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Tribune India: Punjab: Thursday,
January 29, 2026.
All 166 urban
local bodies (ULBs) in Punjab, including municipal councils and municipal
corporations, are collectively paying a daily penalty of around Rs 10 lakh for
failing to comply with solid waste management and legacy waste remediation
norms.
The penalties are
being paid as environmental compensation to the Punjab Pollution Control Board
(PPCB), according to information obtained under the Right to Information (RTI)
Act. The fines have been imposed for continued violation of the Solid Waste Management
Rules, 2016, and for non-compliance with repeated directions issued by the
National Green Tribunal (NGT).
Official
documents reveal that most civic bodies have failed to prepare or submit
proposals for scientific processing and disposal of solid waste since April 1,
2020, despite repeated reminders and notices.
Under the
NGT-approved framework, each ULB is liable to pay environmental compensation
based on its population. Municipalities with a population above 10 lakh are
required to pay Rs 10 lakh per month, those with a population between 5 lakh
and 10 lakh are charged Rs 5 lakh per month, while other ULBs are required to
pay Rs 1 lakh per month.
On an average,
the PPCB has been imposing penalties of nearly Rs 3 crore per month on ULBs
across the state for non-compliance since July 1, 2020. Between July 1, 2020,
and June 30, 2025, the PPCB imposed a cumulative environmental compensation of
Rs 170.12 crore on all 166 ULBs. During this period, the pollution board issued
seven notices to the Local Government Department, urging corrective action.
Year-wise details
of the penalties reveal that Rs 31.84 crore was imposed between July 1, 2020,
and March 31, 2021. This was followed by penalties of Rs 35.26 crore from April
1, 2021, to February 28, 2022; Rs 50.43 crore from March 1, 2022, to September
30, 2023 (a period of 19 months); Rs 14.76 crore from October 1, 2023, to March
31, 2024; Rs 7.65 crore from April 1, 2024, to June 30, 2024; Rs 15.12 crore
from July 1, 2024, to December 31, 2024; and Rs 15.06 crore from January 1,
2025, to June 30, 2025.
Sources said the
persistent failure of ULBs to establish waste processing facilities, ensure
segregation at source and clear legacy dump sites poses a serious threat to
public health, groundwater and the environment. The PPCB has warned that
continued non-compliance could invite further penalties and legal action.
Advocate Kamal
Anand, who obtained the information under the RTI Act, criticised the civic
bodies for their “irresponsible and negligent attitude”. “Instead of investing
in proper management and disposal of solid waste, municipalities in the state
are paying an average of Rs 10 lakh per day as compensation. This ultimately
burdens taxpayers,” he said. “At the same time, residents continue to face
serious health hazards due to mounting heaps of garbage in almost every part of
the state,” added Anand.
Maximum dues
on Ludhiana, Amritsar MCs
The Ludhiana and
Amritsar Municipal Corporations have accumulated the highest environmental
compensation dues of Rs 6 crore each, followed by the Jalandhar MC at Rs 3
crore.
Countercurrents: Raebareli: Thursday,
January 29, 2026.
The Right to
Information Act was enacted to correct a structural imbalance between the
citizen and the State. In a constitutional democracy, information generated
using public funds does not belong to officials or institutions; it belongs to
the public. The RTI Act converts this principle into enforceable law by
imposing binding duties on public authorities and empowering citizens to
question, examine, and audit governance. Nowhere is this obligation more
critical than in a government district hospital, where public money,
administrative discretion, and human life intersect on a daily basis.
Rana Beni Madhav
Singh District Hospital, Raebareli, is a government district hospital and
therefore squarely falls within the definition of a public authority under the
RTI Act. Its records are not optional disclosures or administrative favours.
They are statutory responsibilities. Decisions relating to staffing,
procurement, inspections, expenditure, and service delivery are created in the
name of the public and must withstand public scrutiny. Any denial of such
information must meet the strict legal standards laid down in the Act.
Section 5 of the
RTI Act mandates the appointment of Public Information Officers and fixes
personal responsibility for compliance. This provision exists to ensure that
information flows to citizens efficiently and without obstruction. It does not,
in any form, authorize the denial of information. Citing Section 5 as a ground
for non-disclosure either reflects a serious misunderstanding of the law or an
attempt to cloak denial in procedural language. The section creates
accountability; it does not dilute it.
Section 7 governs
timelines and procedure for providing information. It reinforces the idea that
information delayed is information denied. In the context of a public hospital,
where records often relate to essential services and public welfare, delay or
evasion defeats the very purpose of transparency. Invoking Section 7 while
withholding information reverses the logic of the Act and undermines its
intent.
Section 8
provides limited exemptions, not blanket immunity. These exemptions are narrow,
conditional, and must be justified with reasons. Section 8(1)(j), which
protects personal information, applies only where disclosure has no
relationship to public activity or public interest. Administrative records of a
government hospital cannot be classified as private simply because disclosure
may be uncomfortable or embarrassing. The Act itself makes it clear that even
exempt information must be disclosed where a larger public interest exists. In
public healthcare institutions, public interest is not incidental; it is
inherent.
The most
disturbing aspect of the RTI response is the inclusion of Sections 16, 44, 46,
and 66 as grounds for denial. These provisions have no role whatsoever in
refusing information. Section 16 safeguards the independence of Information
Commissions. Section 44 mandates annual reporting on RTI implementation.
Section 46 gives the Act overriding effect over inconsistent laws. Section 66
enables rule-making for effective implementation. None of these sections
empower a public authority to reject an RTI application. Their invocation
serves no legal purpose except to confuse, overwhelm, or intimidate the
applicant.
The usage of
these sections is not a harmless clerical error. It gives rise to a reasonable
apprehension that legal provisions are being selectively deployed to create the
appearance of legality while, in effect, obstructing transparency. This
practice transforms the RTI reply into a bureaucratic shield rather than a
democratic instrument. It signals an institutional mindset that views
transparency as a threat to be managed rather than a duty to be fulfilled.
