Tuesday, January 31, 2012

7 out of 10 abandoned children are girls.

Hindustan Times:Tuesday, January 31, 2012.
Three children are relegated to the city’s teeming dustbins every day dead or alive. Some of them, such as a one-year-old female toddler who was found abandoned at a public toilet in AIIMS as the country celebrated 63 years of being a republic, are found alive. Others, such as a newborn girl child who was found bleeding on the train tracks at the New Delhi Railway Station on Children’s Day last year, however, are not as fortunate.
“In the year 2010, 124 cases of children being abandoned were registered. Last year, 134 such cases were detected. While lost children are claimed in most cases, no one comes forward looking for abandoned children,” said a senior police officer, adding seven out of 10 abandoned children are girls.
The Delhi Police, in fact, recovered as many as 111 lost children from different parts of the city between January 1 and January 30 more than three children per day. These abandoned children, who come into spotlight every now and then, are victims of helpless parents and a burdened system that is proving to be less and less adequate in providing support to them.
According to an RTI filed by NGO Pratidhi, 745 children were abandoned in 2010. Most of these children were found in northern and central Delhi.
“Despite a law against abandonment, the number is rising day by day. Of the total number of children abandoned, more than 70% are girls,” said Raaj Mangal Prasad, chairperson, Child Welfare Committee, Lajpat Nagar.
While the Juvenile Justice Act has various provisions to provide a home for the children, the awareness and implementation is lacking. According to Prasad, the highest number of children who are abandoned are between the ages of 2 and 4.
“They are left in crowded markets and railway stations by parents who are too poor. We have come across cases of single mothers abandoning children when they decide to get remarried,” Prasad said.
The other two categories are of children between 0 and 1 years mostly abandoned by unwed mothers in hospitals and dustbins.
Children above the age of four are mostly girls, who are abandoned because the parents cannot take care of them anymore.
“While city children are able to provide some useful information about their parents which helps us track them in a majority of cases, those from small towns and villages fail to do so,” the officer said.

Make public selection procedure of country's envoys: CIC

The Economic Times:Tuesday, January 31, 2012.
NEW DELHI: The selection procedure for the appointment of ambassadors to various countries should be made public, the Central Information Commission has said.
Information Commissioner Shailesh Gandhi issued the order while hearing the plea of Kishanlal Mittal, who had sought to know from the External Affairs Ministry the procedure for the appointment for ambassadors and high commissioners to various countries during last five years.
Mittal had also sought to know from the Ministry the procedure of appointment of secretaries during the period.
The Ministry had provided partial reply to the application, saying, "Taking into account India's bilateral and multilateral relations, disclosure of such information could prejudicially affect India's relations with foreign state."
It also refused to give details, saying the appointment process also involves examination of annual confidential report (ACR) records of the officers containing details about the "character, capability and other attributes of the official reported upon, disclosure of which to any other person amounts to unwarranted invasion in the privacy of the individual".
Citing exemption clauses of the RTI Act which allow withholding of the information which is personal and which can affect country's relations with foreign countries, the MEA refused to provide this information.
"The PIO will provide the process of appointment. In case no process of exists, this should be stated... The PIO states that there are three boards for dealing with personnel and postings. The PIO is directed to provide the information on these and minutes of the last three meetings of these boards," Gandhi said in his order.
He also directed to post on the Ministry's website a compiled list of committee and other bodies as mandated under the pro-active disclosure clause of the RTI Act.

My signature forged to close case, alleges RTI activist.

IBNLive.com:Tuesday, January 31, 2012.
Mumbai: A Right to Information (RTI) activist has accused a BMC assistant engineer and an executive engineer of faking his presence at an RTI-related hearing to close a case. On January 10, Sudhir Singh filed a complaint to this effect with Assistant Municipal Commissioner (S Ward) Ramakant Biradar, asking him to investigate the matter.
According to Singh, on September 8, 2011, he sought details about a restaurant at Vikhroli through RTI. He alleged that a few days before, some residents of the locality had approached him with a complaint that the restaurant owner had fraudulently occupied a portion for illegal construction, and it was causing major inconvenience to them. Following the residents' complaint, Singh filed the RTI application with the intention of taking BMC officials to task by filing an official complaint against them.
But he failed to receive any information or reply from S Ward. On October 24, 2011, he filed a first appeal seeking a response. On December 26, 2011, he was shocked to receive a letter from S Ward, stating that hearings on his RTI application had taken place on December 7, 2011, and the information had been provided to him. The letter further mentioned that Singh was himself present at the hearing.
"This is a blatant lie. I never got any notification for the hearing nor have I attended any hearing. The engineers have forged the entire incident. They also forged my signature," said Sudhir Singh.
Singh has complained that the alleged forgery is in complete disregard of the RTI Act, 2005. He has demanded suitable action against the engineers. "This amounts to cheating and forgery by two government officials who occupy positions of responsibility. They should be punished," said Singh.
Meanwhile, Assistant Municipal Commissioner Ramakant Biradar (S Ward) said, "I will look into the matter."

Executive files RTI for lost money.

Hindustan Times:Tuesday, January 31, 2012.
Even after 11 days, the Gurgaon police are yet to file an FIR on the complaint of a Gurgaon-based MNC chartered accountant and a resident of Vasant Kunj (Delhi) from whose Standard Chartered Bank (Gurgaon branch) salary account Rs 1.31 lakh was siphoned off. He has now filed an RTI application.
“Despite writing regularly to the Standard Charted Bank, no action has been taken by the bank and this is very disgusting,” said Harsh Mehta, 27.
“I am their old client and at least they should respond. Where shall I go to get my money back? Someone has so cleverly taken out money from my account and no one is answerable now,” he added.
According to Mehta, the money was siphoned off from his salary account in the Gurgaon branch of Standard Chartered Bank.
“On January 19 around 5 pm, I received an SMS from Airtel giving an ID for changing my SIM number. After that, there was no signal on my mobile. I was surprised as I had never made such a request. I contacted the Airtel customer care officer and he assured me that nothing would happen and they will keep a check,” he said.
The next morning, Mehta received an email from the bank showing unknown transactions to the tune of R1.31 lakh.
The accused must have hacked the phone, requested the bank for OTP, activated my SIM on his phone and then transferred funds to his account, Mehta said.
Reeta V Jain, customer care, Bharti Airtel Limited on behalf of Airtel said, “Please be informed that your concern has been sent to the respective authority for further investigation and action. We would respond to you with an update on the same at the earliest.” Gurgaon police are investigating the case.

Monday, January 30, 2012

264 drivers have spotless record, no reward.

