Wednesday, March 18, 2026

पत्नी भरण-पोषण की कार्यवाही के लिए RTI Act के तहत पति का IT रिटर्न नहीं मांग सकती, यह 'निजी जानकारी' के तहत छूट प्राप्त है: कर्नाटक हाईकोर्ट

Live Law: Karnataka: Wednesday, 18 March 2026.
कर्नाटक हाईकोर्ट ने फैसला सुनाया कि कोई भी जीवनसाथी
, दूसरे जीवनसाथी का इनकम टैक्स रिटर्न और वित्तीय रिकॉर्ड, सूचना का अधिकार (RTI) एक्ट, 2005 के तहत आवेदन करके प्राप्त नहीं कर सकता; क्योंकि ऐसी जानकारी RTI Act की धारा 8(1)(j) के तहत 'निजी जानकारी' मानी जाती है, जिसे सार्वजनिक करने से छूट प्राप्त है।
बेंगलुरु में बैठी पीठ ने अदालत के आदेश में यह टिप्पणी करते हुए गिरीश रामचंद्र देशपांडे बनाम CIC, 2012 AIR SCW 5865 मामले का हवाला दिया,
"...किसी व्यक्ति द्वारा अपने इनकम टैक्स रिटर्न में दी गई जानकारी निजी जानकारी होती है, जिसे RTI Act की धारा 8(1) के खंड (j) के तहत सार्वजनिक करने से छूट प्राप्त है, जब तक कि कोई बड़ा जनहित साबित न हो जाए... 'बड़ा जनहित' शब्द का अर्थ ऐसा हित है, जो विवाद में शामिल पक्षों से परे हो और जिसका संबंध आम जनता या उसके किसी बड़े हिस्से से हो। भरण-पोषण से जुड़ा कोई व्यक्तिगत विवाद... मुख्य रूप से जीवनसाथियों के बीच का एक निजी मामला ही रहता है।"
हालांकि, जस्टिस सूरज गोविंदराज ने आगे स्पष्ट किया कि जिन अदालतों में भरण-पोषण की कार्यवाही चल रही है, वे संबंधित पक्षों की वित्तीय क्षमता का निष्पक्ष आकलन करने के लिए इनकम टैक्स विभाग से संबंधित दस्तावेज तलब कर सकती हैं।
हालांकि अदालत ने यह माना कि RTI आवेदन के माध्यम से केंद्रीय जन सूचना अधिकारी (CPIO) से आय का विवरण प्राप्त नहीं किया जा सकता, क्योंकि यह 'बड़े जनहित' की कसौटी पर खरा नहीं उतरता। फिर भी भरण-पोषण के दावों के संबंध में जीवनसाथी उन दस्तावेजों को अदालत में पेश करवाने के लिए अदालतों का दरवाजा खटखटा सकता है।
जज ने आदेश के साथ संलग्न परिशिष्ट में यह बात कही,
"...अदालत [भरण-पोषण मामलों की अदालतें] केवल मौखिक बयानों या आय के संबंध में बिना पुष्टि वाले दावों के आधार पर भरण-पोषण की राशि तय नहीं करेंगी। यदि किसी भी पक्ष की आय को लेकर विवाद है, तो अदालत स्वतः संज्ञान लेते हुए अपनी शक्तियों का प्रयोग करके दस्तावेजी साक्ष्य तलब कर सकती है, जिसमें इनकम टैक्स रिटर्न और संबंधित वित्तीय रिकॉर्ड शामिल हैं..."
उपरोक्त बातों को ध्यान में रखते हुए अदालत ने याचिका आंशिक रूप से स्वीकार किया और पत्नी को यह स्वतंत्रता दी कि वह भरण-पोषण के मामले की सुनवाई कर रही अदालत में जाकर अपने पति के वित्तीय रिकॉर्ड का आकलन करने का अनुरोध कर सकती है। आयकर विभाग को IT Act, 1961 की धारा 138 के तहत भरण-पोषण न्यायालय के समक्ष वित्तीय दस्तावेज़ प्रस्तुत करने की आवश्यकता होने की संभावना है।
हाईकोर्ट ने पति या पत्नी में से किसी के भी वित्तीय अभिलेखों के संबंध में 'प्रस्तुतीकरण आदेश' (Production Orders) के लिए आवेदन करने हेतु विस्तृत दिशानिर्देश भी जारी किए।
Case Title: Income Tax Officer and CPIO v. Smt. Gulsanober Bano Zafar Ali Ansari and another

No govt job through employment offices in five years in Rajasthan; 22 lakh candidates registered, says RTI

