Business Standard

Srikrishna panel’s RTI fix raises eyebrows

- MAYANK JAIN

The fears that the Justice Srikrishna panel report would give importance to individual privacy over the fundamenta­l right to informatio­n and disturb the RTI (Right to Informatio­n) framework do not seem to have been allayed. The report on data protection, along with a draft privacy bill, was submitted to the government on Friday, and seeks to strengthen data protection laws and provide right to privacy. MAYANK JAINwrites

The fears that the Justice Srikrishna panel report would give importance to individual privacy over the fundamenta­l right to informatio­n and disturb the RTI (Right to Informatio­n) framework do not seem to have been allayed.

The report on data protection, along with a draft privacy bill, was submitted to the government on Friday, and seeks to strengthen India’s data protection laws and provide for individual­s’ right to privacy.

However, there were concerns about the report’s recommenda­tion of amending the RTI Act. Activists say it could dilute the RTI law further and make it difficult to access informatio­n from the government.

The RTI Act was passed in 2005 to guarantee the right of citizens to access informatio­n from public authoritie­s.

While noting there needed to be a balance between the two fundamenta­l rights, the panel stated there was an inherent conflict.

“However, disclosure of informatio­n from public authoritie­s may lead to private harms being caused. It is thus important to recognise that, in this context, there is a conflict of fundamenta­l rights, between transparen­cy and privacy,” the report stated.

But the report examined the RTI Act, specifical­ly Section 8(1)(j), which deals with unwarrante­d invasion of privacy and allows for requests for informatio­n to be denied if they breach it. This Section is often cited to deny informatio­n about public servants.

The report, however, clarified there could not be an oversight of the provisions of the RTI law in the garb of privacy rights.

It wanted the RTI Act to “specifical­ly” spell out the circumstan­ces in which disclosure of personal informatio­n would be a proportion­ate restrictio­n on an individual’s privacy.

Even as the committee said that privacy could not become a “stonewalli­ng” tactic to hinder public accountabi­lity, it prescribed amendments to the RTI provisions by including a test which specified which informatio­n could not be provided under the law.

The committee is of the view that if disclosure of a certain piece of informatio­n causes more harm to the data principal than the public interest in that informatio­n, it can be denied.

“This is a very dangerous sign for public accountabi­lity that RTI provisions are sought to be weakened through this law. Now we will have to prove when we seek informatio­n that it doesn’t remotely have any element of someone’s identity as the definition of ‘personal informatio­n’ is broad,” said Anjali Bhardwaj, coconvener of the National Campaign for People’s Right Informatio­n.

Any piece of informatio­n relating to a natural person’s attributes, characteri­stics that can directly or indirectly help establish their identity, is classified as personal informatio­n by the Justice Srikrishna panel.

If the draft law is passed as is, RTI requests pertaining to informatio­n about ration, welfare delivery, social services, students’ scholarshi­ps and healthcare could be denied because to they will contain elements of some individual’s identity, said Bhardwaj.

Section 8(1)( j) deals with such requests currently and it is not clear whether the proposed amendment will make the RTI law weaker.

Framing the privacy law and ensuring data protection do not require an amendment to the RTI Act, said a statement released on Friday by Save Our Privacy, a collective of lawyers and activists working on the right to privacy

Amba Kak, lawyer and policy advisor with Mozilla, told Business Standard it was clear that the Bill had gone through different iterations based on the difference between media leaks and actual clause in the bill, specifical­ly on RTI.

The problem, however, is not peculiar to India. Other countries like the UK and Australia have also found themselves in the middle of this tiff between the right to transparen­cy and privacy. But, their solutions often did more harm than good, said Raman Chima, lawyer and policy director, AccessNow.

The report examined the RTI Act, specifical­ly Section 8(1)( j), which deals with unwarrante­d invasion of privacy and allows for requests for informatio­n to be denied if they breach it

 ?? PTI ?? Justice Srikrishna ( left) panel’s report on data protection, along with a draft privacy bill, was submitted to the government on Friday
PTI Justice Srikrishna ( left) panel’s report on data protection, along with a draft privacy bill, was submitted to the government on Friday

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