The RTI Act does
not permit authorities to assemble a list of sections and present it as a
substitute for reasoned justification. The law demands clarity. Every denial
must demonstrate how the requested information specifically falls within a
valid exemption. Anything less reduces the Act to a procedural ritual devoid of
substance.
Transparency in a
government hospital is not an abstract principle. It directly affects service
quality, resource allocation, and public trust. District hospitals serve
citizens who often have no alternative access to healthcare. When such
institutions resist scrutiny, the consequences are borne not in legal theory
but in lived reality.
The RTI Act was
designed to pierce administrative opacity, not legitimize it. When a government
hospital responds to public queries by misusing statutory provisions, the issue
transcends one application. It raises fundamental questions about how public institutions
understand accountability and their relationship with the citizens they are
meant to serve.
Democracy is not
judged by the existence of laws alone, but by the integrity with which they are
applied. The misuse of RTI provisions is not merely a legal lapse; it is a
democratic failure. When transparency is obstructed through legal obfuscation,
accountability becomes performative and governance loses its moral authority.
BSS: Bangladesh: Wednesday, 28 January 2026.
An orientation session on
the Right to Information (RTI) was held
for students at Nowhata Government High School under Paba upazila of the district.
"Access to
information is your right" a response from the stage came instantly against a raising question "Is
it really possible to get information if
we ask for it?" from a student at the session.
The auditorium turned into
silence while such a question was raised but the entire hall erupted in
applause after hearing the answer.
The orientation session
included such a lively and dramatic atmosphere-filled with quizzes, question-and-answer sessions,
and real-life stories.
At the meeting, held this
(Tuesday) morning on the school premises, speakers said that it is not possible to build an
accountable and transparent system of
governance without ensuring the right to access information. The human desire to know is eternal, they added.
As citizens, the right to
seek and receive information is known as the Right to Information. Information means power, which
plays an effective role in establishing
good governance and combating corruption.
The United Nations and the
Constitution of Bangladesh recognize the right to information as a fundamental right. Article
39(1) of the Constitution of Bangladesh
also mentions this right.
The meeting was organised
by the Bangladesh Country Office of The Carter Center with the aim of raising awareness among
citizens about their right to information
and ensuring the effective implementation of the RTI Act to prevent corruption. The event was held under
the initiative of the combined office of
the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC).
Several real-life examples
of the successful application of the RTI Act were shared at the meeting.
In some cases,
irregularities were prevented by obtaining information about development project expenditures; in others,
experiences were shared on ensuring that
genuine beneficiaries receive support under social safety net programmes.
These real stories sparked
students' curiosity and clearly demonstrated that the right to information is not merely a
theoretical concept, but one deeply connected
to everyday life.
During the orientation, it
was explained that the RTI is a fundamental democratic right of citizens, through which
information held by the government and
certain private institutions can be accessed.
Discussions highlighted
the background, objectives, and significance of the RTI Act 2009. Students were also given a clear
understanding of the definition of
information, the appointment and responsibilities of designated officers, institutional obligations to provide
information, procedures for submitting
applications, the process of responding within stipulated time frames, and application fees.
The quiz competition
organised under the theme "Know the Law, Know Your Rights" made the session even more
engaging, with active participation from students.
Applause for correct
answers and laughter at wrong ones turned the auditorium into an open learning space.
According to the
organisers, such participatory events play an effective role in generating interest among young people in
law and civic rights.
Students also shared their
reflections at the meeting.
Rimti, a sixth-grade
student of Nowhata Government High School, said, "Before today's event, the right to information was
limited to textbook pages for us.
Through real examples and
quizzes, we have understood how seeking information can help stand against injustice and
corruption. Now it feels like we can ask questions too."
Eighth-grade student Ifat
said, "I didn't have much idea about the Right to Information Act before.
Today I learned that even as ordinary citizens, we can request information from
government offices. This knowledge has boosted our confidence and inspired us
to become more conscious citizens in the future."
Fazlul Bari, deputy
director of the ACC, addressed the event as the chief guest saying effective
implementation of the Right to Information Act 2009 increases transparency in
both public and private institutions and reduces opportunities for corruption.
"The right to
information is not just a law; it is a powerful tool for citizen empowerment.
If awareness of this right is created among students and young people, building
an accountable and corruption-free society in the future will be much
easier," he added.
In her welcome address,
Shammi Laila Islam, country representative of The Carter Center, said that
accurate information is power.
She noted that the law
plays a vital role in ensuring the free flow of information, including women's
right to access information. She also remarked that rights can only be properly
exercised when people are aware of them.
ACC Assistant Director
Tanvir Ahmed, Headmaster of the school Omar Ali, President of the Corruption
Prevention Committee Akhtar Faruk also spoke.
The awareness and
confidence visible on the students' face at the end of the meeting offered a
hopeful sign for building a responsible citizenry in the future.
Tribune India: Haryana: Wednesday, 28 January 2026.
Highest number of
vacancies for teachers in English department
According to information
obtained under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, 4902 teaching posts are
lying vacant across government colleges in Haryana.
The RTI reply reveals that
out of 8,137 sanctioned teaching posts across 185 government colleges in the
state, only 3,235 are filled, leaving 4,902 posts vacant. To address the acute
shortage of regular faculty, colleges have engaged 1,971 extension lecturers
and 45 guest lecturers.
The information was sought
by Subhash, state convenor of the Haryana Soochna Adhikar Manch, who had filed
an RTI application with the State Public Information Officer of the Higher
Education Department, seeking details on the number of government colleges,
sanctioned teaching posts and subject-wise vacancies.
The department's reply
points to a severe shortage of teachers, which has adversely affected higher
education in the state.
Subhash said that the
highest number of vacancies was in the English subject. Of the 1,146 sanctioned
posts for English teachers, 792 are vacant. In Geography, 508 posts are vacant
out of 806; in Commerce, 486 out of 1,034; in Mathematics, 409 out of 704; in
Botany, 174 out of 226; and in Chemistry, 409 out of 583 posts are vacant.
Similarly, 233 out of 476
posts in Computer Science, 335 out of 528 in Hindi, and 140 out of 199 posts in
Physical Education remain unfilled. Notably, all sanctioned posts in subjects
such as Environment, Anthropology, Electronics, Zoology, Management, Biology,
Information Technology, Microbiology, Statistics and Urdu are vacant.