The Hindu: Jaipur: Wednesday, 18 March 2026.
The data, provided by the Directorate of Employment, shows that as of January 14, a total of 22,21,317 candidates were registered as job seekers in district employment offices across the State; of these, over 13.08 lakh were male, 9.12 lakh female, and 989 fell under the 'other' category.
More than 22 lakh unemployed youth are currently registered with employment offices across Rajasthan, according to information obtained under the RTI Act.
It was further revealed that no candidate was recruited in the government sector through the employment offices in the past five years.
The data, provided by the Directorate of Employment, shows that as of January 14, a total of 22,21,317 candidates were registered as job seekers in district employment offices across the State. Of these, over 13.08 lakh were male, 9.12 lakh female, and 989 fell under the 'other' category.
Among districts, Jaipur recorded the highest number of registered unemployed people at 2.51 lakh, followed by Alwar (1.53 lakh), Nagaur (1.34 lakh), Jhunjhunu (1.22 lakh) and Jodhpur (86,320). In contrast, Jaisalmer (12,031) and Pratapgarh (14,047) reported the lowest number of registered candidates.
The category-wise data indicates that candidates from the Other Backward Classes (OBC) form the largest share among registered job seekers, followed by general, Scheduled Castes (SC), Scheduled Tribes (ST) and other categories.
Placements in the private and public sector
The data further revealed the limited placements in the private sector during the past five years. According to the information provided, 86 candidates were placed in 2021, 825 in 2022, three in 2023, 23 in 2024 and 71 in 2025 through employment office initiatives, including job fairs and coordination with private companies.
"The private sector has seen high growth in the last two decades. Investment in crores, but the jobs provided by the directorate are miniscule. Permanent and temporary jobs in the government sector through the directorate seem to have completely stopped. There is a need to activate employment offices and refer candidates," Right to Information (RTI) applicant Chandra Shekhar Gaur said.
The RTI application had also sought details of employment generated through investor summits held in the State over the past two years. However, the department clarified that such information is not related to it.
It also replied to a query saying that the employment offices did not provide jobs in government sector in the past five years.
A senior officer of the Directorate of Employment said the department publishes 'Rojgar Sandesh' fortnightly to keep job seekers aware of various government vacancies.
He said various activities like fairs are also organised from time to time.
The official website of the Department of Skills, Employment and Entrepreneurship in Rajasthan notes that the Department of Employment has been catering to the needs of the job seekers through various activities and schemes. For better coordination and speedily execution of programmes, 'Department of Skills, Development and Entrepreneurship' was established in May 2015.
Providing vocational guidance about various courses and training facilities to job seekers, submission of job seekers' list to employers, registration of unemployed youth, organising Rozgar Melas, and assisting job seekers of weaker sections of the society under special schemes are listed as some of the department's functions.