Expressindia.com:Monday,January 30, 2012.
Pune Not all drivers are like MSRTC’s Santosh Mane, who in a bizarre state of mind, mowed down eight persons and injured serveral others last week. At least city transport undertaking PMPML has reasons to feel proud of its list of faultless drivers: 264 to the last count, from a total of 3,000 drivers on its roll. These 264 hold a unique record of not a single accident, let alone fatalities, in their two-three decades of service, reveals the reply from PMPML administration to an RTI application by The Indian Express.
Of the 264, Suresh Laxman Shitole is on top with 29 years of accident-free driving, the reply says. The likes of Devidas Govindrao Jadhav, Rajkumar Gajanan Paradkar, Suresh Rajaram Dhume and Narayan Mahadevo Landge have 28 years of service without any mishaps.
Following this exemplary bunch are Vishwasrao Ranoji Modhve, Bharat Nathabuva Salekar, Balu Bhiku Bhosale, Bapur Vitthal Sagle, Kisan Bhikaji Gundal, Sambhaji Dinkar Gawari, Baban Shankar Rakshe, Balasaheb Parshuram Nimbalkar, Chandrakant Sopan Kalane, who have 27 years of accident-free service on the city’s narrow, congested roads.
Three drivers, Kalu Popar Sable, Yeshwant Baban Pawar and Gajanan Bapurao Gaikwad, have been driving for 26 years without getting involved in any accident. There are 14 drivers with 25 years of service, 18 who have put in 24 years, 13 with 23 years of service, 18 who have 22 years, 30 with 21 years, 31 with 20 years and 32 with 19 years of service without any accidents. Of the 264, 10-15 have been promoted to other departments.
“I have been at the streering for nearly 28 years and have not had a single mishap,” says Devidas Jadhav, a resident of Dehugoan. For the last six months, Jadhav, now nearing retirement, has been ferrying PMPML’s stores vehicles. For 10 years, he was on the Dehugaon to Pune station route and for eight years, on Wadgaon to Khadki route, both with heavy traffic. “There is no police complaint or any panchama during my service. Only once, a youngster who hurriedly tried to rush out of the vehicle at Phugewadi in 1983 was injured after he jumped before the bus halted. He suffered bruises. I took him to hospital. He went home without lodging any complaint because he knew it was his fault, not mine,” says Devidas Jadhav.
Though they are proud of their achivement, some of them say they are doing a thankless job. “Though I have been a safe driver, I have never been honoured for such a service,” 56-year-old Jadhav says and breaks down, when asked whether PMPML or his earlier organisation, PCMT, had felicitated him.
His colleague, 53-year-old Suresh Dume, with 28 years of accident-free service, says. “I was never rewarded for safe driving. That is because there was partiality in PCMT. I am sure PMPML will recognise my services.” He is now on the Bhosari-Pune station route.
PMPML spokesperson Deepak Pardeshi says, “Every year, on Republic Day and Independence Day, we felicitate 10 safe drivers. All drivers who excel in that particular year are honoured.”
PMPML’s accidents department head Sanjay Kulaskar says the unique record of the 264 drivers speaks for itself. Criticising PMPML, Ajay Anpur, general secretary of a PMPML union, says, “Only drivers who are on actually a route should be honoured. But that is not happening...”
Civic activist Prashant Inamdar says,”It’s heartening to know there are such drivers who make travelling safer for commuters.”

Sharp rise in UT arms registrations.

Expressindia.com:Monday,January 30, 2012.
Chandigarh: Call it a craze for weapons or just a sense of insecurity. There is an increase in the number of city residents getting their personal weapons registered at various police stations across the city. As per information obtained by Newsline under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, the city has seen 1,675 different types of weapons being registered at the 11 police stations in the past 10 years.
The Central Division, with the Sectors 3, 11 and 17 police stations falling under it, has the maximum number of weapons registered. The division takes care of 19 sectors and four villages, many of which are inhabited by the elite of the city. The division has a total of 800 registered weapons, which is almost double the number of weapons registered at the two other divisions.
The Southern Division has a total of 580 weapons registered while the East Division has a total of 295 weapons registered. Each of the above divisions have four police stations falling under them.
The maximum number of weapons has been registered under the Sector 3 police station, which has Sectors 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 and Kaimbwala village falling under its jurisdiction. The second spot is taken by police station-34 with 227 weapons while the Sector 11 police station has 225 registered weapons.
The two police stations which are at the bottom end when it comes to weapons registered with them fall under the East Division and have mostly villages and colonies falling under their jurisdiction. The Manimajra and Industrial Area police stations have 20 and 31 registered weapons respectively.
Interestingly, Sector 33 alone has 119 people with registered weapons against their name. According to the police, the number of registered weapons does not pose a big problem as they are aware of the credentials of the people possessing weapons in a particular sector or a locality.
Another fact that has come out from the information available is that a large number of weapon-holders are retired or serving in the armed forces. This, the police state, is because of the large number of defence personnel settled in Chandigarh.
As per the data available, single and double barrel guns of different bores are preferred by the majority of people. The number of revolvers and pistols too have seen an increase over the years, apart from foreign-made weapons.
Surprisingly, only four licenses have been cancelled in the past decade due to various reasons. Three arms licenses registered under the Sector 36 police station were canceled in the last 10 decade.
The Sector 26 police canceled the licence of former municipal councilor Davinder Singh Babla as he was absconding in the cases registered against him.

Rs 25 lakh spent to curb monkey, dog mess.

Hindustan Times:Monday,January 30, 2012.
Even though stray dogs and monkeys continue to unleash a reign of terror in the city, the Municipal Corporation of Gurgaon (MCG) claims to have spent more than Rs 25 lakh on capturing and sterilising them between June 1 and December 31 last year.
In its January 19 reply to an RTI application in this regard, the MCG said 4,388 dogs and 188 monkeys were captured and sterilised through services hired from the People For Animals (PFA) and Friendicoes. The PFA and Friendicoes sterilised 2,162 and 2,226 stray dogs respectively, according to the reply.
The MCG spent Rs 23, 91, 460 and Rs 1, 31, 600 on capturing and sterilising dogs and monkeys respectively.
With no respite from dog and monkey menace in the city, the RTI applicant Aseem Takyar questioned the MCG's claim of spending such huge money as 'exaggerated'. "If this much amount was spent, the situation would have improved," he said.
A PFA representative said that sterilising a dog costs Rs 545 and the MCG bears it. Other costs, such as transportation, are PFA's responsibility.
At least half a dozen cases of monkey bite have been reported recently. While a gardener was attacked by monkeys in South City two weeks ago, a similar incident was reported from sector 22 a week ago. According to MCG, there are around 500 monkeys in the city.

Haryana govt push to bring Mangar hill under conservation zone.