Subhash said around 4,200
teaching posts were vacant in June 2024 when he had earlier sought similar
information. "The number of vacant posts has now gone up to 4,902, which
indicates that new recruitments are not being carried out while teachers continue
to retire on superannuation," he said.
Quoting the 2024 RTI
reply, he said Gurugram had 228 vacant posts, Hisar 279, Faridabad 242, Bhiwani
214, Ambala 103, Jind 169, Karnal 145, Palwal 114, Rohtak 170, Sirsa 167,
Sonepat 109 and Fatehabad 143.
Subhash described the
situation in colleges as a reflection of the "deplorable" state of
higher education in Haryana.
"The condition of
school education in the state is also quite bad. Thousands of teaching posts
are vacant in schools. Schools are being merged and teaching posts are being
abolished," he alleged.
Moneylife: Article: Wednesday, 28 January 2026.
The Delhi High Court has
dismissed a writ petition filed by the directorate general of health services
(DGHS), refusing to interfere with a central information commission (CIC) order
that directed disclosure of information, payment of ₹45,000 as compensation to
a right to information applicant and imposed a ₹15,000 penalty on the public
information officer (PIO) for obstructing access to information.
Justice Purushaindra Kumar
Kaurav held that the CIC had acted within the scope of the Right to Information
(RTI) Act, 2005, and that no perversity, procedural impropriety or illegality
was made out to warrant the exercise of writ jurisdiction under Articles 226
and 227 of the Constitution.
"The Commission has,
after affording due opportunity and upon an exhaustive consideration of the
record, held that the said officer deliberately obstructed the flow of
information, failed to comply with binding directions of the Commission and
exhibited a nonchalant and evasive approach towards his statutory obligations
under the RTI Act. The penalty has thus been levied in his individual capacity
and is statutorily recoverable from his salary in terms of the Act.
Consequently, any grievance arising out of such penalty is personal to the said
officer alone, and if aggrieved, the law provides him an independent remedy.
The petitioner, therefore, lacks the requisite locus standi to espouse or
agitate any challenge in respect of the penalty so imposed, or to assail the
findings recorded by the Commission against the said officer," the Bench
says.
The case arose from an RTI
application filed on 31 October 2023 by Sanjeev Kumar, who sought detailed
information regarding the licensing status of Artemis Hospital in New Friends
Colony during the hospitalisation of his wife on 7th April and 8 April 2023.
Mr Kumar also sought
details relating to action taken on his complaint filed on the centralised
public grievance redress and monitoring system (CPGRAMS) portal, claim
settlements by a third-party claim therapist, correspondence with the hospital,
doctor-wise fee distribution and preventive steps taken by authorities to
protect patients.
The PIO of DGHS replied on
21 November 2023, stating that the Hospital was regulated under the Delhi
Nursing Homes Registration Act, 1953, claimed that the Hospital held a valid
licence, and rejected several queries as 'not pertaining' to the department.
Dissatisfied with the
response, Mr Kumar filed a first appeal, after which the appellate authority
directed the DGHS to furnish replies to certain points. A second appeal was
then filed before the CIC.
During multiple hearings
in 2024, the CIC found DGHS replies to be incomplete and evasive. In an interim
order on 7 October 2024, the Commission noted that DGHS had failed to clearly
establish whether Artemis Hospital held a valid licence during the relevant
period in April 2023.
The Commission observed
that the Hospital’s registration certificate was valid only till 31 March 2023,
while the renewed licence came into effect from 1 August 2023, leaving the
crucial period uncovered. It also found that information on claim settlements,
correspondence, doctors’ fees, and preventive measures had not been properly
addressed.
In its final order on 16
January 2025, the CIC strongly criticised the conduct of the then and present
PIO, Sandeep Kumar Agarwal, medical superintendent of DGHS, noting a 'casual
and nonchalant attitude' towards statutory obligations.
The Commission held that
the PIO had deliberately obstructed the flow of information, failed to comply
with earlier directions, and attempted to sidestep responsibility by merely
forwarding notices to the hospital.
Accordingly, the CIC
imposed a penalty of ₹15,000 on the PIO in his personal capacity, directed the
DGHS to pay ₹45,000 as compensation to Mr Kumar for the harassment and
detriment suffered due to the delay and inaction, and issued an advisory under
Section 25(5) of the RTI Act for systemic improvements.
Challenging the CIC order,
DGHS approached the High Court, arguing against the penalty, compensation and
advisory.
Rejecting the plea, the
Court held that the penalty imposed on the PIO is personal in nature and DGHS
lacked locus standi to challenge it. “Any grievance arising out of such penalty
is personal to the officer concerned,” the Court says.
On compensation, the Court
upheld the CIC’s power under Section 19(8)(b) of the RTI Act, observing that
the provision is remedial and intended to redress loss or hardship caused by
unlawful denial or delay of information.
The advisory issued by the
CIC is held to be purely recommendatory and non-enforceable, carrying no civil
or penal consequences.
Finding no illegality or
perversity in the CIC’s reasoning, the Court dismissed the petition, concluding
that the Commission had exercised its statutory discretion within the four
corners of the law.
New Indian Express: New Delhi: Wednesday, 28 January 2026.
The commission said that
upon verification of marital status and pendency of a matrimonial or
maintenance case, the IT department shall provide the information sought in the
application.
The Central Information
Commission (CIC) has directed the Income Tax Department to disclose the details
of the gross income of a man to his estranged wife, holding that such
information cannot be denied in a matrimonial dispute on privacy grounds.
Information Commissioner Vinod Kumar Tiwari passed the order on an application
file by the estranged wife, who had sought the income details of her husband
for the last five assessment years for the purpose of the maintenance
proceedings before a court. She alleged that her estranged husband was
“concealing his actual earnings to evade maintenance liability”.
The commission said that
upon verification of marital status and pendency of a matrimonial or
maintenance case, the IT department shall provide the information sought in the
application. It, however, clarified that the details of the income tax returns
and other personal information of third parties need not be disclosed.