RTI Act: Right to information, wrong in practice

Business Standard: Bangladesh: Wednesday, 18 March 2026.
Bangladesh’s RTI framework ranks highly in global legal ratings, but the prolonged vacancy in the Information Commission has left the law without its central enforcement mechanism
Bangladesh enacted the Right to Information Act in 2009, granting citizens the legal right to request information from public authorities. The law also created the Information Commission, an independent body responsible for hearing appeals when government agencies fail to respond to those requests.
Today, that enforcement mechanism is largely inactive. The posts of Chief Information Commissioner and two commissioners have remained vacant for more than 18 months, leaving the institution without leadership.
In the absence of a functioning commission, citizens who are denied information have limited avenues to challenge those decisions. A recent amendment to the law introduced several procedural changes, but the institutional gap remains.
The tenure of the last commissioners expired, and the interim government did not appoint replacements. The newly elected government has inherited the same vacancy. As of March 2026, no commissioner has yet been named.
The RTI Act itself requires the existence of a Chief Information Commissioner and two additional commissioners. Without them, the enforcement mechanism of the law collapses. Citizens who are denied information have nowhere to appeal.
At a press conference earlier this month, Transparency International Bangladesh Executive Director Iftekharuzzaman described the situation as "embarrassing".
He also said, "During the tenure of the interim government, a number of important decisions affecting key sectors of the state were taken without due regard for transparency. In that context, it is perhaps not surprising that the government allowed the Information Commission to remain unconstituted for a year and a half. However, the continued failure to form the Information Commission, despite the legal obligation to do so, is deeply embarrassing."
He added, "During the Awami League's 16 years in power, the country was governed through what many described as a system of entrenched corruption, and the Right to Information Commission was rendered ineffective, much like several other oversight bodies. At the same time, the governance process under the interim administration also suffered from a lack of transparency. Until the very last moment of its tenure, the formation of the Information Commission was deliberately delayed."
Badiul Alam Majumdar, secretary of Citizens for Good Governance (Shujan), expressed frustration, saying, "Transitioning from our country's long-standing culture of secrecy to a culture of openness is a long and difficult process. In this regard, the interim government failed to set a positive example. Despite having a legal obligation to do so, it delayed the formation of the Information Commission for an extended period, setting an unprecedented record."
Reality on the ground
On paper, Bangladesh's Right to Information framework is not weak.
The Global RTI Rating, maintained by the Centre for Law and Democracy in Canada, gives Bangladesh a score of 107–109 out of 150, placing it 27th among 141 countries as of 2024. In terms of legal design, the law even scores higher than countries such as Finland, the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada.
But a law is only as effective as the institution that enforces it.
Moreover, data from the Right to Information portal shows how the system is currently functioning.
According to the dashboard, a total of 27,673 RTI applications have been submitted across Bangladesh. Yet only 121 applications have received responses so far.
Another 139 applications remain under process, while the overwhelming majority 24,487 requests have already exceeded the legal response deadline without resolution. In addition, 18 applications have been cancelled.
The numbers highlight a striking imbalance between requests filed and responses delivered. In effect, thousands of citizens have exercised their legal right to seek information, but only a tiny fraction have received replies within the system.
The portal also indicates that the platform has been viewed by 127,629 visitors, suggesting growing public interest in using the law despite the system's limited responsiveness.
What the 2026 RTI amendment introduced
The RTI Amendment Ordinance 2026, issued earlier this year by the interim government, marked the first significant revision of the law since its adoption in 2009.
The ordinance introduced several changes.
It broadened the definition of "information", strengthened provisions on proactive disclosure, and increased penalties for non-compliance. The daily fine for refusing to provide information was raised from Tk50 to Tk100, while the maximum penalty increased from Tk5,000 to Tk10,000.
Taken individually, these revisions appear reasonable. Yet they largely bypass the deeper institutional problems that have long limited the effectiveness of the law.
One of the most debated changes concerns the definition of information itself. The amendment expanded the scope to include digital materials, maps, microfilms and electronically generated records.
At the same time, it explicitly excluded official note sheets the internal documents where bureaucrats record discussions, recommendations and the reasoning behind administrative decisions. For transparency advocates, this exclusion removes precisely the records that allow citizens to understand how decisions are actually made inside the state.
Civil society groups had proposed much broader reforms.
In 2025, the Tottho Odhikar Forum submitted 37 recommendations to the government. Among them were proposals to include note sheets within the scope of the law, extend coverage to political parties and private organisations receiving public funds, introduce a mandatory deadline for filling vacancies in the Information Commission, and harmonise the RTI Act with conflicting legislation such as the Official Secrets Act.
None of these recommendations was incorporated into the amendment.
Even the revised penalty provisions may have limited practical impact. A maximum fine of Tk10,000 for denying a citizen's legal right to information is unlikely to act as a strong deterrent for public officials.
How South Asia compares
Bangladesh is not the only South Asian country struggling with the enforcement of transparency laws. But its current institutional vacuum is particularly severe.
India, which ranks ninth globally in the RTI Rating, operates a multi-tiered oversight structure consisting of a Central Information Commission and information commissions in each state. While the institutional framework remains active, the system faces significant delays.
As of mid-2024, more than 405,000 appeals and complaints were pending across 29 information commissions nationwide, reflecting mounting pressure on the transparency regime despite its continued operation.
Sri Lanka, ranked 4th globally with a score of 131/150, offers a more encouraging model. Its five-member RTI Commission, established under the Right to Information Act of 2016, has the power to conduct inquiries, summon witnesses under oath, and file cases in Magistrates' Courts against officials who provide false or incomplete information, with penalties of up to Rs50,000 or imprisonment. The commissioners are appointed on the recommendation of the Constitutional Council, insulating the process from executive discretion.
Nepal, ranked 23rd globally, was the first country in South Asia to recognise the right to information as a fundamental constitutional right. The National Information Commission continues to process appeals and oversee compliance with the law.
"The tenure of the last commissioners expired and the interim government did not appoint replacements. The newly elected government has inherited the same vacancy. As of March 2026, no commissioner has yet been named. The RTI Act itself requires the existence of a Chief Information Commissioner and two additional commissioners. Without them, the enforcement mechanism of the law collapses. Citizens who are denied information have nowhere to appeal."
According to the commission's latest annual report from November 2024, the body received 5,182 appeals during the five-year tenure of its commissioners and resolved about 95% of them. The figures show that the commission remains institutionally active in handling information disputes. Yet challenges persist. Reports from civil society indicate that citizens sometimes face harassment after filing information requests, while proactive disclosure by provincial and local governments remains uneven.
Afghanistan presents another notable case. According to the global RTI Rating, its Access to Information Law ranks first in the world with a score of 139 out of 150. Adopted in 2014 and later strengthened through amendments, the law grants broad rights to request information and establishes detailed provisions on scope, appeals and disclosure obligations.
In principle, any individual can request information from public institutions under this framework.
The RTI Rating, however, evaluates the strength of legislation rather than its implementation.
A new government, an unresolved vacancy and a test for Bangladesh
Bangladesh's challenge is not writing a good transparency law. That part was largely achieved in 2009. The real challenge is ensuring that the institution responsible for enforcing the law actually functions.
As long as the Information Commission remains vacant, the Right to Information Act will continue to operate without its central pillar. Citizens may still submit requests, but when those requests are ignored or denied, there is no authority to intervene.
In that sense, Bangladesh today faces a simple but crucial question: whether transparency will remain a principle written into law or become a practice backed by functioning institutions.
Until that gap is addressed, the country's right to information risks remaining exactly what critics have long warned a right that exists on paper but not in practice.
The vacancy at the Information Commission has now extended across two successive administrations.
The commissioners' terms expired in August 2024 during the final months of the Awami League government. The interim administration that followed the July 2024 political upheaval did not appoint replacements, leaving the statutory body inactive.
Following the parliamentary election held in February 2026, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party formed the new government after securing a large parliamentary majority. The election marked the party's return to power after nearly two decades in opposition, ending the interim administration that had overseen the transition following the protests that forced the previous government from office.
The new government has inherited a number of institutional gaps created during the period of political turbulence, including vacancies in several statutory bodies. The Information Commission is among the most significant because its operation is directly linked to the enforcement of the Right to Information Act.
Under the RTI Act, the commission is responsible for hearing appeals when citizens do not receive responses to information requests within the legally mandated timeframe. With the commission inactive, those appeals cannot be processed, effectively removing the final enforcement layer of the law.
The continuation of the vacancy in the commissioners' posts means that the Right to Information framework is currently operating without the institution designed to adjudicate disputes and enforce compliance.
In practical terms, the responsibility for restoring the commission now rests with the current administration, which holds the authority to appoint new commissioners.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Info panel at doorstep of citizens: Over 1,100 pending 2nd appeals disposed of in Nanded