The Times of India:Monday,January 30, 2012.
FARIDABAD/ NEW DELHI: The Haryana forest department has pushed the demand to bring the hill area including sacred forest in Mangar in Faridabad under the conservation zone. The proposal has been moved even as the state government is giving the final touches to the development plan for 23 Aravali villages which will allow a tourist-cum-entertainment complex in the forest.
Haryana principal chief conservator of forests Chhotu Ram Jotriwal said, "We have placed the proposal before the government and this is based on recommendations of the Faridabad deputy commissioner. It takes time for the government to notify areas under Section 4&5 of Punjab Land and Preservation Act," he said.
The notification under these two sections of the law restricts land use for any non-forestry purpose. The letter written by Faridabad deputy commissioner - accessed through RTI by environment activists - to the town and country planning department states: "I am of the view that the Aravali hilly stretches should be excluded from the agriculture zone and delineated as a water recharge and forest conservation zone in the draft development plan of Mangar 2031."
Forest department officials said they hope the government will exclude this area from development activity while finalizing the development plan. The protection of this huge patch of land is crucial considering the government plan to allow mining in some parts of Mangar. Records available with TOI show that Haryana government has identified 210 hectares in Mangar and Mohabatabad villages for fresh mining.
The Faridabad deputy commissioner had written that curbs on indiscriminate mining under various Supreme Court orders implemented by the state had helped to rejuvenate the natural forest cover and ground water in the area.
Meanwhile, hectic lobbying has begun by real estate giants and major players in the entertainment industry to ensure that government does not come under the pressure of environment activists and forest departments to disallow non-forestry activity in the sacred forest zone. Sources said a major firm in entertainment industry has even started ground survey in the region.
Manger is forest has been widely mentioned in documents as the only original ridge in Aravalis where no artificial plantation has been done.

Khag residents allege bungling in TSP, NREGA, Want social audit; ACD concedes demand.

GreaterKashmir.com:Monday,January 30, 2012.
Budgam, Jan 29: The inhabitants of Malpora and its adjoining areas in Khag block of central Kashmir’s Budgam district have alleged bungling in the implementation of Total Sanitation Programme (TSP), demanding a social audit into it and other works executed by the Rural Development Department.
Under TSP, each household is provided Rs 2200 for construction of a lavatory.
These alleged bunglings, according to the resident came to fore after some youth obtained records pertaining to TSP implementation in Malpora and adjoining areas of Khag block from the local BDO office under Right to Information Act (RTI Act).
“The records pertaining to 2008, 2009, 2010 reveal that each beneficiary has been provided Rs 2200 for construction of lavatory, but they have received only Rs 700 each,” said Gulzar Ahmad Dar a local.
“Some families have even been provided mere Rs 500,” he added.
“It has been shown that 49 lavatories have been constructed in Malpora village, but only 15 such lavatories exist,” Gulzar added.
According to the locals, there has been large scale corruption in the implementation of NREGA and other schemes of Rural Development department in the village.
“We appeal to the district administration to conduct a social audit in our area so as to expose the corrupt practices of the officials of Rural Development department. The State Vigilance Organisation must also take cognizance of this issue as bungling in these schemes have been done in other villages of Khag block,” Muhammad Yousuf Mir added.
Will conduct Social Audit: ACD Budgam
When contacted, Assistant Commissioner Development (ACD) Budgam, Qazi Sarwar said, “I will look into the matter.”
Qazi assured that he will himself conduct a social audit in the area so that the locals get justice and real culprits are identified and punished if any bungling is proved.

Civic body yet to recover Rs 6 lakh from disqualified corporators.

Hindustan Times:Monday,January 30, 2012.
The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation, which is set to spend Rs 35 crore for the upcoming civic polls, has failed to recover Rs 6.16 lakh from corporators disqualified over the last decade.
This was revealed by a Right to Information (RTI) claim filed by activist Anil Galgali.
Once disqualified, a corporator needs to return the salaries and allowances received in his tenure.
In all, 11 corporators who were disqualified between 2002 and 2011 for submitting false caste certificates during the civic polls have not yet repaid their dues.
The BMC is also yet to recover 18 corporation emblem blocks  used for attesting official documents and other official purposes  from the disqualified corporators.
The corporators who owe money to the BMC are Janardan Yadav, Mohammad Yusuf Shaikh, Pravin Devahare, Gita Gore, RR Singh, Baig Sahin, Lalaji Yadav, Shirish Chaugule, Simintini Narkar, Anjuman Fatima and Sunil Chavan.
“This is public money and if the disqualified corporators received it through wrong means, they should refund it. The emblem also has its own value and should not be used by a barred members,” said Galgali.
Of the 11, Sahin and Shaikh owe the most to the civic body- Rs 1.79 lakh and Rs 1.72 lakh respectively. Shiv Sena corporator Sunil Chavan, disqualified last year, owes Rs93,300 and two emblem blocks.
“I haven’t received any letter from the corporation asking to refund salary or return emblems. If I receive any such intimation, I will obey it,” said Chavan.
Mrudula Kulkarni, municipal secretary in-charge said: “In case of submission of fake caste certificates, the corporators are disqualified under the reservation act.”

J and K schools back on track; Dilapidated buildings repaired, student-teacher ratio improves.

Deccan Herald:Monday,January 30, 2012.
Education in J&K seems to be looking up at last. Dilapidated school buildings have been repaired. Student-teacher ratio is improving, and enrolment rate and literacy are rising.
After over two decades of militancy, the educational system in this border state is coming back on track, though some problems remain, said state education minister Peerzada Mohammad Sayeed.
At least 800 schools have been damaged since violence erupted in the state in 1990. The damage was so severe that recovery took quite a long time. However, successive governments in the state had restored infrastructure one step at a time, and now the improvement is visible.
The literacy rate in J&K has reached 64 per cent it was 54 per cent in 2011. The national average is 74.04 per cent.
Sayeed recently said that dropout rate was high from 1990 to 1995, when militancy was at its peak. “Dropout rate has come down to 39,000 from 3,67,000 in the last five years, he said.
“Militants used to burn down schools in the early 1990s. There was an atmosphere of fear due to counter-insurgency operations as well. So children did not get a chance to study properly for the last two decades,” he said.
According to him, the government reconstructed the damaged schools.
In a reply to an RTI query, the J&K education department stated that there are sufficient number of teachers in all levels primary, middle, higher and higher secondary.
The RTI reply also stated that teacher-student ratio in primary and middle schools is 1:16, while it is 1:22 in high schools and 1:25 in higher secondary schools.
There are at least 1.7 million students and 75,000 teachers in 20,000 government schools.
However, data on the number of private schools were not available with the department. According to a department official, there may be 5,000 private schools in J&K.
“Two decades of militancy has affected education. Most schools remain closed in Kashmir, particularly remote areas, because of regular firefights and curfews. Search operation by security forces is another problem, besides militancy,” said the official.
According to the RTI reply, 4,242 primary and 616 middle school buildings have been built in the last five years. At least 6,000 teachers have been recruited in the last two years, and more vacancies have been referred to the state recruiting agency, the RTI reply stated.
“There is a significant improvement in quality of studies in government schools,” said Majid Qureshi, a Class 10 student of Doda Government Higher Secondary School. “I want to score high marks in my Class 10 exam,” said Qureshi, who wants to become an engineer.
However, not all students are as lucky as Qureshi.
“Studies are affected when teachers are frequently deputed on special duties such as elections, census and VIP visits,” said Sajjad Hussain, a retired principal in the border town of Poonch.
He said that last year, the panchayat elections took three months to complete and teachers were posted on special duty. Then came the census and teachers were again withdrawn from schools.
A good incentive for poor families to send their children to school is the mid-day meal scheme.
“I started sending my son Ayub to school as he would get meal there. Then he developed interest in studies and he is now among the toppers in Class 5,” said Jahangir Matoo of Assar village near Doda.