The application was filed
before the CEC after the Income Tax Department rejected the Right to
Information request, citing it was the third-party personal information,
protected under the Right to Information (RTI) Act. Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI
Act exempts personal information from disclosure if it has no relationship to
public activity/ interest or causes an unwarranted invasion of privacy.
In its order, the
commission said that information relating to income does not remain purely
personal when sought by a legally wedded spouse for maintenance litigation and
directed the appellant to submit documents establishing her marital
relationship and the pendency of the case before a competent court.
The Times of India: Bengaluru: Tuesday, 27 January 2026.
In a significant ruling
strengthening transparency in urban governance, the Karnataka State Information
Commission (KSIC) held that the Electronics City Industrial Township Authority
(ELCITA) is a "public authority" under the Right to Information (RTI)
Act, 2005, and is therefore bound to disclose information sought under the law.
It directed ELCITA to
appoint a public information officer, an assistant public information officer,
and a first appellate authority as mandated under the Act.
The commission, while
hearing an appeal by Ganesh Kumar M, a resident of Doddathoguru, traced the
origin of Electronics City to 1970, when the state govt established it to
promote electronic industries. Spread over more than 900 acres now, the area
was developed by the Karnataka State Electronics Development Corporation
(Keonics), which handed over its management to ELCITA in 1997. However, the
commission noted that governance of the township rests with ELCITA, a statutory
body constituted under the Karnataka Municipalities Act, 1964, through a govt
notification issued in March 2013.
The commission observed
that ELCITA performs core municipal and governmental functions, including the
provision of roads, water supply, sanitation, and the collection of property
taxes.
State information
commissioner Rudranna Harthikote ruled that ELCITA is a self-governing
statutory authority exercising municipal powers, even though it does not have
an elected body. Members of the authority are appointed by the govt, and senior
officials from various departments serve on its board, indicating substantial
govt control. The commission relied on judicial precedents, including Supreme
Court rulings and decisions of the Madras high court, which consistently held
that bodies performing public functions or receiving significant govt support
fall under the RTI Act. It also referred to similar industrial township
authorities, such as Noida, being treated as public authorities.
It ordered that the
information sought by the appellant on Feb 15, 2025, be furnished within 10
days. Warning of penalties for non-compliance, the commission disposed of the
case with a caution that future RTI applications must be answered within the
stipulated time frame.
Daily Pioneer: Article: Tuesday, 27 January 2026.
Ever since the first
amendment in RTI Act was done ever since its implementation on October 12,
2005, some NGOs and opposition parties are crying that the RTI Act is diluted!
But the amendment made in the year 2019 aimed to change the status and tenure of
Information Commissioners, in no way affected users of the RTI Act.
Insertion of section 44(3)
in “The Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023”, removing riders to section
8(1)(j) of RTI Act, in fact, is necessary to preserve Parliamentary privilege
and remove confusion through the term “public-interest”. It is perhaps for the
first time that the Central Information Commission has the full strength of a
Chief Information Commissioner and ten Information Commissioners sworn on
December 15, 2025.
Otherwise also, the
earlier two Commissioners went on disposing of the cases at a fast speed, with
Vinod Kumar Tiwari having disposed of 12700 cases with quality judgements
elaborately worded in a short span of just 24 months, while this figure does
not include matters of Show-Cause notices and Non-Compliance matters. It is
significant that he even heard some cases on different dates to ensure enough
opportunity to respondent public-authorities to defend their case, like in his
verdict dated January 16, 2025, in petition-number CIC/GNCTD/A/2024/108412 in
the matter “Sanjeev Kumar versus Directorate of Health Services (GNCTD”. He
even imposed a penalty on the PIO and awarded compensation to the petitioner,
apart from making recommendations while highlighting malpractices in the
working of private hospitals, with DHS being the mute spectator.
Even the Delhi High Court
dismissed a writ-petition WPC 596/2026 against this verdict on the first day of
hearing, i.e., January 16, 2026. Even the present Chief Information
Commissioner Raj Kumar Goyal echoed likewise in his verdict dated January 16,
2026, observing that despite 20 years of implementation of the RTI Act, public
information officers and first appellate authorities in DHS (GNCTD) were not
alert to their legal responsibilities, terming it to be a serious issue.
At the same time, Vinod
Kumar Tiwari praised such officers who respond to matters nicely not only while
responding to RTI applications, but also while presenting their case before the
Commission. An example is a decision dated November 17, 2025, in file-number
CIC/DDATY/A/2024/114518 in the matter “Pawan Jindal versus Delhi Development
Authority (DDA)” where he praised Rahul Gupta, PIO-cum-Executive Engineer (DDA)
for his nicely presenting the case before the Commission. Such praise in a CIC
verdict motivates others to do similar nice work to handle RTI matters.
However, RTI rules (and not the RTI Act) need important modifications mainly to
prevent misuse of the Act and minimising challenge to CIC verdicts in courts.
Notification should be to declare all public-private-partnerships, sports
bodies, cooperative societies, and other such bodies, public authorities under
the RTI Act.
Land and Building
Departments of the central and State Governments should study all cases of
allotment of land or Government-accommodations at subsidised rates or lease,
and declare all these as public authorities under the RTI Act. For the future,
land or Government-accommodations should be provided at subsidised rates on
pre-condition of beneficiaries coming under the purview of the RTI Act.
Offices like those of the
President, Prime Minister, Governor, Lt Governor and Chief Minister must not
act like “Post Offices” by transferring RTI applications under section 6(3) of
the RTI Act to the concerned departments. These offices should entertain RTI
applications pertaining to their respective offices only, and returning rest
others to RTI applicants, advising applicants to file RTI applications directly
to the concerned departments.
Considering the vast
participation of public money in private sector banks, all private sector banks
must be under the purview of the RTI Act. Already, all employees up to the
highest post of CMD are public servants according to the Banking Regulation Act.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had to impose restrictions on the withdrawal of
money for some time on a prominent private sector bank.
