The Asian Age: Mumbai: Wednesday, July 12, 2017.
More than a
decade since the Right to Information (RTI) Act fully came into force,
activists are divided over whether the government’s rules pertaining to the Act
are diluting it. The debate started after the Centre released its draft RTI
Rules 2017. The government has, however, refused the allegations, terming them
misleading.
Speaking
about earlier alleged efforts by the government to dilute the Act, RTI activist
Anil Galgali said that the Maharashtra government had introduced such rules in
2012. “It had reduced the word limit of applications to 150 in 2012. The
government also refused to give information about officials whose inquiry was
on, terming it ‘confidential’ as per the same set of rules. The Maharashtra
government in its rules has specified that the application should be pertaining
to one subject only,” Mr Galgali said.
The activist
said that every political party tries to water down the Act after coming to
power. “Congress brought in the RTI. But the same government also got the 2012
rules in Maharashtra. Now the BJP is also trying to dilute the Act,” he
alleged.
Former
central information commissioner Shailesh Gandhi however, said that the rules
do not dilute the RTI Act, but misinterpretation of orders undermines it. “I do
not think that rules dilute the RTI Act. This is a wrong impression. There are
some bad rules, but no conscious efforts to dilute it. There is confusion about
the Act and the rules. The Act is passed by Parliament and rules are framed by
the Central or the state governments. The rules cannot go beyond the law. There
was a proposal to amend the Act in 2006 after it become operational in
2005. There were two more attempts,
which did not go to Parliament. Those were serious and would have seriously
affected the Act. But no amendment has been made in the Act. By and large, the
rules do not make the Act weaker. But by gross misinterpretation the Act has
been diluted. This is happening at the hands of commissions, PIOs and appellate
authorities. There are bad orders and good orders. But everybody’s copying bad
orders,” he said.
Facts and
figures
Every year,
four to six million applications are filed. So far, 54,95,215 applications have
been received and 4.44 per cent of the applications went into the second appeal
and 95.66 per cent of the applications received the desired information, as per
the state government’s 2015 RTI report. In 2015, urban development department
received the highest number of applications (2,31,831) followed by the revenue
and forest department (1,47,209) and home department (1,37,865).