Overcrowding, poor infrastructure plague state-run children's homes.

The Times of India:Monday,January 30, 2012.
NEW DELHI: At 7am when other children are already up and preparing to begin their day, Sulekha lies down to sleep. She was up all night because there wasn't any vacant bed in the room and sleeping outside in this biting cold was out of the question.
The 14-year-old mentally challenged girl is not the only one napping in shifts. Overcrowding and lack of infrastructure in the Delhi government-run childcare institutions meant for special children and destitute - particularly girls - is forcing hundreds like Sulekha to live in such deplorable conditions.
Information obtained through an RTI query, a copy of which is with TOI, has revealed that 666 people are living in the three homes for mentally-challenged that have space for only 375. Sukhanchal School and Home for Mentally-Challenged Girls, Asha Kiran complex, has 174 inmates while it has space for just 75.
The five homes for girls in the city have the capacity to house 339 kids, but the current number of occupants is 436. At least two homes are facing severe crisis in terms of infrastructure and trained manpower and are now not admitting any more children.
The children admitted to these institutions are either lost or have been abandoned. They are picked up from the streets or found deserted in hospitals and various religious and public places. A senior health department official said when taken in, most of these children have various infections and show signs of having been subjected to violence and maltreatment. "These children have limited intelligence and their nervous system is also weak. As a result of which, it is hard for them to express their discomfort or illness. Often, by the time the symptoms become visible, much damage has already been done," he said.
Pratidhi NGO, which filed the RTI, said overcrowding at these homes is a major concern. "Such children need help to eat, walk, play and even to go to the washroom. Due to overcrowding, it becomes difficult to attend to each and every child and the children run the risk of catching infection which can prove fatal. More than 100 deaths have been reported at the childcare homes run by the state in the last five years," said the NGO spokesperson.
Delhi Women and Child Development Minister Kiran Walia said they are planning to shift Asha Kiran Complex - which houses the mentally-challenged - to Narela soon. "The new complex will be big enough to accommodate at least 1,000 inmates and it will have better infrastructure. Expansion plans for other children' homes for girls are under way and we are closely monitoring the infrastructure requirements," said Walia.
Rights activists, however, point out that the shifting of Asha Kiran Complex has been in the works since 2006, and the delay is causing irreparable harm to the health of these children.

A matter of propriety vs integrity.