Former CMD of another
prominent private sector Bank is under arrest for serious charges of
misappropriation of public-money in the Bank. Inspection Reports of private
banks, revealed under the RTI Act by the RBI, reveal gross misuse of public
money by top management. Another private sector bank is in notoriety for a
large number of Non-Performing Assets (NPAs).
Heavy fluctuation in share
prices of certain private sector banks tends to doubt regarding the safety of
public money in private sector banks. Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee
Corporation (RBIsubsidiary) has to pay a maximum of rupees five lakhs from
state-funds to each depositor of the bank, including those in the private
sector, which collapses due to massive irregularities, which is public funding
to declare private sector banks as “public authorities” under section 2(h) of
the RTI Act.
Sections 27 and 28 of the
RTI Act give power to Competent Authorities and state-Governments to draft
their own rules, which include fixing of RTI fees.
Several Competent
Authorities and states misused their power by having RTI fees as high as rupees
500. However, the Supreme Court in its verdict dated March 20, 2018, imposed a
capping of rupees fifty to be maximum RTI fees.
RTI-fees should be
uniformly rupees 50, inclusive of copying charges for the first twenty copied
pages. Making basic RTI-fees at rupees fifty will largely prevent misuse of the
RTI Act. There must not be any fees for filing First or Second Appeals.
Handling the cost of a
postal-order of value rupees ten costs the postal department about rupees
fifty, with the cost of handling of postal-orders by a public-authority and
bank-clearing even extra.
The Postal Department
should issue special RTI stamps (like earlier stamps for licence fees of radios
and TV sets) in denominations of rupees 2, 10 and 50, which will save crores of
rupees annually to public-exchequers in using postal orders as a mode of
payment of RTI fees. These RTI stamps
should be available at all post offices and counters of public-authorities and
other convenient sale points.
Post-free RTI-applications
addressed to central public-authorities should be accepted at all about 160000
post offices rather than just about 4500 post offices presently. It is not
difficult because every post-office however small it may be, daily sends a
post-bag to the Head Post Office with registered post, cash and unsold
revenue-articles. This post-bag can carry post-free RTI-applications received
at the post office.
Decision dated
November 2, 2012 by Punjab & Haryana
High Court in the matter “Fruit and Vegetable Union versus Unknown” (CWP 4787
of 2011) requiring ID proof compulsorily with every RTI application, First
Appeal and petitions filed with Information Commissions should be compulsorily
adopted throughout the country Police-enquiry conducted at behest of some
Indian missions abroad established that a petitioner approached Central
Information Commission with name and address both of which did not exist.
RTI-responses and orders
of First Appellate Authorities should be auto-emailed rather than
RTI-applicants required to search portals for viewing of RTI-responses and
orders by First Appellate Authorities.
Websites designed by the
National Informatics Centre (NIC) for central public authorities should be
mandatorily for all states. This has become necessary for state like Odisha,
which has made online filing of RTI-applications a mockery when it is compulsory
to download an online-filled RTI-application, and then send it by post to the
concerned department.
Delhi High Court in its
order dated August 8, 2018, in WPC 8278 of 2018 in the matter “Anil Dutt Sharma
versus Government of NCT Delhi and others” mentioned This Court is of the
prima facie view that the Right-To-Information Act, 2005 would now override the
Delhi Right To Information Act, 2001.
The DRTI Act has lost all
with the implementation of the RTI Act 2005. Very few applications are filed
under the DRTI Act. All such acts legislated by individual states, before the
RTI Act 2005 came into existence, must be repealed.
(The writer is an RTI
consultant holding the Guinness World record for most letters published in
newspapers; views are personal)
Navbharat: Maharashtra: Monday,
January 26, 2026.
आरटीआई कानून के
दुरुपयोग का बड़ा मामला सामने आया है। राज्य सूचना आयोग की नाशिक खंडपीठ ने एक RTI कार्यकर्ता की 1007 द्वितीय अपीलें खारिज कर दीं और कानूनी कार्रवाई की
चेतावनी दी।
सूचना का अधिकार कानून
के दुरुपयोग का एक गंभीर मामला सामने आया है। राज्य सूचना आयोग की नाशिक खंडपीठ ने
एक आरटीआई कार्यकर्ता की एक साथ 1007 अपीलें खारिज करते हुए इस
प्रवृत्ति पर बड़ा प्रहार किया है।
राज्य सूचना आयोग द्वारा
एक साथ इतनी द्वितीय अपीलें खारिज करना यह पहला मौका है। आयोग ने अपीलें खारिज
करते हुए कानूनी कार्रवाई पर विचार करने की चेतावनी भी दी है। बीड के वकील केशव
निंबालकर ने राज्य सूचना आयोग की नाशिक खंडपीठ के समक्ष हजारों की संख्या में द्वितीय
अपीले दायर की थीं।
निंबालकर ने तीन वर्षों
के कार्यकाल में अहमदनगर,
नाशिक, धुले, जलगांव
और नंदुरबार जिलों के लगभग सभी तहसीलों से लेकर जिला स्तर के सरकारी कार्यालयों
में आरटीआई के तहत आवेदन डालकर विभिन्न प्रकार की सूचनाएं मांगी थीं।
मांगी गई सूचनाएं पुरानी
और विस्तृत स्वरूप की थीं। इसके अलावा एक ही सूचना के लिए एक से अधिक बार अलग-अलग
आवेदन दायर किए गए। जब जनसूचना अधिकारी से सूचना नहीं मिली, तो निंबालकर ने राज्य सूचना आयोग में द्वितीय अपील
दायर कर दी।
एक ही प्रकार की सूचना
के लिए सैकड़ों आवेदन:
- राज्य सूचना आयुक्त
भूपेंद्र गुरव के समक्ष हाल ही में इन अपीलों की सुनवाई हुई। सुनवाई में पत्ता चला
कि एक ही प्रकार की सूचना के लिए सैकड़ों आवेदन किए गए, जिससे कर्मचारियों का काफी समय बर्बाद हुआ।
- कुछ सूचनाएं तैयार थी, लेकिन शुल्क भरकर उन्हें लेने के बजाय निंबालकर ने
उन्हें नहीं लिया और सीधे आयोग में अपील दायर कर दी। आयोग ने इसे व्यवस्था के
दुरुपयोग के रूप में देखते हुए गंभीर संज्ञान लिया। आयोग ने कहा कि भविष्य में ऐसा
कोई मामला सामने आने पर गंभीर कार्रवाई की जाएगी।
- वरिष्ठ समाजसेवी अन्ना
हजारे द्वारा लाए गए इस कानून का दुधारी तलवार की तरह इस्तेमाल हो रहा है, जिससे इसमे सुधार की आवश्यकता महसूस की जा रही है।
Business & Financial Times: Ghana:
Monday, January 26, 2026.
