Youth Ki Awaaz: National: Tuesday,
June 21, 2016.
Answers to
questions, sometimes, would be clear as daylight. Sometimes they would be hazy,
and you will have to strain to make out the words. Sometimes, the answer would
just be silence. And if your country feels like you are asking too many
questions, it just makes you forget that you had a right to ask questions in
the first place. That is exactly what happened in Rajasthan recently, where a
chapter in the Right to Information (RTI) Act was removed from the Social
Sciences textbook of Class VIII. Why teach children that they have a right to
question and to information, and later be forced to expose your own blemishes?
If you teach them to be silent now, their questions will not haunt you later
this seems to be the mantra.
It is still a
fairytale that an incredibly powerful legislative tool like the RTI Act is
extant in the world’s largest democracy that scored 38/100 in Transparency
International’s latest Corruption Perception Index. The milestone Act has a
stated objective to “empower the citizens, promote transparency and
accountability in the working of the Government, contain corruption, and make
our democracy work for the people in real sense”. An informed citizen is better
equipped to keep necessary vigil on the instruments of governance and make the
government more accountable to the governed, adds the RTI Citizen Gateway. All
this in a country which still holds dear the archaic Official Secrets Act,
1923, which talks about not divulging “information or the destruction or
obstruction thereof, or interference therewith, [which] would be useful to an
enemy” well-intended but with an exponentially risky purview. It would be
time-consuming to even consider initiating a debate on who constitutes an
‘enemy’ in these times of troubled nationalism, but the fact remains that the
RTI Act boldly says it will deliver, notwithstanding the Official Secrets Act,
if “public interest in disclosure outweighs the harm to the protected
interests”.
Yes, the RTI
Act was indeed monumental. As it confidently promenaded along India’s public
front, the writing on the wall was clear – corruption, which had permeated
every crevice of administration, had to stop. As the fear grew in the echelons
of power, applause and relief grew among the poorest of the poor. According to
studies, the total bribe amount involved in a year in below poverty line (BPL)
households availing just basic services was estimated to be INR 883 crores. In
many of India’s villages which house these families, the RTI Act has been used
to avail social benefit schemes like getting food ration for individuals,
ensuring quality and quantity of mid-day meals, and pushing for teacher and
doctor attendance. When it comes to the relatively better-off citizens, the Act
was still used largely for issues like cleaning up the locality, availing
scholarships, getting EPF money, receiving passport and processing education
loans – going by the success stories displayed in the government’s RTI website.
At this juncture, India cannot afford stray incidents to determine the fate of
a tested and proven law that has benefited millions of lives.
Despite multiple
attempts at diluting one of the strongest public interest legislations, the Act
has survived but the same cannot be said of many of its users. Lawyer Ram Kumar
Thakur from Bihar exposed the MNREGS corruption of around 40 lakh by the
corrupt village sarpanch, and was killed in 2013, shot at point blank range.
Rinku Singh Sahi, a civil servant who exposed a 40 crore fraud in Uttar Pradesh
was assaulted, detained, and admitted in a psychiatric ward in 2012.
Reportedly, 289 attacks on RTI activists have occurred since the passing of the
Act in 2005, including instances of murder, assault, kidnapping and threat
calls.
However, with
a well thought-out and futuristic plan, Rajasthan the fountainhead of most
things RTI has taken giant leaps to censure the way a generation thinks; a way
that does not feature questioning status quo, corruption, and injustice. This
is not an isolated attempt at nipping free thought and an attitude of
questioning. It is, in fact, one of the most recent nails in the coffin that
aims to bury the rights to know and understand.
The world’s
largest democracy, founded on justice, liberty, equality and fraternity, cannot
afford to erase one of its biggest achievements – the right to information.
Miserably, the recent past has painted a picture of a country which is
increasingly intolerant when it comes to dealing with critique and
uncomfortable questions. From lambasting the UN special rapporteur’s report
that mentioned caste discrimination to concealing of caste figures of the Socio-economic
and Caste Census 2011 (SECC), India has been playing its cards very, very
close.
A
full-fledged RTI Act retaining its original form is imperative to
knowledge-empower India’s citizens. According to a 2009 study, the awareness
levels about RTI among men was 53% higher than women, and the OBC/SC/ST
categories trailed behind the ‘general’ category by 48%. Poor quality of
information and officials’ perception of RTI as a time-wasting tool is also a
much common complaint, despite an overwhelming majority of the RTIs being
related to the delivery of basic needs and amenities. Additionally,
implementation of RTI is an area that needs urgent attention, especially
protection of whistleblowers, maintaining confidentiality of applicant identity
and effective deduction of penalties. A dedicated office for RTI is required,
with a focused effort to enhance the range and quality of the usage of RTI
among citizens.
In 1910,
Tagore visualised a land where the “mind is without fear” and “knowledge is
free”. However, the Bard of Bengal certainly might not have imagined that
things would turn drastically different a century later. The mind is with fear,
and knowledge definitely comes at a price. An attitude change is a must –
public information is a right, and not charity. Any attempts to dilute the Act
and diminish its ambit must be warded off, ‘in public interest’, especially
when it comes to denying upcoming generations their right to know about their
right to know. It might profit the country to treat the blight before it
consumes it, and make the essence of democracy an official secret.