Express Tribune: Peshawar: Thursday,
June 02, 2016.
A draft
proposing amendments to the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Right to Information Act (RTI)
2013 has yet to be cleared even though it has been with the law department for
three months.
Amendments
aimed at making the law more result-oriented, expanding its jurisdiction and
empowering the commission were sent in February to the law department. However,
it has yet to clear the draft to be tabled at K-P Assembly and legislated.
“The
amendments empower the public information officer (PIO), but they are being
delayed despite getting a nod of approval from Special Assistant to Chief
Minister on Information Mushtaq Ghani,” an RTI commissioner, Abdul Mateen, told
The Express Tribune.
However, the
law department defended the lackadaisical pace, saying its officials had
certain objections over the proposed draft which needed to be discussed.
The draft, a
copy of which is available with The Express Tribune, suggested some changes to
the law. These involved including the high court into the remit of the law and
broadening the definition of the ‘requester’ who seeks information from any
government body.
String of
objections
Sub-clause V
in Section-2 of the act is to be replaced with the words “any court financed by
the government”. This will bring the high court under the ambit of the RTI act.
As a result, any citizen of Pakistan can seek information from the entity under
this law.
“We have
objections over the phrase ‘any court financed by the government’. It can be
replaced clearly with the words high court and subordinate judiciary,” said an
official of the law department, requesting anonymity.
For Section
6, which makes a public body liable to designate a public information officer
(PIO), the draft adds subsections 4 and 5.
“A PIO,
designated under Subsection 1, shall have the authority to supply all
information held by the public body and other officers shall act in aid to the
PIO to ensure in-time supply of information under the act,” states Subsection
4.
It clearly
increases the powers of the PIO, who is currently toothless, and can only send
reminders to the sections of a public body that has withheld information or
deliberately tries to delay provision.
The PIO will
not need the approval of his department head to provide the information as he
or she will be authorised directly.
The law
department, meanwhile, had objections over Section 4.
“You are
enabling the PIO to provide information without taking approval from the head
of the department which will create problems,” the law department official said.
“Certain information is restricted or privileged. This subsection will distort
relations between the PIO and the head of his department.”
In case of
the expected retirement of any of the two commissioners or chief information
commissioner, the body has to start a case to fill the vacant seat 120 days
before the expected exit and send it to the government. In turn, the latter
must fill the vacant seat within 30 days.
The law
department also had objections over Subsection 8 of Section 24. It deals with
the removal of a commissioner and his right to appeal such a decision.
Currently, Section 8 states the word “courts” where a removed commissioner may
appeal. However, the law department wants the word to be replaced with “a
division bench” to further specify.
“We also have
a suggestion that a commissioner, even after completion of his three-year
tenure, shall stay until a successor replaces him.”