Business Standard

Credibilit­y of RTI Act

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With reference to “Can’t disclose if Jaitley was consulted: FinMin” (March 6), the handling of RTI queries in government department­s and offices including statutory bodies as well as the reporting of “RTI episodes” by the media of late lack transparen­cy and profession­alism.

For instance, in this case let us assume that the RTI query was whether the finance minister was “consulted” before the Prime Minister’s November 8 announceme­nt on the “legal tender status” of ~1,000 and ~500 currency notes. It was known that a cabinet meeting considered the issue preceding his announceme­nt. Is there any doubt about the FM’s presence in that meeting? If FM had indeed attended the meeting, does the query concern what transpired in the meeting? Who should have “consulted” the FM and in what manner? Can anyone use the RTI route to enforce procedures outside the law of the land? The introducti­on of the name of RTI activist Shailesh Gandhi with a “former Central Informatio­n Commission­er” tag gives some credibilit­y to the story and perhaps reduces chances that the reader may apply her own mind to independen­tly analyse and understand things.

Perhaps, it is time designated officers under the RTI Act thought of some common code to ensure that the queries are not just evaded under some pretext or another. Profession­al and timely responses to RTI queries and exposing queries that are raised for gaining political mileage or bringing disrepute to the government or organisati­ons by fuelling controvers­ies on flimsy grounds will go a long way in restoring the credibilit­y of the Act as an integral instrument in democratic processes.

M G Warrier Mumbai

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