The
Hans India: National: Tuesday, 01 December 2015.
The right to
petition, recognised eight hundred years ago, has a new enforceable additional
force the Right to Information. File a petition, give reasonable gap and ask
for action taken report under the RTI. The authorities are under obligation to
inform the action taken or not taken within 30 days.

Magna Carta’s
Right to petition is strengthened with RTI. The bureaucrats and arrogant
administrators say the RTI should not be used for redressal of grievance. They
even say it’s misuse. But the social activists rightly observe the usage of RTI
for solving their complaints or seeking action on their representations is a
creative use.
When the
right to petition was first considered, human rights as an idea or a provision
of law was not known. This year, in the month of June, we celebrated eight
hundred years of Magna Carta, looking at the humanity from the rights angle
i.e., an individual’s right to something against the powers-that-be.
What is
important in social living? Is it right to life? Do we get it without asking
for it? How do we ask without any guaranteed right to ask? Right to ask is
basic; right to petition is a basic need. If that is given as a right, an
individual can ask for life and for everything he needs.
Petitioning
was equated with questioning, or challenging the authority of Emperor. Kings
considered it as seditious libel. It’s a complaint against the royal rule. They
looked down upon the seeker of something. The people should take whatever is
given, should not ask – that was the refrain. The right to demand was
unimaginable in dictatorship regimes the world over. The right to petition is
the first ever human right perhaps recognised by Magna Carta. It was won after
bitter fights and bloody revolutions.
The right to
petition reaches back at least to the Magna Carta in 1215. The English
Declaration of Rights in 1689 confirmed that subjects were entitled to petition
the king without fear of prosecution.
The Petition
Clause finds its roots in Article 61 of the Magna Carta. The Article 61 provided for the presentation
of grievances to the king, and required the king to redress grievances within
40 days or risk rebellion. The Magna Carta’s Right to Petition includes, if the
right is abridged, the right to wage whatever war against the government needed
to get just redress. The Magna Carta’s Petition Right included a Right to Rebel
in the event that the Right to Petition were abridged. Right to rebel? It’s
unimaginable.
The First
Amendment of the Bill of Rights (United States of America) addresses five
rights. The limits on government
interference with religion, speech and the press took shape of first amendment
rights. The right to peaceable assembly was a needed protection to exercise
these first three. The Right to Petition was central to constitutional law and
politics in the early United States: “Congress shall make no law … abridging
… the right of the people … to
petition the Government for a redressal of grievances.”
The right to
petition the government for redressal of grievances is the right to make a
complaint to, or seek the assistance of one's government, without fear of
punishment or reprisals. The Article 44 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of
the European Union ensures the right to petition to the European Parliament.
The right can be traced back to the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of
Germany, the Bill of Rights 1689, the Petition of Right (1628), and the Magna
Carta (1215), the UNDHR in 1948 followed by the listed Fundamental Rights in
Indian Constitution.
Recently in
January 2007, the US Senate considered a provision as Section 1, an omnibus
"ethics reform" bill. This bill included a provision (Section 220) to
establish federal regulation, for the first time, of certain efforts to
encourage "grassroots lobbying". The bill said that "'grassroots
lobbying' means the voluntary efforts of members of the general public to
communicate their own views on an issue to Federal officials or to encourage
other members of the general public to do the same".
RTI an
added value to right to petition
Right to
petition is important even today during these modern days of democratic rule of
law. Most appropriately, the right to information is an added value to that
eight hundred-year-old right to petition. A just born child cries to say
something. It might contain a demand, perhaps. Mother, father or doctor or
somebody around has a duty and need to respond to that cry. Cry of the society
of the day is right to information. Right to information is a human right. It
means right to empower oneself.
In the days
of no governance or bad governance, information is an important tool for a
citizen. Informed citizen alone could be a vibrant citizen, without whom there
cannot be any purposeful democracy.
What happened
to such a crucial right to petition in these 800 years since? Right to petition
to get redressal of grievances is yet to be granted in a comprehensive manner.
This became substantive right to good governance including ‘development.’ This
is the new human right the universe is languishing for.
The Citizen
Charters are supposed to be declarations of public authority to serve the
tax-paying citizen. The governors owe a duty to serve them. Something like
issuing caste certificate or certifying income or giving permission to build a
house as per building bylaws, etc. Charter should declare time-bound delivery
of services to the citizen. It should have been done without somebody making a
law about it. But as it is not being done, the law is needed. Some of the
States gave citizens an entitlement to service as a right through a service
legislation. Some limited it with mere charters. So far no State guaranteed the
remedies for non-compliance of the ‘charter’ promised to citizen.
Without any
system of redressal of grievances, either of employees or of the citizens, the
State cannot boast of governance, let alone ‘good governance.’ The political leadership and the bureaucracy
under the guidance of political governors have almost forgotten the obligation
of offering governance to the people who are paying taxes and cast their votes
to rule them.
Administrative
ethics
Administrative
ethics and law demand accountable administration. Accountability is possible
only through transparency. Transparency is for the first time provided by
Section 4 of Right to Information Act 2005. It’s in fact a revolution in
governance. But the weakness of the law is that it remained a recommendation,
not mandatory at all. The law does not
even prescribe consequences for ignoring this ‘recommendation’ in suo moto
disclosure clause. However, there is an alternative. If a citizen seeks the
information under Sections 3, 6 and 7 as a matter of right, it should be
delivered unless hit by any of exception under Sections 8 and 9. If information
requested is that which the public authority has to disclose on its own, it
becomes mandatory and denial shall lead to penal proceedings.
Hence, we
cannot say that Section 4 is not enforceable at all. The information to be
disclosed has to be shared when demanded, without even asking for identity of
seeker, his address or the purpose.
The
bureaucrats and arrogant administrators say the RTI should not be used for
redressal of grievance. They even say it’s misuse. But the social activists
rightly observe the usage of RTI for solving their complaints or seeking action
on their representations is a creative use.
The right to
petition, recognised eight hundred years ago, has a new enforceable additional
force – the Right to Information. File a petition, give reasonable gap and ask
for action taken report under the RTI. The authorities are under obligation to
inform the action taken or not taken within 30 days. Magna Carta’s Right to
petition is strengthened with RTI!