Kasmir Monitor: New Delhi: Sunday, March 18, 2018.
The Finance
Ministry rejected highest number of RTI applications received by it during
2016-17, the year in which it had implemented demonetisation of Rs 1000 and Rs
500 currency, the annual report released by the Central Information Commission
on Friday said.
The data
cited by the report shows that among all the union ministries and central
government departments, the Finance Ministry rejected 18.41 per cent of 1,51,186
applications received by it during the said period.
The Finance
Ministry was closely followed by the Home Ministry which rejected 16.08 per
cent of 59,828 applications addressed to it, it said.
The number of
Right to Information (RTI) applications has come down from 9.76 lakh in 2015-16
to 9.17 lakh in 2016-17 - a dip of 6.1 per cent, it said. Among these, 6.59 per
cent applications were rejected by the public authorities during the year. The
overall proportion of rejection for the central government (including UTs) has
come down marginally from 6.62 per cent in 2015-16 to 6.59 per cent in 2016-17.
According to
the CIC, the top authority in monitoring the implementation of the RTI in the
country, the public authorities, in maximum cases, cited exemption clauses like
state interests, personal information, information forbidden from disclosure by
the country, fiduciary capacity listed under Section 8(1) of the RTI Act.
The Ministry
of Home Affairs received 59,828 RTI applications during 2016-17 even though 33
public authorities under it reported 57,657 RTI applications the previous year.
The
proportion of rejection of the MHA has gone up considerably to 16.10 per cent
in 2016-17 from the 14 per cent reported in 2015-16.
A bulk of
these RTIs (6,422) were rejected by the exempt organisations under this
Ministry such as the Assam Rifles, Border Security Force (BSF), Central
Industrial Security Force (CISF), Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) etc.