Deccan Chronicle

Not all GOs uploaded on TS website

- COREENA SUARES I DC

There is a drastic fall in the number of government orders (GOs) being uploaded on various staterun websites. Around 10 government department­s headed by Telangana ministers, are not uploading all the orders on the official website.

The Municipal Administra­tion and Urban Developmen­t (MA&UD) department headed by Minister K.T. Rama Rao, uploaded 776 GOs in 2015. In 2016 this dropped to 508 and in 2017 to just five.

Likewise the General Administra­tion Department (GAD), the portfolio held by TS Chief Minister K. Chandrasek­har Rao, uploaded 3,920 GOs in 2015, 1,409 in 2016 and 599 in 2017.

It is the same case with

The GAD, the portfolio held by TS Chief Minister K. Chandrasek­har Rao, uploaded 3,920 GOs in 2015, 1,409 in 2016 and 599 in 2017.

the home department headed by Naini Narsimha Reddy, and with the higher education ministry headed by Deputy CM Kadiam Srihari, irrigation and command area developmen­t, held by minister T. Harish Rao, panchayat raj and rural developmen­t, revenue, and roads and buildings.

It all began in 2016, when the government issued a GO for payment of lawyer’s fee to defend an officer.

This was considered a private matter for which the officer concerned should have paid and a PIL was filed in the High Court.

This PIL was reviewed by the government at a meeting in February 2016 and it was after this meeting that public access to certain GOs was restricted.

There is a drastic fall in the number of government orders (GOs) being uploaded on various government websites. Around 10 government department­s headed by Telangana ministers, are not uploading all the orders on the official website.

M. Padmanabha Reddy, secretary, Forum for Good Governance, which has studied this subject for over two years, said, “From the decline it is clear that the government is curtailing uploading GOs on its website and those uploaded are not of public interest. Since 2015 the work taken up by the government has multiplied and as a result more number of GOs should be issued and uploaded, but the decrease paints another picture. Why are major decisions and policies not being uploaded? As a result people are unaware of many important strategies being taken up."

The rule under Section 4 (1) (c) of the Right to Informatio­n (RTI) Act says the state government must publish all relevant documents while formulatin­g important policies that affect the public. Also, Section 4 (1) (d) of the Act says that the government should provide reasons for its administra­tive decisions that are in connection with citizens. However, the decrease in number of

The rule under Section 4 (1) (c) of the Right to Informatio­n (RTI) Act says the state government must publish all relevant documents while formulatin­g important policies that affect the public. Also, Section 4 (1) (d) of the Act says that the government should provide reasons for its administra­tive decisions that are in connection with citizens.

GOs being uploaded shows that the government is operating contrary to the rules.

Citizens should note that if the government issues a GO against the public interest, one has the right to question and hold the government accountabl­e in a court. Congress leader Dasoju Shravan in 2016 filed a writ petition in the High Court against the decision of the government to shut down certain websites publishing GOs. He told Deccan Chronicle, “There is lack of transparen­cy; why is the government concealing a few GOs? When questioned in the Assembly the government termed these GOs as confidenti­al. Why are people kept in the dark if it’s in public interest?”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India