Times of India: Aurangabad: Tuesday, 17 March 2026.
The State Information Commission(SIC)'s Chhatrapati Sambhajingar bench has started a special initiative called ‘info panel at doorstep of citizens' under which a total of 1,136 second appeals were disposed of in Nanded.
Led by state information commissioner, Prakash Indalkar, the SIC bench is holding hearings at various places to save time and energy of applicants.
"The special hearing programme for second appeals was organised for Nanded district from March 9 to March 13. A total of 1,136 second appeals, and other cases related to the RTI Act 2005 were disposed of during the programme," said an official release.
Hearing notices were issued by the SIC to all concerned parties and a cause list, which is an official schedule that lists the cases to be heard on a specific day, were made available on the official website.
"Many appellants along with public information officers and appellate officers from different public offices expressed their gratitude towards the SIC for making special efforts by holding district-level hearings," the SIC has said.
Under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, 2005, a second appeal is the final administrative remedy available to an applicant who is dissatisfied with the decision of the First Appellate Authority (FAA). Filed under Section 19(3) of the Act, the second appeal must be filed within 90 days from the date on which the First Appellate Authority decision was actually received by the appellant or within 90 days after expiry of 45 days of filing of first appeal in cases where no reply has been received.
As per official record, 14,469 second appeals are pending with the SIC main bench and seven different benches by Feb-end.

No government job through unemployment offices in five years in Rajasthan; 22 lakh candidates registered: RTI

The Hindu: Jaipur: Tuesday, 17 March 2026.
The data, provided by the Directorate of Employment, shows that as of January 14, a total of 22,21,317 candidates were registered as job seekers in district employment offices across the State
More than 22 lakh unemployed youth are currently registered with employment offices across Rajasthan, according to information obtained under the RTI Act.
It was further revealed that no candidate was recruited in the government sector through the employment offices in the past five years.
The data, provided by the Directorate of Employment, shows that as of January 14, a total of 22,21,317 candidates were registered as job seekers in district employment offices across the State. Of these, over 13.08 lakh were male, 9.12 lakh female, and 989 fell under the 'other' category.
Among districts, Jaipur recorded the highest number of registered unemployed people at 2.51 lakh, followed by Alwar (1.53 lakh), Nagaur (1.34 lakh), Jhunjhunu (1.22 lakh) and Jodhpur (86,320). In contrast, Jaisalmer (12,031) and Pratapgarh (14,047) reported the lowest number of registered candidates.
The category-wise data indicates that candidates from the Other Backward Classes (OBC) form the largest share among registered job seekers, followed by general, Scheduled Castes (SC), Scheduled Tribes (ST) and other categories.
The data further revealed the limited placements in the private sector during the past five years. According to the information provided, 86 candidates were placed in 2021, 825 in 2022, three in 2023, 23 in 2024 and 71 in 2025 through employment office initiatives, including job fairs and coordination with private companies.
"The private sector has seen high growth in the last two decades. Investment in crores, but the jobs provided by the directorate are minuscule. Permanent and temporary jobs in the government sector through the directorate seem to have completely stopped. There is a need to activate unemployment offices and refer candidates," Right to Information (RTI) applicant Chandra Shekhar Gaur said.
The RTI application had also sought details of employment generated through investor summits held in the State over the past two years. However, the department clarified that such information is not related to it.
It also replied to a query saying that the unemployment offices did not provide jobs in government sector in the past five years.
The official website of the Department of Skills, Employment and Entrepreneurship in Rajasthan notes that the Department of Employment has been catering to the needs of the job seekers through various activities and schemes.
For better coordination and speedily execution of programmes, the Department of Skills, Development and Entrepreneurship was established in May 2015. Providing vocational guidance about various courses and training facilities to job seekers, submission of job seekers' list to employers, registration of unemployed youth, organising Rozgar Melas, and assisting job seekers of weaker sections of the society under special schemes are listed as some of the department's functions.