Chandigarh Tribune:Raj Chengappa:Monday,January 30, 2012.
If the Government believed that the issue regarding the date of birth of General Vijay Kumar Singh had been settled once he had been appointed as Chief of Army Staff (COAS) on 31 March 2010 it would soon be mistaken.
Singh would bring it up again raising serious questions about propriety apart from misuse of office. There was a feeling that the General should have distanced himself from investigations into his age issue because as COAS the two crucial wings involved, the Military Secretary’s (MS) Branch and the Adjutant General’s (AG) Branch now reported to him. But we are getting ahead of the chronology of events.
After Singh took over as COAS, there was a six month lull on the age issue before it was reopened in the most curious fashion. In October 2010, the Army’s Central Public Information Officer (CPIO) got a flurry of queries under the Right To Information (RTI) Act with regard to General V.K. Singh’s date of birth.
The RTI route
On 11 October 2010, Lt Col Attar Singh living in Delhi requested information as to whether a Court of Inquiry had been conducted with regard to “the determination of the correct date of birth” of VK Singh, COAS. The MS Branch then directed the query to the AG’s branch stating, “it is the official custodian in respect of the information sought.” The AG’s Branch replied on 29 December 2010 that, “no Court of Inquiry has been conducted” on the subject.
Meanwhile, on 14 October 2010, Attar Singh had sent another RTI query, “seeking information as to the number of instances wherein the MS Branch had effected changes in the date of birth of the serving officers and ranks after two years of their commissioning. “The MS Branch replied on 17 November 2010 that there were five such cases where dates of birth were changed after the statutory period of two years. The point being that Singh’s case was not unusual.
Then on 28 October 2010, Dr Kamal Taori, a retired IAS officer, requested information regarding anomalies in Singh’s age with regard to his matriculation certificate and the Army records. Taori also wanted to know the age and date of birth of five serving General Officers of the army. There was another similar query by Ravikesh K Sinha, said to be a lawyer, on 12 January 2011.
In the interim, there occurs an apparently unrelated exchange of letters starting 25 November 2010 between the Indian Military Academy (IMA) and the National Defence Academy (NDA) from the Adjutant General’s (AG) Branch AAG Manpower Planning, MP, 6 (A) with regard to verification of the documents of Gentleman Cadet’s prior to being commissioned to the Army. General Singh cited these documents to bolster his arguments in his subsequent petitions to the Government on the age issue.
On 14 February 2011 in response to Taori’s RTI query, Major General Satish Nair, ADG MP, put out an unusually detailed letter to Inder Kumar, Legal Advice (Defence), LA (Def) Ministry of Law and Justice, that concluded, “The documents held with the AG’s Branch would lead only to one conclusion that the date of birth in respect of the officer is… 10 May 1951.”
Nair then stated, “Before reply to the RTI query to the applicant is given, advice of the LA (Defence) is requested on the above facts and circumstances on the issue whether the date of birth may be informed to the said application as 10 May 1951.”
Startlingly, on such a significant matter, Inder Kumar, replies to Nair’s letter on the same day i.e. 14 February 2011. It is an extremely detailed reply containing even Supreme Court judgments on the matter. Kumar’s opinion concluded: “We are of the view that the DOB recorded in the High School Certificate is having a greater evidentiary value. The PIO may accordingly give a reply to the applicant holding the DOB (Date of Birth) as 10 May 1951.”
On 23 February, 2011 an innocuous reply is sent to Taori by Brigadier A.K. Tyagi of the RTI Section giving an annexure that shows that the date of birth of General Singh as per AG records is 10 May 1951 and that of his High School Certificate is also 10 May 1951. Similar information is provided for five other general officers that the RTI petitioner had asked for.
On 25 February 2011, Nair, the ADG, MP, then wrote to Deputy MS (X) ordering that, “ The following amendment be made in the records of the COAS by the MS branch with info to all concerned that, “For: 10 May 1950; Read: 10 May 1951. The above amendment is in accordance with advice of LA (Def) and accepted on file by the Ministry of Law.”
MS doesn’t play ball
There is no immediate reply from the MS Branch. Meanwhile, Brigadier Tyagi writes another letter to Taori, the RTI applicant, on 8 March 2011 offering “additional information” and stating, “In this connection the Date of Birth as record in the HSC (Rajasthan Board) as well other documents of IC 24173 Gen VK Singh COAS is 10 May 1951. There are no averments in this regard. However, there was an omission in one Branch and as advised by LA (Def), Ministry of Law and Justice, necessary correction is being made to correct the omission.”
MoD called in
The MS Branch though does not cooperate with the AG Branch and wanted MoD clearance to be obtained on such a significant issue. R. Chandrashekaran, the Deputy MS, in his letter of 16 March 2011 to Nair, the ADG MP, stated, “As per policy…changes in the date of birth in respect of Commissioned Officers are required to be accepted by the Competent Authority in the MoD. It is requested that requisite approval of the Competent Authority to the acceptance of the change in the instant case be obtained and intimated to this Branch to enable relevant records being amended accordingly.”
Nair of AG’s Branch is back with a detailed reply on 21 March 2011, clarifying that, “the subject case does not pertain to request for change in the date of birth of the said officer but only a correct after a mistake has come to light.” He claimed that the “MoD had been informed about the same” and “ in light of the facts stated above you may initiate necessary action at your end to correct the anomaly of incorrect entry of the date of birth of the said officer in your records.”
Adding to the pressure on the MS Branch is a reply sent by M.D. Paliath, Principal Controller of Defence Accounts (Officers), CDA, to the AG’s Branch on 30 March 2011 referring to the RTI query and stating that its records from the time of VK Singh’s commissioning show the date of birth as 10 May 1951.
MoD gets tough
The MoD was alerted of the matter when the AG’s branch sent a communication to its Establishment Branch and clearly looked upon it as transgression of accepted procedure. Subhash Chandra, Joint Secretary (G and Air), in his letter of 29 March 2011 to the Defence Secretary Pradeep Kumar, stated, “It must be pointed out that the RTI applicant has sought information. The AG has clearly gone beyond the furnishing of information to getting an issue investigated by the LA( Def), Ministry of Law and proceeding to rectify an omission by another branch. This is most irregular as it involves the date of birth of the COAS and has implication for his tenure.”
In the letter Chandra pointed out that Singh at the time of the selection of COAS had accepted his date of birth as 10 May 1950. He stated: “Thus Gen VK Singh’s date of birth is a settled matter as far as the Government is concerned. It is surprising that the AG Branch has not taken note of these developments which are in its knowledge… Instead of furnishing facts to the applicant, the AG Branch has empowered itself to change the official date of birth of the COAS as 10 May 1951 on the basis of an RTI application.”
On 4 April 2011, the MoD formally sought clarifications from the Army HQ, asking it four telling questions: 1) what is the policy for effecting such corrections and who is the Competent Authority 2). Who approved the correction of dates 3). What was the legal issue referred to the Ministry of Law and Justice? A copy of the reference made to the LA (Def) may be furnished 4). Why was the issue not routed through the Ministry of Defence as per norms?
AG dodges query
To which the AG Branch in its reply of 18 April 2011, claimed that as “it is the custodian of all such records of date of birth, the said Branch is competent to convey to any other Branch in case any correction in error is required.” But on the question as to why it bypassed the MoD it blandly stated, “It is our understanding that the office of LA (Def) is an integral part of the MoD and hence clarifications, owing to a legal nature, was referred to it; this is a normal practice in all legal matters related to other cases also. If, however, there are instructions to the contrary the same may please be intimated for our information and necessary action.”
Meanwhile, Singh was apparently drumming up support for his case even approaching the Prime Minister’s Office. On 21 April 2011, Defence Secretary Pradeep Kumar received an unsigned petition from VK Singh that had been submitted to TKA Nair, the then Principal Secretary to the PM, enclosing all the documents of his case including the LA (Def) advice on the matter.
As the matter had turned extremely serious, Chandra in his letter to Pradeep Kumar, Defence Secretary on May 6, 2011, pointed out, “The amendment of the date as a ‘technical’ correction of an error at this stage by the AG Branch of AHQ on the basis of an RTI application in direct consultation with the Law Ministry without bringing the entire facts to the latter’s notice has given rise to a situation where the date of birth is effectively getting changed to 10 May 1951 without the officer himself applying for a change. This issue has implications on the tenure of the officer concerned and the organisation. It also has implications of setting a precedent that may override extant procedures.”
Antony acts
Chandra recommended getting the opinion of the Attorney General of India Goolam Vahanvati on the issue. Kumar agreed with Chandra and in his note of 7 May 2011 to Defence Minister AK Antony on the file stated “A decision regarding amendment in the date of birth of the COAS will have implications on the succession plan on the Army. The possibility of those affected by the decision seeking redressal in the court of law cannot be ruled out. Therefore, it is essential that whatever decision the Government takes in this sensitive matter should be defendable in a court of law.” Antony gave his approval on 9 May 2011 and the matter was referred to Vahanvati.
On 16 May 2011, Vahanvati in his 22 page reply to the MoD got into great detail with case studies that have been brought out in the previous parts of the series by The Tribune. He takes a serious view of the transgressions by the AG’s Branch using an RTI query to change Singh’s date of birth and states, “I find the procedure which was adopted completely untenable in law and to put it mildly, strange. Both on facts and in substance the reply to the queries on the RTI application make disturbing reading.”
Vahanvati then came down strongly on Army HQ stating: “In my opinion… there is a clear case of estoppels and waiver and this position in law is well settled.” The charge of estoppels is serious as, by dictionary definition it is ‘a legal principle that bars a party from denying or alleging a certain fact owing to the party’s previous conduct, allegation or denial.’ Vahanvati concludes, “My answer to the query is that the amendment of the date of birth is not legally tenable and the issue cannot be reopened at this stage on any basis whatsoever.”
Raising doubts
Singh though is not waiting for Vahanvati’s verdict. On 12 May 2011, he gives a detailed petition to Defence Minister Antony, “seeking justice from the Hon’ble Raksha Mantri based on facts and records,” as he is known for his “judicious, dispassionate, unbiased and kind nature.” He charges the MoD of trying to “confuse the entire issue” as a “change in his date of birth” when it was one of “reconciliation of wrong records.”
Raising doubts over the decision of the MoD to refer it to Attonery General Vahanvati, Singh stated that the “ whole process smacks of prejudice and malice as a mere legal advice unilaterally obtained cannot be enough to change the date of birth followed for 41 years.” Apart from charging the MoD of sending “tailor-made” queries to ensure his plea is rejected he startles the MoD by stating that he is attaching “advice obtained by my well wishers from two former Chief Justices of India for your perusal.”
Odd actions
The MoD waits for Vahanvati to give his opinion before taking up VK Singh’s petition to Antony. It is clearly upset with Singh asking for opinion from two former Chief Justices of India without consulting it. Joint Secretary Chandra in his note of 1 June 2011 to the Defence Secretary Kumar pointed out, “It is odd that the Gen Singh and the then DG MP&PS Lt Gen VK Chaturvedi have in a personal matter of the COAS chosen to make a reference to two former Chief Justices of India. Justice G.B. Patnaik has commented that he is unable to comment on the Attorney General’s opinion as he has not seen it whereas Justice J.S. Verma had remarked that while he has perused the opinion furnished by the LA (Def) to the AG’s Branch, it is true that the Attorney General has taken a different view, it is likely the query for his opinion may not be framed correctly.”
Chandra recommended that since two former CJI’s have given their opinion they should get another opinion from Vahanvati. Kumar concurred with Chandra and in a note on 7 June 2011 requested Antony to clear the proposal to get a second opinion from Vahanvati which he does on 8 June 2011.
Out of the loop
Vahanvati in his second opinion dated 21 June 2011 pointed out, “The reference by the AG Branch to Justice Verma directly is highly unusual since the proper and well laid down procedures have not been followed. The Ministry of Defence as well as the Law Ministry was kept out of the loop and excluded completely.”
He then takes on the query raised to Justice Patnaik by Singh’s “well-wishers” that whether “the Central Government could rely on an opinion of the Attorney General of India which was based on tailor made queries.” To make his point Vahanvati quoted from the Union Law Secretary’s note dated 9 June 2011 in which he stated, “ The opinion given by the LA (Def) which has been countersigned by the Additional Secretary cannot be treated as a legal opinion for the purpose of change of date of birth.”
The Law Secretary’s note also stated that the reference made by the AG’s branch to the LA (Def) “ did not have any comments or views of the MoD who are the concerned authority for ordering any change in the date of birth of the concerned officer.” The note further observed, “Moreover such matters should have been placed for consideration at the highest level in this Ministry. I may point out that it is the consistent practice in this Department that all important matters especially in relation to very senior officers are invariably shown to the Law Secretary and Law Minister. The reply of the Legal Adviser (Defence) may be abrogated for these reasons.”
Vahanvati dismisses VK Singh’s suggestions that the queries to him by the MoD were “tailor-made” stating, “to impute motives to the MoD is not only unwarranted but in bad taste.” He ended by stating that, “taking all aspects into consideration I see no reason to revise my opinion.”
A month later, based on Vahanvati’s advice and having sought the concurrence of the Defence Minister, Joint Secretary Chandra sends an office memorandum on 21 July 2011 to Chief of Army Staff (COAS) VK Singh, the Adjutant General (AG) and the Military Secretary (MS) that declares the AG’s note of February 25, 2011 as, “unauthorised and illegal.”
Null and void
Chandra’s memo then stated, “The Central Government therefore declares order No 12918/RTI/MP-6(a) dated February 25, 2011 directing to amend the date of birth of Gen VK Singh (IC-24173), COAS to read as 10 May 1951 instead of 10 May 1950 as recorded, as null and void and non est. The officer’s official date will continue to be maintained as 10 May 1950 (Tenth May, Nineteen Hundred and Fifty).” This was then issued as a formal Government Order on 22 July 2011.
On 26 August 2011, General Vijay Kumar Singh became the first Chief of Army Staff, to file a statutory complaint with the Union Defence Minister AK Antony seeking redressal of his age issue. On 30 December 2011, the MoD rejected his statutory complaint “by order and in the name of the President,” for reasons discussed in The Tribune series. The order stated, “His officially recognised date of birth will continue to remain 10 May 1950. Accordingly there are no grounds for interfering with the impugned Official Memorandum dated July 21, 2011 and the Government order dated July 22, 2011.”
Over to Supreme Court
When the Government had admitted Singh’s statutory complaint it had held in abeyance its July 22, 2011 Order that his date of birth remain as 10 May 1950 and all the Army branches to conform its records with it. But with its 30 December 2011 order, the hold was lifted. On 23 January 2012, the MoD sent a note to the AG ordering it to reconcile its records. (see front page report)
Meanwhile, on 16 January 2012, in another unprecedented step by a Chief of Army Staff, Singh filed a writ petition in the Supreme Court challenging the Government’s order. The first hearing is fixed for February 3, 2012. The highest court of the land will now give its verdict on one of the most contentious and messiest issues concerning the Army Chief that India has seen since Independence.
  • PART 1

