N Venkataraman will make the submissions for the Income Tax Department.

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Uttarakhand Information Commission Directs Providing Of Information On Subordinate Judiciary Under RTI

ETV Bharat: Dehradun: Tuesday, 13th January 2026
Uttarakhand Information Commission Directs Providing Of Information On Subordinate Judiciary Under RTI (IANS). The personal identity or name of any judge or officer will not be made public, and permission will have to be taken before providing information
In an important decision taken in Uttarakhand under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, the Uttarakhand Information Commission has directed the disclosure of information related to complaints filed against officials and judges of the subordinate judiciary. This will be the first time in the country that such information will be made public. The appeal and order in the matter could set a precedent for the country.
The December 29, 2025, order, accessed by ETV Bharat, was passed under the chairmanship of Chief Information Commissioner Radha Raturi.
The matter pertains to an appeal filed by Indian Forest Service (IFS) officer Sanjeev Chaturvedi seeking information on rules, complaints and action taken against the subordinate judiciary.
The RTI application filed by the appellant on May 14, 2025, sought information on the service rules, conduct rules and disciplinary action procedures applicable to the subordinate judiciary in Uttarakhand. It also sought information on where and how complaints against judicial officers related to corruption or other matters are filed.
It was also sought how many complaints were filed against officers and judges of the subordinate judiciary between January 1, 2020 and April 15, 2025, and how many of these cases resulted in the recommendation or implementation of disciplinary or criminal action. The appellant had asked for certified copies of the file notings and documents generated during the RTI application process.
However, the Public Information Officer (PIO) did not provide the appellant with complete information, stating that the information requested was confidential and related to a third party. He also argued that permission from the competent authority was required before providing such information.
Dissatisfied with this response, the appellant filed a departmental appeal and then a second appeal with the Information Commissioner, following which the directive was issued.
During the course of the proceedings, where both the appellant and the PIO were present, the appellant argued before the Commission that the information regarding the number of complaints and their disposal process was in the public interest and could not be considered confidential. The PIO reiterated that the complaints, involving judicial officers, were sensitive and could not be made public without permission.
After hearing arguments, the Information Commission stated in its order that merely stating that information is confidential is not sufficient grounds for withholding it. The Commission acknowledged that information regarding the number of complaints and the process for their disposal in the subordinate judiciary falls within the scope of transparency.
However, the Commission also clarified that the personal identity or name of any judge or officer will not be made public. The Commission directed that necessary permission should be obtained from the competent level before providing information regarding the number of complaints and the process.
The Information Commission has directed the PIO to provide the requested information to the appellant within one month of obtaining permission from the competent authority. The Commission also clarified that until such permission is granted, the appeal will be considered partially accepted.
Experts believe this order is an important step towards increasing transparency in the judicial system. It will clarify how complaints are monitored and processed in the subordinate judiciary. Furthermore, this order will set a precedent for individuals seeking information related to judicial administration through RTI in future.

CIC's Massive Backlog: Can New Appointments Save India's RTI Dream? - By Chandramouli Mohan

Moneylife: National: Tuesday, 13th January 2026
India's Right to Information (RTI) Act empowers ordinary citizens to demand transparency from government bodies and public authorities. However, the central information commission (CIC) the final watchdog for RTI appeals now drowns under 32,232 pending cases as of January 2026. This includes 3,591 unresolved complaints and a substantial 28,641 second-level appeals, with clearance projected at 40 months.
What the Shocking Numbers Reveal
Picture this: In December 2025, CIC managed hearings for just 814 cases despite the mountain of backlog. At this pace, it would take over three years exactly 40 months to wipe the slate clean, assuming no new cases arrive. Second appeals, where citizens challenge denials of information, make up nearly 90% of the pile, showing how frustration builds when first-level appeals fail. For everyday people filing RTIs about local issues like road repairs or pension delays, this means waiting years for answers that may no longer matter.
Years of Skeleton Staff Crippled CIC
The RTI Act clearly states CIC should have one chief information commissioner and up to ten Information commissioners to handle the load. Yet, as of late November 2025, only two commissioners were active, leaving thousands of cases in limbo. The commission last worked at full strength back in December 2016 almost a decade ago before vacancies dragged on despite court orders. This chronic shortage let complaints and appeals snowball, turning a quick redressal system into a bureaucratic nightmare.
New Faces Bring Hope But Will It Last?
Good news finally arrived in December 2025: Raj Kumar Goyal was sworn in as the new chief, alongside eight fresh information commissioners like Jaya Verma Sinha and Swagat Das. This restored the full 11-member team after nine empty years, responding to Supreme Court nudges over the 31,000+ backlog. As of early January 2026, these new appointees were still settling in, but experts predict faster hearings ahead. If they hit the ground running, the 40-month timeline could shrink dramatically, breathing life back into RTI.
Rushed Hearings Hurt the Common Man
Even when cases reach hearing, problems persist. CIC schedules allot only two to five minutes per matter barely enough time for an appellant to explain their side amid technical glitches or incomplete records. Cause lists on the CIC website confirm this tight squeeze, leaving many feeling unheard. For a farmer seeking crop subsidy details or a student probing exam irregularities, such brevity discourages follow-ups and erodes faith in the system.
Why This Threatens RTI's Very Soul
Long waits make RTI a joke: By the time information trickles in, elections pass, schemes change, or issues fade. Applicants give up, officials dodge accountability, and corruption festers unchecked. The backlog's root understaffing has been fixed on paper, but success demands better processes, like longer hearings and real-time tracking. Only then can RTI reclaim its role as the common man's weapon against secrecy, ensuring government answers swiftly and fairly.
(Chandramouli Mohan retired as a senior manager from a public sector bank after 38 years of service in various capacities in several places across the country. He has been an RTI and consumer activist since his retirement in March 2020.)