The Right to
Information (RTI) Commission has upheld the decision of the Minerals Income
Investment Fund (“MIIF” or “the Fund”) to defer the disclosure of its 2024
financial statements, granting the Fund a statutory period of 90 days to
complete the process.
It will be
recalled that a former Board Member of the Fund, had petitioned MIIF to publish
its 2024 financial report. He further escalated the matter to the RTI
Commission, seeking to compel the Fund to disclose the information and sharing
it on various print and social media platforms.
However, in a
letter dated January 12, 2026, MIIF maintained its stance and informed the
Commission that some issues had been identified during the initial audit
process of the 2024 financial statements.
The Fund insisted
that releasing the report at that stage could result in the dissemination of
incomplete, inaccurate, or potentially misleading information to the public.
However, in a
response letter addressed to the Fund, the commission stated that: “The
Commission has considered the matter and concurs with the Minerals Income
Investment Fund’s (MIIF) position that disclosure of the requested information
at this stage would be premature and may result in the dissemination of
incomplete, inaccurate, or potentially misleading information.”
“Accordingly, the
Commission agrees with the decision of MIIF to exercise its right to defer
access in accordance with section 22 of the Right to Information Act, 2019 (Act
989).”
Section 22 of the
Act permits a public institution to defer access to information where the
information is required to be published within 90 days of the request or where
it has been prepared for submission but is yet to be finalised or submitted.
The law further
requires the institution to notify the applicant of the reasons for the
deferment and the likely period within which the information will be made
available.
In its
determination, the Commission granted MIIF a deferment period of three months.
It further indicated that should the Fund fail to furnish the requested
information after the expiration of the deferment period, the Commission would
take the necessary steps to determine the matter.
While the
decision underscores the balance between the public’s right to information, it
also explicitly recognises the responsibility of public institutions such as
MIIF to ensure that information released into the public domain is accurate,
complete, and not misleading, a position MIIF has held in the interest of the
public and investors.
MIIF is mandated
under the Minerals Income Investment Fund Act, 2018 (Act 978), as amended, to
manage and invest Ghana’s mineral royalties in a transparent, accountable, and
sustainable manner for the benefit of present and future generations, a
position the Fund has not shied away from in the public interest.
The Fund has
consistently maintained that it remained committed to transparency and will
publish its audited financial statements once all audit processes are duly
concluded. This position has, however, not gone down well with the former board
member who has rather taken to the tabloids and social media to spread
falsehoods on the matter to paint the head of the Fund in bad light.
There have also
been numerous misguided social media commentaries, and fabrications in select
tabloids deliberately calculated to smear the CEO of MIIF just because she
maintained her stance in ensuring accountability and transparency to ensure
that what is finally published reflects the actual situation on the ground so
that the public and investors are not misinformed.
The Commission,
expressed confidence in MIIF’s cooperation and adherence to the timelines
outlined in the decision.
The Business Standard: Bangladesh: Monday,
January 26, 2026.
More than 15
years after the enactment of the Right to Information (RTI) Act, 2009, its
promise remains only partially fulfilled, with low public awareness and
prolonged delays in accessing information continuing to undermine its
effectiveness, the Right to Information (RTI) Forum has said.
In a statement
issued by its convenor Shaheen Anam today (25 January), the Forum said
structural weaknesses and procedural bottlenecks have limited the act's impact,
making amendments essential to expand its use and ensure meaningful access to
information.
As the government
moves forward with the amendment process, the Forum has urged the adviser to
the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting to ensure that several urgent
recommendations are incorporated into the ordinance.
Among the key
proposals is expanding the definition of "information" to explicitly
include note sheets, arguing that these documents are critical for
understanding who made decisions, how they were taken, and the roles played by
individual officials. The Forum said note sheets should be included under
Section 2(f) of the Act.
The Forum has
also called for broadening the scope of authorities covered by the law. It
proposed bringing government, autonomous and local government bodies explicitly
within the act's ambit, alongside statutory institutions. In addition, it
recommended extending the law to private entities that perform government work
under contract, licence, permit or approval, as well as political parties
registered with the Election Commission.
On institutional
reform, the Forum suggested formally adding "Bangladesh" to the name
of the Information Commission under Section 11(1) and introducing a new
provision requiring that vacancies in the posts of Chief Information
Commissioner or Information Commissioners be filled within a maximum of 45
days.
To strengthen the
independence of the commission, the Forum proposed aligning the rank,
remuneration and benefits of the chief information commissioner and information
commissioners with those of judges of the Appellate Division and the High Court
Division, in line with other constitutional bodies such as the National Human
Rights Commission.
The Forum also
recommended amending the penalty provisions under Section 27 to enhance
accountability, particularly in cases where responsible or appellate officers
refuse to accept information requests or appeals without reasonable cause.
While welcoming
the move to amend the law through an ordinance, the Forum said a comprehensive
amendment incorporating the remaining proposals is necessary to ensure
effective implementation of the RTI Act and to achieve its original objective
of guaranteeing citizens' right to information.
New Indian Express: Uttarakhand: Monday,
January 26, 2026.
A startling
revelation under the Right to Information (RTI) Act has exposed that several
MPs from Uttarakhand are allocating significant portions of their Constituency
Development Funds (CDF) to projects in neighboring states like Uttar Pradesh
and Haryana, even as remote areas within Uttarakhand continue to grapple with
severe infrastructure deficits, including basic amenities like clean water.
