Greater Kashmir: Srinagar: Tuesday, July 25, 2017.
Former Chief
Information Commissioner Wajahat Habibullah today asserted here that public
confidence in elected governments is undermined if access to routine
information about the working of the administration is denied.
Delivering
the keynote address at a day-long interactive workshop on the J&K RTI Act
at the Central University Kashmir, Habibullah, who is also Chairman of the
Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI), described RTI as an instrument for
building public trust in the government.
There were
about 60 participants at the workshop including faculty members,
representatives of the University administration and students of the Faculty of
Law.
Delivering
the Presidential Address, Professor Mehraj ud Din, Vice Chancellor, Central
University Kashmir, described RTI as an invaluable tool for lawyers to get
access to facts and records.
The Vice
Chancellor announced the setting up of a RTI Clinic in the University’s Law
Department to help and train RTI applicants in seeking information under the
law. Speaking of the need to use RTI as a tool for data-driven research, Sanjoy
Hazarika, Director,
CHRI, said
RTI is rarely used by academics for research. He pointed out that data on a
large number of government websites was often dated. “Data tells stories,
stories give perspective, perspective gives the space for asking questions and
interrogating the norm”, he said. He pointed out that RTI opened up
opportunities for researchers to access official data which was not easily
available otherwise and provide feedback to government for inclusion in
processes and policies.
Justice
(retd.) M. S. Khan lamented that there was no mechanism for protecting an RTI
applicant who seeks information to demand transparency and accountability for
wrongdoing in public authorities. As a result, several citizens have lost their
lives or have been brutally attacked for seeking information across the
country, he pointed out.
Professor Altaf Hussain Ahangar, Legal Expert,
expressed his satisfaction over the availability of RTI as a tool for the most
disadvantaged segments of society to seek redress of their grievances. Dr Syed
Haneef Balkhi, SDM Srinagar, pointed out that there is a need to reduce the
time taken for supplying information to RTI applicants from the present outer
limit of 30 days.
Dr Shaikh
Ghulam Rasool, Chairperson, J&K RTI Movement, explained the evolution of
RTI in J&K and presented several case studies of unlettered and
impoverished people using the law effectively to demand accountability for
misuse of public funds and illegal diversion of resources.