  • PART 2

  • PART 3

  • PART 4

  • PART 5

  • Sunday, January 29, 2012

    NHPC flouting norms of Brahmaputra Board.

    Assam Tribune:Ajit Patowary:Sunday,January 29, 2012.
    GUWAHATI:The safety of the Lower Subansiri Hydroelectric Power Project (LSHEP) being built by the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation (NHPC) is doubtful. It has a gap of eight metres between the natural hard rock and the foundation of its dam. This is quite contrary to the engineering norms, said consultant engineer J N Khataniar while talking to The Assam Tribune.
    And now, in the face of popular apprehensions over the safety of the dam, the NHPC authorities have built one 50- metre deep and 80 centimetre thick concrete cut-off wall at the dam site to prevent seepage. They have also provided the dam wall with a 135 per cent base width of its maximum height to reduce the pressure of the stored water on the base.
    Moreover, the power house being built by the NHPC is designed as an over ground one. The site was earlier stated to be not safe for such a power house by the Brahmaputra Board.
    Initially, in 1983, the Brahmaputra Board had prepared the detailed project report (DPR) for the project in consultation with the Geological Survey of India (GSI) and the Central Water Commission (CWC). And the Board DPR had called for a rock-filled dam of 257-metre height from the deepest hard rock, suggesting that the height of the dam should be 240 metre from the riverbed.
    But the NHPC has changed the dam type to a concrete gravity one with the height of 116 metres from the riverbed level and reduced the foundation depth to 9 metres from the river bed. This indicates that the heavy dam foundation is placed eight metres above the hard rock lying below the riverbed, Khataniar said.
    But despite this, the NHPC has now been claiming that its DPR was approved by the Brahmaputra Board.
    It is also not clear as to how the NHPC has addressed the issue of landslide in the area which is prone to severe landslide. Paragraph 137 of the geological report prepared by the Brahmaputra Board has mentioned the devastation caused by the land slid dam on the Subansiri following the August 15, 1950 earthquake, Khataniar said.
    Khataniar has filed an RTI application with the Brahmaputra Board seeking information and observations of the Board on the above issues.