Documents
obtained via RTI show that MPs have sanctioned approximately Rs 1.28 crore for
works such as installing tube wells, constructing community halls, and
improving drainage systems in other states.
This practice has
ignited sharp criticism from the opposition Congress, which accuses the ruling
party of prioritising sectarian politics over regional development.
The data
highlights that Tehri Garhwal MP, Mala Rajya Lakshmi Shah, leads the list in
allocating funds outside the state. She has reportedly focused substantial aid
on the Agra district in Uttar Pradesh, sanctioning a total of Rs 1 crore for
the financial year 2024–25 for projects including footpaths, pedestrian ways,
and drinking water schemes.
Rajya Sabha MP
Naresh Bansal also appears on the list, having allocated Rs 25 lakh for school,
college, and community building projects in Haryana.
Even funds
sanctioned years ago continue to be utilised elsewhere. Former Rajya Sabha MP
Tarun Vijay’s allocation from his 2010–2016 tenure, sanctioned as late as
December 10, 2025, saw Rs 3 lakh approved for drainage and road works in
Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh.
Almora MP Ajay
Tamta also directed funds toward a neighboring district, approving Rs 5 lakh
for constructing rooms and halls in schools and colleges in Nainital, despite
the broader state needs.
This ability to
spend CDF outside the constituency stems from recent amendments to the
guidelines. A letter from the Ministry of Statistics and Programme
Implementation dated August 13, 2024, revised the rules, now allowing MPs to
recommend development works anywhere in the country, subject to a maximum limit
of Rs 50 lakh per financial year.
Defending the
expenditure, Tehri MP Mala Rajya Lakshmi Shah stated that the people of
Uttarakhand reside across the nation.
“Some individuals approached me with genuine needs, and
based on that, certain works were approved,” Shah commented. “The development
of Tehri remains my primary focus, and the majority of my fund is spent here.”
However, the
opposition has slammed this allocation strategy amidst the state’s ongoing
challenges with migration, fueled by a lack of development.
Garima Mahara
Dasouni, Chief Spokesperson of the Congress Party, launched a scathing attack,
stating, “While Members of Parliament may cite technical discretion in the use
of Constituency Development Funds, it is nothing short of a betrayal of
Uttarakhand to ignore the large-scale migration from its hill regions driven by
neglect, unemployment, and lack of basic infrastructure - only to divert public
funds to projects outside the state.”
She further
added, “What is even more disturbing is the growing pattern of these funds
being channelled towards private institutions, raising serious questions about
intent, transparency, and possible misuse of public money. This selective
generosity towards private entities reeks of impropriety and demands immediate
scrutiny.”
Dasouni asserted,
“The BJP has completely abandoned the people of Uttarakhand. Instead of
focusing on roads, healthcare, education, and employment in the hills, the
party is obsessed with the politics of temples, mosques, and shrines. Symbolism
has replaced substance, and propaganda has replaced governance.”
Times of India: Chandigarh: Sunday,
January 25, 2026.
Expressing strong
displeasure over officials dragging their feet in providing information, the
Punjab State Information Commission has directed departmental proceedings to be
initiated if official records are missing, and criminal action be taken if records
are intentionally misplaced.
The directions
were issued by state information commissioner Dr Bhupinder Batth while hearing
an appeal filed by a Nawanshahr resident, who sought information from the block
development and panchayat officer (BDPO), Nawanshahr block, which was pending
since Sept 28, 2023.
During the
previous hearing, the BDPO was directed to appear personally before the
commission. However, the appellant submitted that complete information was
still not provided. At the last hearing, the panchayat secretary appeared on
behalf of the respondent and sought additional time.
During the course
of the hearing, the appellant informed the commission that he inspected records
as directed, but complete information was not provided. He said copies of bills
sought through his RTI application were not supplied. The respondent stated that
the copies of bills demanded by the appellant were not available in official
records, adding that the bills were not handed over by the previous panchayat
secretary.
On perusal of the
case file, the commission noted the information sought by the appellant
remained incomplete. Despite clear directions during the earlier hearing, the
BDPO failed to appear and did not file any reply.
The commission
observed complete negligence and laxity on the part of the public authority in
dealing with the RTI application. It noted such conduct reflected disregard for
the Right to Information Act, 2005, which was enacted to ensure transparency
and effective public access to information.
Describing the
respondent's approach as "casual and callous", the commission, while
expressing its displeasure, said the conduct of the respondent was against the
spirit of RTI Act, and such conduct by a govt servant deserved strong
condemnation.
It added such
employees needed to be taught a good lesson so that the rest of the workforce
received the right message to discharge their duties under the RTI Act,
ensuring complete transparency and due accountability in the governance of
public authorities.
However, in the
interest of justice, the commission granted one last opportunity to BDPO,
Nawanshahr, to appear personally at the next hearing along with the complete
information or to furnish an affidavit explaining the status of the records.
"If the record is missing, departmental proceedings need to be held, and
if it is intentionally misplaced, criminal action is to be taken," the
order reads. Both parties were directed to appear in person at the next hearing
scheduled for April 28, 2026, failing which the matter will be decided on
merit, ex parte.
Hindustan Times: Lucknow: Sunday,
January 25, 2026.
“A hospital is a
public health institution where hundreds of patients, their relatives, medical
professionals and staff move around every day. CCTV footage does not capture
only the appellant but also records the activities of many other individuals.
This concerns their privacy, and unless there is a justified reason or larger
public interest, the RTI Act does not permit the violation of anyone’s
privacy,” the information commissioner observed.
In a ruling aimed
at safeguarding patient privacy, the Uttar Pradesh Information Commission has
held that CCTV footage from hospitals cannot be shared with individuals merely
on request under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, unless it forms part of a police
investigation or is sought under a court order.
Information
commissioner Mohammad Nadeem passed the order on January 21 while hearing an
appeal filed by Kulwant Singh, who had sought CCTV footage from a hospital in
Bijnor district.
The information
commissioner emphasised that hospitals are sensitive public health spaces where
the privacy of patients, their attendants, doctors and staff must be protected.
“A hospital is a
public health institution where hundreds of patients, their relatives, medical
professionals and staff move around every day. CCTV footage does not capture
only the appellant but also records the activities of many other individuals.
