India
Today: New Delhi: Wednesday, 10 September 2014.
Nearly 13
months after Central Information Commission (CIC) directed to issue Right to
Information (RTI) stamps instead of Indian Postal Orders and bank drafts or
cheques to seek information from government departments, the Department of
Posts has said printing presses don't have papers to print stamp papers.
The reply,
which the Department of Posts has given for non-compliance to the RTI filed by
Delhi-based civil activist Subhash Chandra Agarwal, says: "Both the
security printing presses at Nasik and Hyderabad do not have paper to print RTI
stamps!'' To this reply, Agarwal took a dig at the postal department saying,
"these two presses have sufficient paper to print postal stamps for some
foreign countries, apart from adequately equipped for printing commemorative
and definitive-series stamps regularly with some stamps like on Sachin
Tendulkar printed within a few days of decision-taken, but not for RTI, clearly
a discrimination against the game-changer Act and disrespect to the CIC
direction.''
On August 27,
2013, the CIC had clearly directed Secretary, Department of Posts, that
"RTI applications be accepted in all its 25,000-odd post offices across
the country and the RTI stamp of the denomination of Rs.10 be used instead of
postal orders and this would be time and cost-effective step.'' But the postal
department has its own set of reasons for not issuing the RTI stamps so far.
"The
issue of RTI stamps is under examination. A committee has been set up by the
Secretary (Posts). All stamps are printed by India Security Press at Nasik and
Hyderabad. But currently, both presses are out of stamp papers and the printing
of postal stamps has been adversely affected by this. Hence, the matter be
raised by the DOP&T with the CMD of Security Printing and Minting
Corporation of India (SPMCI) Limited and the Finance Secretary under whose
charge SPMCI Ltd operates,'' says the RTI reply by Postal Department.
It also
hinted at logistics hurdles as opening nearly 25,000 postal offices for this
purpose would demand "dedicated manpower and official infrastructure,
including computers, which requires cost. In fact, Department of Posts admitted
that it has got "no manpower and extra remuneration even to execute RTI
Act by accepting those applications and issuing postal orders for the same
through its 4,700 designated post offices.'' The onus thus clearly falls on the
government to give mandate, manpower and money to execute CIC direction in its
right spirit.