    ‘Central funds used to just widen Pune roads’

    DNA:Partha Sarathi Biswas:Sunday,January 29, 2012.
    Civic activist Major General (retd) SCN Jatar, who has been lobbying for proper implementation of the Bus Rapid Transit System (BRTS) in Pune, has alleged that Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC), had utilised funds to the tune of Rs1,500 crore released by central government for BRTS, ‘to widen roads’.
    Using the Right to Information (RTI), Act 2005, Jatar had obtained the minutes of meeting chaired by SK Lohia, officer on special duty (OSD), urban transport (UT) department, for implementation of high quality integrated BRTS in August last year. In the minutes, Lohia had pointed out several flaws in the manner in which the project has been implemented in the city.
    The pilot BRTS project from Katraj to Swargate and Swargate to Hadapsar, was executed by the civic body just prior to the civic elections of 2007. Jatar and other activists had alleged that the hurry and lack of planning for the implementation of the BRTS was due to political pressure by tainted city MP Suresh Kalmadi. The total cost of the implementation of the pilot project was Rs1,24.7 crores for a distance of 12 km.
    The above meeting was attended by municipal commissioner Mahesh Pathak, Vinay Deshpande, officer on special duty (OSD), Jawaharlal Nehru national urban renewal mission (JNNURM) cell and several other officers.
    During the meeting, it was pointed out that the way, several important links were ‘inadvertently left out in the detailed project report (DPR), approved by the Ministry of Urban Development (MoUD)’’. Around 9 links were identified by Lohia and the civic body was directed to submit a revised DPR, for approval under JNNURM.
    Six lanes which were already approved under JNNURM, were singled out by Lohia for having low demand. It was recommended that these lanes be deleted from the BRTS corridors. During the meeting, it was suggested that the civic body take sanction from the JNNURM cell for the work undertaken as part of routine road improvement. Lohia had strongly recommended that PMC goes for only dedicated corridor network.
    “Since day one, we have been pointing out that the civic body had not implemented the BRTS in the city. All the money sanctioned by the state government for implementation of BRTS has been used for road widening. The Centre also did not keep a close watch on the way the funds were spent,’’ said Jatar.
    Vivek Kharwadkar, additional city engineer PMC, was not available for comments.

    Sports Bill is all about govt control: BCCI chief

    Zee News:Sunday,January 29, 2012.
    New Delhi: Cricket Board President N Srinivasan said that the Sports Bill of the government was all about trying to control the national federations and questioned its application to the BCCI.
    "This is all about control (by the government)," Srinivasan said when asked about his views on the Sports Bill. He also agreed that the Bill was not going to produce Olympic gold medallists in the country.
    Asked why the BCCI was against the application of the Right to Information Act, he said, "In principle, why should RTI applies to us, we don`t take any money from the government. There is no secret in our functioning.
    "Except that the information regarding the selection of the team cannot be made public everything is in public domain. We are very transparent," he told a private TV channel.
    Srinivasan vehemently denied that there was conflict of interest in him being the Manager Director of India Cements which owns IPL side Chennai Super Kings and a Cricket Board office bearer.
    "All the decisions of the Board are taken by the General Body and the IPL Governing Council has 13 members. And no decision concerning the IPL are made exclusively for the sake of a particular franchise," he said.
    "Why India Cements bid for the IPL was for the Chennai People. Our company have been supporting cricketers for the last 50 years since when there were no money in cricket. The people of Chennai would have missed out on am IPL team," he added.
    Asked about the case of former IPL Commissioner Lalit Modi now being probed by a BCCI Disciplinary Committee, Srinivasan said, "Modi has made serious allegation against the BCCI. We expected people to be honest and above board, We don`t think so in case of Modi.
    "The Disciplinary Committee will come out with its final verdict and we have to take action. But there was no personal issue between me and Modi," he said.
    Srinivasan refused to compare Modi`s case with that of former BCCI and ICC President Jagmohan Dalmia.
    "We have accept that Dalmia has made a huge contribution in Indian cricket. He was the first ICC President after the world body chief used to be from the MCC.
    There was some misunderstanding in some financial transactions and later those were clarified and we dropped the case. The matter was closed. Modi`s case was different. I don`t want to compare Dalmia with Modi`s case," said Srinivasan.
    On India`s continued opposition to the Umpire Decision Review System, Srinivasan said that the BCCI was against the UDRS as "it would not stand up to the test of perfection".
    "BCCI is not against the use of technology at all. Technology which is not perfect will not add to decision making but rather will take it away. We have told the ICC that the ball tracking technology is faulty, there is uncertainty about it," he said.
    "The problems in the Hot Spot was evident during the England tour. So the main two components which form UDRS do not stand up to the test of perfection.
    "My people have made presentations to me about the Hawke Eye and when I asked about how certain it is, I was told it is like leap of faith I will have to take."
    Asked about former captain Sunil Gavaskar`s claim that the BCCI owes Rs 2 crore for IPL-related service, Srinivasan said, "At the General Body meeting, the members said they don`t know about this."

    FOI and FDI; The impact of freedom of information laws.

    Hindu Business Line:Sunday,January 29, 2012.
    Can the freedom of information (FOI) increase foreign direct investment (FDI) to developing countries? This is the question that Daniel Berliner of University of Washington explores in The impact of freedom of information laws on foreign direct investment in developing countries (www.ssrn.com). His answer is that FOI laws increase FDI inflows per GDP, but only after they have been in effect for several years, and only where the rule of law is high.
    While highlighting the importance of addressing the challenges of implementation and enforcement, the author reminds that implementation should be expected to take time if a new policy requires substantial changes at multiple levels of government, such as the creation of new agencies or new roles within existing agencies (such as information offices or officers), new practices (such as new systems to manage documents), and new types of behaviour (openness as opposed to secrecy).
    According to Berliner, the FOI laws are not important solely for their much-touted benefits to democracy, accountability, free press and civil society. He notes that these laws also play an important role in shaping economic incentives to which investors respond.
    Averring, therefore, that FOI laws can increase transparency in ways that decrease investor uncertainty and solve information asymmetries, the author observes that they can also increase the credibility of policymakers’ commitments, by giving potential sanctioning power to a diffused body of domestic actors.
    “Given the importance of information in the global economy, it is surprising how little research has addressed the role played by information policy itself. FOI appears to be, in fact, good for business.”

    MBBS can't treat cancer, panel told.