This concerns their privacy, and unless there is a justified reason or larger
public interest, the RTI Act does not permit the violation of anyone’s
privacy,” he observed.
He further noted
that allowing one person access to hospital CCTV footage to substantiate a
personal complaint could compromise the privacy of numerous unrelated
individuals.
“We cannot give
one individual the right to intrude into the privacy of hundreds of others
simply to support his grievance,” the order stated.
The commission
clarified that hospital CCTV footage may be disclosed only when it is part of a
police investigation or when directed by a competent court. Beyond these
circumstances, disclosure can be considered only if it can be ensured that no
third party’s privacy is affected a condition the commission said would be rare
in hospital settings.
In the case
before the commission, the appellant had alleged irregularities related to
medical documentation. The information commissioner said that even if such
allegations were true, the appropriate forums for examination would be a police
investigation, a court of law or departmental disciplinary proceedings.
“The RTI Act
cannot be turned into a substitute for investigation or trial,” the order said.
NDTV: Lucknow: Sunday, January 25,
2026.
The RTI Act, he
said, cannot be treated as a substitute for investigation or trial.
The Uttar Pradesh
State Information Commission has ruled that CCTV footage can be provided only
if it forms part of a court order or a police probe, noting that the RTI Act
can not be treated as a substitute for investigation or trial.
The ruling was
given by a bench headed by State Information Commissioner (SIC) Mohammad
Nadeem, while hearing a plea under the Right to Information (RTI) Act seeking
CCTV footage from a hospital in the Bijnor district.
In his order, the
information commissioner said, "Unless the CCTV footage of a hospital
premises is part of a police investigation or a judicial order, it cannot be
made available to any individual merely on demand." Hearing an appeal
filed by Kulwant Singh, the SIC observed that even if allegations related to
fake medical practices are assumed to be true, their examination should be
carried out through a police investigation, a competent court or departmental
disciplinary proceedings.
The RTI Act, he
said, cannot be treated as a substitute for investigation or trial.
He noted that
hospitals are public health institutions where hundreds of patients, their
attendants, doctors and staff move daily.
According to an
official statement, Nadeem said CCTV footage records not only the activities of
the appellant but also those of many other patients and individuals, making it
an issue directly linked to their privacy.
"Unless
there is a valid reason or larger public interest, the RTI law does not permit
violation of anyone's privacy. We cannot grant one person the right to intrude
into the privacy of hundreds of others to substantiate his complaint," he
said.
The SIC further
said, apart from cases where footage is part of a police investigation or
produced under a court order, directing its disclosure in any other situation
can be considered only when it does not affect the privacy of others.
He added that
demands for hospital CCTV footage to substantiate routine personal complaints
cannot be accepted.
(Except for the
headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a
syndicated feed.)
TMV: Article: Sunday, January 25, 2026.
The Right to
Information (RTI) Act, which came into force on October 12, 2005, marked a
watershed moment in India’s democratic journey. For the first time, citizens
were legally empowered to demand information from the government, transforming
transparency from a moral appeal into a justiciable right. Over two decades,
the law has exposed corruption, improved accountability, and strengthened
citizen participation. Yet, the journey has not been without challenges, and
the promise of RTI is increasingly threatened by systemic delays, vacancies,
and bureaucratic inertia.
Since its
inception, millions of RTI applications have been filed across India. According
to data compiled from the Central Information Commission (CIC) and various
State Information Commissions (SICs), more than 5.5 lakh cases remain pending,
even as countless others have been resolved. The CIC alone has around 1.7 lakh
pending cases, while state commissions collectively account for over 3.8 lakh
cases , reflecting widespread delays across nearly all states and union
territories. The highest pendency is reported in Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra,
Bihar, West Bengal, and Tamil Nadu, while smaller states and union territories
also struggle with significant backlogs.
Departments with
the most RTI cases typically include those dealing with public services,
regulatory compliance, and health, such as municipal authorities, health
departments, revenue and land records offices, and social welfare departments .
The Delhi Health Department, for instance, came under recent scrutiny when
information regarding a private hospital was provided to a citizen only eight
months after the RTI request, far beyond the statutory 30-day period. The CIC
described the delay as “inordinate” and a “serious issue”, issuing a show-cause
notice to the responsible Public Information Officer (PIO).
While the law has
been transformative, these delays undermine its purpose. Experts attribute the
pendency to vacant commissioner posts, limited staffing, and procedural lapses
by PIOs and First Appellate Authorities. Recent amendments in 2019, altering tenure
and service conditions for Information Commissioners, have further weakened the
institutional independence of commissions , affecting their ability to dispose
of cases in a timely manner.
Citizens seeking
to exercise their right to information can file requests either online or
offline. Online applications are accepted through the official RTI portal
(https://rtionline.gov.in), where applicants can register, submit requests, pay
a nominal fee, and track the status of their applications. Offline applications
can be submitted directly to the PIO of the concerned department, with the
required fee paid via postal order or cash. If a response is not received
within 30 days or is unsatisfactory, citizens may file a first appeal with the
department’s First Appellate Authority. Failure to resolve the matter may lead
to a second appeal with the CIC or the respective SIC, which has the power to
summon hearings and impose penalties of up to ₹25,000 for non-compliance.
Despite the
challenges, the RTI Act remains one of India’s most powerful tools for
citizen-led accountability, with landmark disclosures in corruption, land
allotment, welfare benefits, and public service delivery highlighting its
transformative impact. Experts recommend a combination of proactive disclosure
by departments, timely appointments of commissioners, enhanced training of
PIOs, and strict enforcement of penalties to restore the law’s effectiveness.
As India
commemorates 20 years of the RTI Act , the substantial backlog across more than
30 states and union territories serves as a stark reminder that the promise of
transparency is only meaningful if enforced. Citizens are urged to make
informed use of RTI, following statutory procedures diligently, while the
government must ensure that institutional mechanisms function efficiently. The
law, after all, is only as strong as its implementation, and the health of
Indian democracy depends on a timely, accountable, and transparent government.