Zee
News: New Delhi: Friday, 14 November 2014.
Deciding first
appeals against RTI replies without hearing the appellant by a public authority
is illegal, the Central Information Commission has said in its order against
the Law Ministry.
Under the
Right to Information Act, an appellant gets a chance to appeal twice against
the order of the Central Public Information Officer who receives and answers
the application.
The First
Appeal is filed before an officer, senior to CPIO, within the department where
application is filed. The Second appeal is filed before the Central Information
Commission.
It is a
common practice that at the First Appeal stage, public authorities do not
invite applicants for hearing and decide the case on the basis of appeal filed
by them.
The order of
Information Commissioner Sridhar Acharyulu may help in curbing the practice of
deciding the first appeals without giving a chance to the applicant to explain
himself during the hearing.
The case
relates to number of RTI applications filed by activist R K Jain from the Law
Ministry.
"Passing
orders in first appeal without hearing or sending hearing notice is illegal and
will render the order invalid. The Commission sets aside the order of First
Appellate Authority for violating RTI Act and breach of natural justice by
denying the appellant a chance of presenting his case and by raising entirely a
new defence which was never claimed," Acharyulu said in the order.
He said,
"It deserves action though the concerned officer retired from service and
recommends Public Authority to initiate disciplinary action against the
concerned FAO for acting totally against the RTI Act in this case".