Monday, March 16, 2026

RTI plea revives 22-yr-old plan to create lake in Kovilpatti

The Times of India: Chennai: Monday, 16 March 2026.
More than two decades after the Tamil Nadu govt first proposed creating an irrigation lake in Thuraiyur village near Kovilpatti, an RTI application has nudged authorities to revive the project. The commissionerate of land administration has now sought 11.88 crore from the state's water resources department to acquire land for the project.
Records presented before the Tamil Nadu state information commission show that the proposal dates back to a govt order issued in 2004 by the water resources department allocating 29.41 lakh for creating a lake, with 3.35 lakh released for land acquisition.
However, the project failed to progress for years after the initial steps. The RTI application by Kovilpatti resident Ponnusamy in 2022 sought information on the land acquisition and compensation to develop the irrigation lake in Thuraiyur village. The public information officer (PIO), who is the personal assistant to the Kovilpatti district revenue officer (DRO), did not respond to the application or to the first appeal filed by the applicant.
Following this, Ponnusamy approached the state information commission with a second appeal in Nov 2022.
During the first hearing in June 2025, the PIO informed the commission that the land acquisition process could not begin as revised land survey details were not received from the public works department (PWD). The commission then summoned the PWD's PIO for the next hearing.
At subsequent hearings held in July and later months, officials informed the commission that the Tuticorin district administration wrote to the commissioner of land administration in Chennai on Dec 9 seeking administrative sanction to acquire 23.46 hectares of private land in Thuraiyur and Sivanthipatti villages, along with 6.28 hectares of poramboke land, to create the irrigation lake.
Acting on directions from the commission, the sub-collector's office reported on Feb 27 that the commissionerate of land administration wrote to the water resources dept secretary on Feb 18 requesting allocation of 11.88 crore to initiate land acquisition.
The commission now directed the sub-collector to report on the steps taken by the water resources department secretary by June 6.

Missing records no ground to deny RTI info: Punjab State Information Commission

The Times of India: Chandigarh: Monday, 16 March 2026.
The Punjab State Information Commission made it clear that public authorities cannot deny information under the Right to Information (RTI) Act on the ground that records are missing. Taking a serious view of such a plea by the Punjab State Warehousing Corporation, the commission directed its managing director to look into the matter and ensure that appropriate action is taken regarding the missing records.
The direction was issued by a bench of State Information Commissioner Dr Bhupinder Batth while hearing an appeal filed by a Mohali resident seeking information from the Punjab State Warehousing Corporation. The RTI request was pending since July 2023.
During the hearing, the respondent department informed the commission that the information sought by the appellant could not be located in its official records. The department stated that the information demanded was very old and sought additional time to trace it. The appellant was not present during the hearing, and the notice sent to him was returned as undelivered.
After hearing the respondent and examining the documents on record, the commission observed that the department did not provide the requested information on the ground that the records could not be traced. It noted that the respondent cannot evade its responsibility to provide information merely by stating that the records cannot be located. The commission said efforts must be made to trace the records and supply the information sought by the applicant.
The commission granted the respondent an opportunity either to furnish the required information to the appellant or to submit an affidavit detailing the steps taken to locate the missing records.
The commission also observed that the department did not implement Section 4 of the RTI Act, 2005, which mandates that every public authority must maintain its records duly catalogued and indexed in a manner that facilitates access to information under the Act. It further noted that records that are appropriate for computerisation should be computerised within a reasonable time, subject to the availability of resources, and connected through a network across the country on different systems. Emphasising this provision, the commission said failure to maintain proper records cannot be used as a ground to deny information under the RTI Act.
In view of these observations, the commission directed that a copy of the order be sent to the managing director of the Punjab State Warehousing Corporation to examine the issue, ensure necessary action regarding the missing records, and submit a compliance report before the next hearing. Both parties were directed to appear in person before the commission on the next date of hearing scheduled for July 9.

RTI obligations for local governments and government owned corporations : Published by- Joanne Jary & Cosmo Cater

