The News International: Peshawar: Tuesday, September 19,
2017.
The
government officers in Mohmand Agency and local journalists held a dialogue
here Monday on the Right to Information (RTI) law and discussed how it could be
used to improve governance and benefit the masses.
Mohmand
Agency’s Political Agent Mahmood Aslam Wazir, Additional Political Agent
Hameedur Rahman and officers from every line department took part in the lively
dialogue.
The Political
Agent said though RTI hasn’t been introduced in Fata yet, but his doors were
open to anyone seeking information about development projects and working of
the political administration. He said a complaint cell had also been
established a month ago to enable the people to pinpoint shortcomings and help
improve governance.
The local
journalists led by Said Badshah, president of the Mohmand Press Club were also
part of the dialogue.
Senior
journalist Rahimullah Yusufzai was the moderator for the dialogue. He was
assisted by Peshawar-based journalist Gohar Ali. Syed Saadat Jehan of the RTI
Commission Khyber Pakhtunkhwa also made a presentation at the session.
Tribal elders
from Mohmand Agency joined the second session of the dialogue and highlighted
issues concerning their lives.
It was
pointed out during the dialogue that the RTI law has introduced transparency in
the affairs of the state in the developed world.
Speakers said
that RTI law had been implemented in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab while the
federal government was moving the bill in the National Assembly after getting
it passed by the Senate.
It was added
that the RTI law could be implemented in Federally Administered Tribal Areas
(Fata) once after the National Assembly passed the bill and it became the law
and Fata’s future is decided.
The
participants said that tribespeople should be educated about the RTI laws that
would empower them to seek information on the development schemes and other
government activities in their area.
They noted
that journalists were benefiting the most from the RTI law by asking questions
to seek information from government departments and 20 percent of all the
applicants were journalists.