    The Times of India:Prafulla Marapakwar:Sunday,January 29, 2012.
    MUMBAI: An MBBS doctor can neither treat nor dispense medicines to a cancer patient, director of medical education P H Shringare and director of public health Suresh Gupta have told Aurangabad information commissioner D B Deshpande. TOI had reported on December 27 that, following an RTI appeal, the commissioner had summoned Shringare and Gupta on the issue.
    Shringare told the commissioner that MBBS doctors have not been taught about cancer drugs, cancer treatment and chemotherapy. Furthermore, only pharmacists registered under the Pharmacy Council Act, 1948, can dispense drugs to a cancer patient, he said.
    Gupta, while endorsing Shringare's view, said that only in a special circumstance can an MBBS doctor give a cancer patient preliminary treatment. "Under the cancer prevention programme, we are imparting training to MBBS doctors for preliminary treatment of cancer patients. Once trained, they can treat a cancer patient, but only after the treatment protocol is prescribed by a cancer specialist."
    Showing how an MBBS doctor is unqualified to treat cancer, Shringare submitted to the commission, "In the curriculum prescribed by the Maharashtra University of Health Sciences, an MBBS doctor is not taught administration of medicines to a cancer patient. In fact, it has been stated that principles of cancer treatment and their adverse drug reactions, individual agents and regimes need not be taught. Thus, an MBBS doctor does not have a comprehensive knowledge of medicines prescribed for treatment of cancer."
    On chemotherapy, Shringare said the subject is not included in the MBBS curriculum. "An MBBS doctor can diagnose common clinical disorders and cancer is not a common clinical disorder. So it would be inappropriate for an MBBS doctor to administer chemotherapy," he said. On the basis of their submissions, Deshpande asked the chief secretary to draft comprehensive norms for dispensation and administration of medicines to cancer patients.

    Former Isro chief G Madhavan Nair gives up IIT post; hopeful of getting justice through RTI

    Economic Times:Sunday, January 29, 2012.
    NEW DELHI: Former Isro chief G Madhavan Nair, who has been barred from any government work for his alleged lapse in the Antrix-Devas deal, on Friday voluntarily stepped down from the post of chairman of the board of governors of the upcoming Indian Institute of Technology, Patna.
    The government decided to bar Nair and three other ex-Isro scientists from any government work for their alleged lapses in the Antrix-Devas deal.
    "I came here to say goodbye. I am voluntarily stepping down. This college is very close to my heart and it's my moral responsibility to give them the message. I have nothing to do with the government. It has hurt me very badly. I have not been told anything by the government so far," the top space scientist told TOI on phone from Patna.
    Sources said Nair refused to chair the meeting of the board but was persuaded to stay on as he was associated with the planning for the college for a long time. Nair said he had filed an application under the RTI Act and had sought the two inquiry committee reports.
    "I am sure the government will not refuse it. After studying the reports , we will take appropriate action. It's a question of my prestige and it has to be restored ," he said. "We do not know what were the terms of the committees, what are their recommendations .
    We do not know what processes they followed to secure such an unilateral decision from the government," he added. In February 2011, the UPA government scrapped the controversial contract between Antrix Corporation and Bangalore-based Devas Multimedia for the lease of space segment in S-band. The government had said it could not grant S-band spectrum to anyone including Antrix due to strategic reasons.
    The controversy over the deal surfaced at a time when the government was battling corruption charges over the allocation of 2G spectrum. The government promptly appointed two committees - one headed by former cabinet secretary B K Chaturvedi and another by former central vigilance commissioner Pratyush Sinha - to probe lapses in the deal.
    Nair said the Chaturvedi panel allowed them to present their case but the Sinha panel only sent a questionnaire, suggesting that they were denied the right to be heard. "We answered all the questions and sent it to them but we have not received any reply," the ex-Isro chief said, adding that government's decision to bar him from official work was against the process of natural justice.
    Devas Multimedia has moved the International Court of Arbitration to settle the issue but Antrix has not responded favourably to the arbitration . The SC is expected to hear Antrix's petition on the issue early in February.
    The ICA has appointed a three-member panel to go ahead with the arbitration proceedings. Former CJI A S Anand has been appointed as one of the members of the arbitration panel.

    Govt clarifies on RTI delay; The State government on Saturday said there will not be any delay in replying to RTI applications.

    Deccan Herald:Sunday, January 29, 2012.
    In reply to a report in the Deccan Herald titled ‘Waiting for RTI replies just got longer’, which appeared on Saturday, the press secretary to the Chief Minister said the new rule of approaching the First Appellate Authority (FAA) and waiting for 45 days is meant only to prevent the influx of appeals directly to the Karnataka Information Commission (KIC).
    The press note said it is the responsibility of the PIO to furnish information to the applicant within 30 days. However, there remains an ambiguity about when a person should approach the KIC in light of the new order, when the RTI Act says that a person is free to approach the KIC if the PIO fails to give information within 30 days or gives incomplete information.
    As per the RTI Act, 2005, it is only the KIC that can levy penalty on the PIO and not the FAA.
    The press note does not clarify whether the aggrieved person is entitled to file a complaint against the PIO for not providing information before 30 days until the FAA intervenes. An RTI activist, Vikram Simha, claims that a person denied information within 30 days can approach both the KIC and the FAA simultaneously.
    “The FAA can provide information to the aggrieved party whereas levying penalty on the PIO is the prerogative of the KIC alone,” said Simha. Also the government has not made any provision to publish the list of the FAA in all the government departments.

    Revisit RTI provisions you framed: CIC to Rajasthan HC

    Indian Express:Sunday, January 29, 2012.
    The Central Information Commission (CIC) in New Delhi has asked the Rajasthan High Court to revisit a number of provisions framed by it pertaining to the Right to Information (RTI) Act.
    The commission passed the order in response to an appeal by a Mumbai-based RTI activist, Sunil Ahya. Ahya sought to know the reasons why the Rajasthan HC framed certain rules under the Rajasthan Right to Information (High Court and Subordinate Courts) Rules, 2006, which he contended, were contrary to significant provisions of the original act. Significant regulations which were brought to light stipulate that the applicant has to attach a self-attested photograph to the application and has to make several declarations in his plea, including a statement that the “motive for obtaining such information is proper and legal.” Chief Information Commissioner Satyananda Mishra noted that these rules are “not in conformity with the provisions of the Right to Information (RTI) Act, 2005.”
    Further, the rules of the Rajasthan HC in Section 5 (1) hold that “if the requested information does not fall within the jurisdiction of the authorised person, it shall be conveyed to the applicant in Form C as early as practicable.” The original rules, however, stipulate that if the information is not available with public information officer, he should transfer the application to the relevant public authority.
    Goregaon resident Ahya approached the commission after he was denied information regarding the reasons for framing these rules. The panel noted, “Section 28 of the RTI Act vests the power to make rules in the competent authority in order to carry out the provisions of the Act; it does not give any power to the competent authority to frame rules to restrict the rights conferred by the Act.”