Holding Redlich: Queensland: Monday, 16 March 2026.
The Information Privacy and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2023 (Qld) (IPOLA Act) made substantial changes to both the Right to Information Act 2009 (Qld) (RTI Act) and the Information Privacy Act 2009 (Qld) (IP Act), seeing substantial law reforms happening over the course of 2025-26 relating to information in Queensland.
Key changes include a Mandatory Notification of Data Breach (MNDB) scheme for Queensland government agencies (delayed for local government until 1 July 2026), a single set of Queensland Privacy Principles (QPPs) and broader control requirements for agencies including a QPP Privacy Policy, Data Breach Policy and publication scheme change.
A significant development affecting local government lawyers in 2026 is the staggered commencement of obligations under the IPOLA Act, some of which do not take effect until 1 July 2026. The consequence is that local councils are now entering their compliance window for the most significant reform to Queensland's information law regime in over a decade.
Similarly, government owned corporations (GOCs), whilst generally being subject to the RTI Act, have a nuanced position worth exploring.
Who must comply?
The RTI Act applies to ‘agencies’, which include departments, local government, public authority, government owned corporation or subsidiary of a government owned corporation.
This deliberately broad definition catches entities that may not appreciate or have tested their RTI exposure, particularly GOC subsidiaries and local government bodies.
The fundamental threshold question for any entity uncertain about its status is whether it is established for a public purpose by or under an Act (section 16(1)(a)(i) – (ii) RTI Act). Most government boards in Queensland are established for a public purpose by or under an Act. This means that under the RTI Act, members of the public have a right to access documents that government boards have control or possession of.
Uncertainty about whether a body is an ‘agency’ is not a safe harbour, and entities that have historically operated as though they are outside the RTI regime may find themselves exposed if they have never tested that assumption.
Government owned corporations
The classification of GOCs under the RTI Act is one of the more nuanced areas of Queensland information law. The basic position is clear: a GOC or its subsidiary is an agency under the RTI Act. However, the position for some GOCs is materially qualified.
Schedule 2, Part 2 of the RTI Act lists functions of entities to which the RTI Act does not apply. Several GOCs are included. For these GOCs, the RTI Act only applies in relation to their community service obligations. A GOC listed in Schedule 2, Part 2 may not have any community service obligations. Any community service obligations a GOC performs must be included in the GOC's statement of corporate intent, which is prepared each financial year.
A GOC that is listed in Schedule 2, Part 2 is largely shielded from RTI access applications, but only in respect of its commercial functions. Where it has community service obligations, those remain subject to the Act.
The RTI Act also provides protection in relation to the disclosure of commercial-in-confidence information. This is important as GOCs that operate in competitive markets are entitled to resist disclosure of pricing strategies, contract terms and proprietary operational information on public interest grounds.
The Publication Scheme Obligation for GOCs
Beyond responding to individual access applications, GOCs have a proactive disclosure obligation administered through publication schemes. On their website, each GOC must develop and publish the details of the information it is making available to the public (section 21 RTI Act). As a guide, the level of disclosure in the publication scheme should be similar to the types of information that private sector public companies publish, for example, information which ASX-listed companies publish on their website.
Accountability now does not sit exclusively with the legal team. Boards and CEOs are responsible for compliance.
Local government
Local councils are unambiguously agencies for RTI purposes. Core obligations apply: making access decisions within statutory timeframes, maintaining a publication scheme, operating a disclosure log, and providing internal and external review rights.
Councils that have not appointed a dedicated RTI officer are at risk particularly given the volume of community and media-generated applications that flow through local government.
For local governments, the countdown is on. The MNDB scheme commenced on 1 July 2025 for all other agencies and will begin to apply to local government from 1 July 2026. Councils that have not already begun implementing an MNDB-compliant data breach response framework have less than three months to do so.
Queensland government agencies will be required to undertake an assessment of an eligible data breach within 30 days and notify affected individuals and the Information Commissioner. An eligible data breach arises where there is unauthorised access to or disclosure of personal information held by the agency. This 30-day assessment clock begins from the moment the council has reasonable grounds to believe an eligible data breach may have occurred, and not from confirmation of the breach.
Agencies should also be aware that federal privacy reforms introduced a statutory tort for serious invasions of privacy. For local councils, which routinely hold sensitive personal information, this tort creates a new litigation angle.
Consolidated access and amendment processes
A further IPOLA change affecting all agencies is the consolidation of access and amendment processes into a single regime under the RTI Act. Applications for access to documents of an agency and to  amend personal information are now made under the RTI Act. There continues to be no application fee for amendment applications or for access applications limited to documents containing the applicant's personal information.
The list of reviewable decisions has been expanded to include one that purports to, but may not, cover all documents in scope of an application. This makes sufficiency of search a specific reviewable decision, which means internal reviews can be made solely on sufficiency of search grounds. Agencies must be able to demonstrate not only that they made a decision, but that they searched comprehensively for all documents in scope.
Key Points for local governments and GOCs
In light of the above, local councils, GOCs and lawyers advising them should be pressing the following:
For local governments (with the 1 July 2026 MNDB deadline approaching):
  • has a senior officer been designated with responsibility for IPOLA implementation?
  • is there a compliant data breach policy and data breach response plan in place?
  • has the privacy policy been updated to align with the new Queensland Privacy Principles?
For GOCs:
  • has the entity confirmed whether it is listed in Schedule 2, Part 2 of the RTI Act, and if so, what are its current community service obligations?
  • is there a publication scheme in place, calibrated against the ASX-disclosure benchmark?
The window for preparation is closing. Local government lawyers should be treating the 1 July 2026 MNDB commencement as a firm deadline requiring active project management.
Disclaimer
The information in this article is of a general nature and is not intended to address the circumstances of any particular individual or entity. Although we endeavour to provide accurate and timely information, we do not guarantee that the information in this article is accurate at the date it is received or that it will continue to be accurate in the future.

