Daily Pioneer: New Delhi: Monday, July 30, 2018.
The Justice
Srikrishna panel on data protection has called for amending the Right to
Information Act to restrict non-disclosure of information only in cases where
harm to an individual outweighs the common good of transparency and
accountability in the functioning of public authorities.
In its
213-page report that calls for a new legislation to protect an individual’s
right over his data, the committee said neither the right to privacy nor the
right to information is absolute and the two will have to be balanced against
each other in some circumstances. The panel said data protection law is
designed to limit the processing of personal data to legitimate reasons and
adds there is a conflict between transparency and privacy. “This requires
careful balancing,” it said.
Chapter II of
the RTI Act grants citizens a right to obtain information from public
authorities but certain exemptions are provided for in Section 8 of the Act in
which case the disclosure of the requested information is not necessary.
This section
requires the Public Information Officer to generally provide information unless
such information has no relationship to any public activity or interest or causes
unwarranted invasion of privacy.
“If the
condition that the information bears no relation to any public activity or
public interest is met, the burden shifts on the seeker of information to
establish that the disclosure of the information is in larger public interest.
“This may
often be a difficult burden to bear as the citizen may not be in possession of
any material to establish any specific concern involving larger public
interest. Further, this defeats the spirit of the RTI Act which sees transparency
as an end in itself, and not necessarily a means to an end,” the panel said.
Also, the other section of about causing unwarranted invasion of privacy also
raises complex issues as there is no indication in the provision as to what
constitutes such an unwarranted invasion.
The panel
said a lot of information sought from a public authority may contain personal
data of some kind or another. “Further a strict interpretation of purpose
limitation may give rise to the inference that any disclosure other than for
the purpose for which the personal data was submitted would lead to an
unwarranted invasion of privacy,” it said.
“To avoid
this predicament, the RTI Act must specifically spell out the circumstances in
which disclosure of such personal information would be a proportionate
restriction on privacy having regard to the object of the RTI Act in promoting
transparency and accountability in public administration. This must be done
keeping in mind the fact that the RTI Act generally leans in favour of
disclosure of information,” it said.
The panel was
of the view that the feature in the RTI Act that the burden is on the public
authority to justify denial of information under one of the exemptions must be
preserved notwithstanding a data protection law. On the exceptional
circumstances in which personal data can be denied to a citizen, the panel said
the relevant factor should be any likely harm that may be caused to the data
principal by the disclosure of such information.
“The RTI Act,
in most circumstances, leans in favour of disclosure, underlining the
importance of transparency in public activities. The Committee is cognizant of
the fact that this feature of RTI Act has contributed tremendously to securing
the freedom of information and enhancing accountability in public
administration,” it said. It noted that this feature has to be accounted for in
any balancing test created under the RTI Act.
“Therefore,
in addition to the likelihood of harm, disclosure should be restricted only
where any likely harm outweighs the common good of transparency and
accountability in the functioning of public authorities,” the report said.
It proposed
that the RTI Act be amended to state that “nothing contained in the data
protection bill will apply to the disclosure” so as to “prevent privacy from
becoming a stonewalling tactic to hinder transparency”. The default provision
is that the information which is sought must be disclosed, according to the
panel’s report.
Such
disclosure, it said, promotes the public interest and the common good of
transparency and accountability. “Only if such information is likely to cause
harm to a data principal and such harm outweighs the aforementioned public
interest, can the information be exempted from disclosure,” it said. The
Committee said that such a formulation offers a more precise balancing test in
reconciling the two rights and upholding the spirit of the RTI Act without
compromising the intent of the data protection bill.