Sribhumi officer told to pay Rs 30k for RTI Act violation

Times of India: Silchar: Monday, 16 March 2026.
The Assam State Information Commission has imposed a penalty of Rs 30,000 on the district social welfare officer of Sribhumi district, SA Islam, for failing to furnish information sought under the Right to Information (RTI) Act.
The order was passed by state information commissioner Utpal Baruah on March 10 while hearing a complaint filed by Silchar resident Nirupam Banerjee. According to the commission’s order, Banerjee had sought certain information from the office of the district social welfare officer under the RTI Act. However, the information was allegedly not provided in a satisfactory manner, prompting the applicant to approach the commission.
During the hearing, the commission observed that despite being given opportunities, the concerned officer failed to adequately justify the delay and deficiencies in providing the information. It also noted procedural irregularities in the handling of the RTI application and the responses submitted by the department. After examining the records and submissions, the commission held the officer responsible for violating provisions of the RTI Act and ordered the imposition of the penalty. The commission directed the officer to deposit the penalty amount under the head of account “Receipt under RTI Act” through the eGRAS portal within 30 days and submit a copy of the receipt to the commission.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Why the government must prioritise RTI : Shamsul Bari and Ruhi Naz

The Daily Star: Bangladesh: Sunday, March 15, 2026.
After the first cabinet meeting of the new BNP government on February 18, a 180-day priority plan was announced focusing on controlling commodity prices, maintaining law and order, stabilising supply chains, and ensuring uninterrupted gas and electricity supply. Given the difficult inheritance from the interim administration, setting these priorities was expected as they addressed the immediate anxieties of ordinary households and the basic conditions for economic stability.
However, if the government truly intends to deliver on these commitments, and sustain public confidence while doing so, it must tackle a less visible but more decisive requirement: a governance system that is transparent, accountable, and responsive to citizens. Without that foundation, even well-designed welfare programmes can be weakened by information gaps, weak monitoring, and administrative inertia.
In this regard, a promising signal was when Prime Minister Tarique Rahman urged senior officials to honour the people’s mandate sincerely. He stressed the importance of merit-based performance, insisting that officials act in accordance with the constitution, the laws, and the rules of business. This emphasis on rules-based governance creates an opening to revive one of Bangladesh’s most powerful yet chronically underused democratic instruments: the Right to Information (RTI) Act, 2009.
Properly applied, RTI can help the government improve service delivery, raise integrity in public programmes, and build trust in institutions. Tragically, RTI was among the laws most conspicuously neglected during the interim period, leaving the regime close to paralysis. If the new government is serious about a fresh approach to governance, reviving RTI should be among its earliest reforms.
It bears repeating that government initiatives social safety nets, health services, education stipends, and infrastructure often falter not because of a lack of intent but because oversight is weak. Beneficiaries are frequently unaware of how the programmes are designed, how resources are allocated, which criteria apply, or who is responsible for delivery. In that vacuum, welfare policies risk remaining promises on paper. RTI addresses this problem at its source.
When citizens can access information about where resources go, how programmes are run, and whether targets are met, a clear chain of positive outcomes follows: transparent information resulting in a more informed citizenry, better monitoring, better accountability, more effective service delivery, and stronger trust in public institutions. RTI turns citizens from passive recipients into constructive participants. It enables them to ask informed questions, detect gaps between policy and practice, and press for corrective action. Far from undermining government programmes, RTI strengthens them by improving integrity, efficiency, and public confidence.
To that effect, the first practical step for the BNP government will be to restore the Information Commission immediately. During the interim period, key positions remained vacant, leaving citizens with little recourse when authorities ignored or obstructed requests. Backlogs grew and civic engagement declined. The government can quickly reverse this by appointing the three designated information commissioners, including the chief information commissioner, through a credible and transparent process consistent with the Act. This is urgent not only to clear pending cases but also to send a clear message to the bureaucracy and public alike that impunity and secrecy will no longer be acceptable.
Once a credible commission begins working, many activists and ordinary users who have retreated in frustration in recent months will return. That said, it is also important that expert recommendations on the RTI (Amendment) Ordinance, 2026 are heeded before the ordinance is passed in parliament.
The value of RTI is best seen in outcomes. One of its strongest contributions in Bangladesh so far has been in improving the integrity of social safety net programmes. Citizens, often with civil society support, have used RTI to ask simple but powerful questions: How were beneficiary lists prepared? Who participated in the selection? What criteria were applied? Frequently, the prospect of disclosure alone deterred nepotism and exposed irregularities, helping ensure that limited resources reached those most in need.
RTI has also strengthened healthcare delivery, especially for vulnerable communities. Citizens have sought information on free medicine supplies, doctors’ attendance records, and sanitation schedules at public facilities, often prompting immediate corrective action once officials realised that records could be scrutinised.
A striking example is the Nilphamari Mother and Child Health Welfare Centre, where beneficiaries were repeatedly told that no doctor was available and services effectively ceased. In January 2025, an RTI request seeking the list of posted doctors and attendance records revealed prolonged unauthorised absences. The disclosure increased public awareness, triggered pressure for accountability, and prompted a more responsive local administration, thus helping restore services for mothers and children.
Similar improvements have been documented elsewhere, reducing misuse of scholarship funds and exposing contractors’ non-compliance in roads and highways projects. These instances exemplify how RTI works best, not as a tool for sensational exposure but as a mechanism of continuous correction. This means identifying problems early, fixing them promptly, and improving systems over time.
For a government that wants to deliver results and rebuild trust, RTI offers a constructive pathway. It is therefore vital to establish a clear institutional focal point within the government to engage with RTI users, civil society, and concerned citizens so that feedback is translated into administrative improvements and transparency becomes routine rather than exceptional. For example, citizens can be useful allies in implementing the government’s new family card and farmer card programmes.
The government’s priorities cannot be achieved sustainably without transparency and accountability. The RTI Act provides proven, practical means to bridge this gap. By restoring the Information Commission, strengthening compliance, and encouraging civic engagement, the new government can improve service delivery and lay the foundations for trust-based, participatory governance.
Shamsul Bari and Ruhi Naz are chairman and deputy director of RTI, respectively, at Research Initiatives, Bangladesh (RIB). Email: rib@citech-bd.com.
Views expressed in this article are the author's own.

Make fire safety clearances public, Gujarat State Information Commission tells civic bodies

The Times of India: Ahmedabad: Sunday, March 15, 2026.
Details of fire safety clearances granted by municipal bodies across Gujarat are not publicly available. And, the Gujarat State Information Commission has directed that this must change.
The order came on an application filed under the Right to Information (RTI) Act by Surat resident Arun Pathak, who had sought records of fire NOCs issued by the Surat Municipal Corporation for new constructions between Jan 11, 2023 and June 11, 2023. The fire department refused to provide the information, a position the commission found had no basis in law.
During the hearing, the commission observed that while applicants can track the status of their fire NOC requests through an online portal, the details of NOCs that were already granted are not available in the public domain. The commission noted that such information is also not included in the proactive disclosure sections of municipal websites, which are mandated under the RTI Act.
In its order, the commission stated that the absence of publicly available records relating to fire NOCs restricts transparency in matters concerning building safety and regulatory compliance. It emphasised that disclosure of such information is necessary in the interest of public safety and accountability.
The commission further observed that there was no legal restriction preventing the fire department from sharing the information. The information officer concerned was directed to verify the authenticity of the documents submitted by the applicant within a week and provide the requested details within the stipulated timeframe after verification.
In addition, the commission recommended that all municipal and metropolitan corporations in the state publish details of fire NOCs on their official websites and update them periodically. It also suggested that a standard operating procedure (SOP) be developed for maintaining and publishing such records in a transparent manner.
The commission directed that its order be forwarded to the urban development and urban housing department for necessary action and implementation across civic bodies in the state.

Himachal Pradesh excludes ACB, vigilance bureau from RTI purview

The Economic Times: Shimla: Sunday, March 15, 2026.
Himachal Pradesh's Congress government has removed the Anti-Corruption Bureau and Vigilance Bureau from the Right to Information Act. This move prevents citizens from seeking information on these bodies. The opposition BJP has strongly condemned the decision. Former Chief Minister Jairam Thakur stated the action is undemocratic and against constitutional spirit.
The Congress government in Himachal Pradesh has excluded the Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) and the Vigilance Bureau from the ambit of the RTI Act, 2005, drawing criticism from the opposition BJP.
An order issued on Thursday said the move was aimed at safeguarding sensitive information during investigations. State chief secretary Sanjay Gupta said the decision was similar to exemptions granted to central agencies such as the CBI and the Intelligence Bureau under the RTI framework.
With the order, citizens will not be able to seek information on the ACB and the state Vigilance Bureau through RTI applications, except for limited disclosures in specific cases.
The BJP criticised the decision. "It is extremely unfortunate, undemocratic and against the basic spirit of the Constitution. It clearly shows that the chief minister fears transparency and is attempting to hide growing corruption in the state," former chief minister Jairam Thakur told ET.
"Congress leaders roam around the country with a copy of the Constitution. But when they come to power, they themselves disregard constitutional norms and public accountability," he added.

Public exam answer sheets accessible under RTI: TN info panel

Times of India: Chennai: Sunday, March 15, 2026.
Tamil Nadu Information Commission has ruled that digitized answer sheets of public examinations are accessible under the Right to Information (RTI) Act and cannot be withheld on the grounds of a five-day window set by the directorate of govt examinations for applying for copies after results are declared. Noting inconsistencies in the responses provided by the PIO and the appellate authority, the Commission asked the public information officer to explain why a penalty of 25,000 should not be imposed and recommended departmental action against the appellate authority.
The order came while disposing of an appeal filed by R Priyadarshini, whose request for copies of her Class XII answer sheets was denied.
In 2023, Priyadarshini sought copies of her Tamil, English, Physics, Chemistry, and Zoology answer sheets under the RTI Act. Her application was rejected on the ground that the directorate's five-day period for such requests had expired. When her first appeal seeking the answer sheets free of cost was turned down for want of a below poverty line certificate, she filed a second appeal with the Commission.
Citing multiple Supreme Court and Madras high court rulings, state information commissioner V P R Ilamparithi held that answer sheets are furnishable information under the RTI Act and must be provided upon payment of the applicable fee.
Ilamparithi, after recording the submissions made by the PIO, said the directorate acted with a motive to deny information and directed the PIO to furnish certified copies of all answer sheets within a week.
The commission has recommended the directorate of govt examinations keep digitised copies of the answer sheets for six months instead of three months, since it involves the career of the next generation. It directed the authorities to promptly display on their official website that students can avail the answer sheets under the RTI Act during the period the sheets are maintained by them.