FrontLine

Contentiou­s draft rules

The RTI rules, 2017, are still to be notified and appear to have been put in cold storage over a few controvers­ial proposals.

- BY AKSHAY DESHMANE

FOR the past one year, away from the public eye, an important process has been going on inside the Central government concerning the rules by which the Right to Informatio­n (RTI) Act is administer­ed. It began on March 31, 2017, when the Department of Personnel and Training (DOPT) released the draft RTI Rules, 2017, for public comments.

At the time, it was expected that the DOPT would notify the rules after one month, once public comments were received. It has been more than a year since then, but the DOPT has not notified the rules so far. In fact, it appears that the issue has been put into cold storage for now.

This new set of proposed rules was the most consequent­ial, as well as controvers­ial, proposal concerning RTI to be considered seriously in official circles during the Narendra Modi-led National Democratic Alliance government’s tenure.

Frontline has reported on the criticism of the draft rules by civil society groups and opposition parties (“Diluting a right”, May 12, 2017) and on the note of dissent sent to the government by a serving Informatio­n Commission­er, Sridhar Acharyulu, in the Chief Informatio­n Commission (CIC) (“Draft rules and dissent”, October 13, 2017).

The DOPT files concerning the proposal to draft RTI rules, which Frontline has accessed, reveal how the entire process of changing the rules lacked transparen­cy right from the beginning; how it was not prompted by any urgent issue of public interest; and how some of its provisions do not appear to be in sync with the spirit of the law. The access to the documents was facilitate­d by the RTI activist Commodore (retired) Lokesh Batra, who procured the files after filing multiple RTI applicatio­ns with the DOPT over the past five months.

SECOND DRAFT

Among the documents is a not-yet publicised second draft of the RTI rules.

After the first draft of the RTI rules became controvers­ial, a committee of government officials was set up in May last year to analyse the suggestion­s received from citizens.

On the basis of the committee’s recommenda­tions, the DOPT sent a fresh draft of the RTI rules to the CIC in August for its comments. The CIC did not send its comments despite repeated reminders. Instead, it sent to the DOPT in December the minutes of a meeting of Informatio­n Commission­ers on the draft rules held in November.

The minutes reveal the difference­s in the CIC over the second draft rules. The minutes of the meeting note:

“The Hon’ble Informatio­n Commission­ers put forward their views on the proposed rules. Hon’ble IC Shri Yashovardh­an Azad expressed his strong reservatio­ns on the proposed Rule 15 and suggested that it should be deleted. This was also endorsed by Hon’ble IC Shri Shridhar Acharyulu.”

The lack of unanimity in the CIC was partly because the second draft rules retained some controvers­ial rules from the first draft.

For instance, Rule 12 proposed to give the CIC the power to permit withdrawal of an RTI appeal and abatement of proceeding­s relating to that appeal in the event of the death of the RTI applicant (Frontline, October 13, 2017).

At least one civil society group called it a “death sentence” for RTI applicants. This dreaded rule is not a part of the second draft rules accessed by Batra and shared with Frontline.

BONE OF CONTENTION

Rule 15 was the key bone of contention in the CIC. Rule 15 was Rule 17 in the first draft. This rule is about the manner in which Informatio­n Commission­ers are chosen to hear RTI appeals or complaints in the CIC. It gives the CIC indisputab­le power to decide which informatio­n commission­er (s) will hear an RTI applicant’s appeal (s) or complaint (s). This power is to be exercised in two conditions: a) at the request of an Informatio­n Commission­er, and b) suo motu if the appeal or complaint involves “an intricate question of law or larger public interest”.

Exactly what may be classified as an intricate question of law or larger public interest has been left undefined.

A source in the CIC explained why the Informatio­n Commission­ers did not like the rule: “The issues raised by four Supreme Court justices in January at an open press conference, particular­ly regarding allotment of benches, find an echo among the Informatio­n Commission­ers in the CIC. This is because

something similar has been going on in the CIC for sometime now. Take the example of Sridhar Acharyulu. Because two of his orders were unfavourab­le towards top people in the government, he was divested of the charge of the Human Resource Developmen­t Ministry in the CIC. There is nothing in the 2012 RTI rules which permits that; it is only a convention that the CIC decides which subjects an Informatio­n Commission­er will hear. Rule 15 in the second draft could make the unfortunat­e example of Sridhar Acharyulu permissibl­e and even more commonplac­e.”

Acharyulu had permitted, in response to an RTI appeal, the inspection of the B.A. degree records of Delhi University (D.U.) for 1978, the year in which Modi graduated, as claimed in his election affidavit. He had also ordered, in response to an RTI applicatio­n, that the Central Board of Secondary Examinatio­n (CBSE) should reveal the former Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng Minister Smriti Irani’s board examinatio­n results.

Both orders were stayed by the Delhi High Court on appeals from the D.U. and the CBSE.

ULTRA VIRES THE RTI ACT

Acharyulu wrote to the DOPT against the rule. He argued: “The Act did not provide for constituti­on of Division Benches or larger benches. Making rules for larger bench, which is not provided by Act, is illegal and ultra vires the RTI Act. If by practice or convention, constituti­ng bench is felt appropriat­e by the Commission, for the same involves an intricate question of law or larger public interest, IC should be left with power to decide and only on his reference or request, the chief can constitute larger bench. Executive government cannot dilute or reduce or destroy powers of individual commission­er, or enhance the powers of Chief Informatio­n Commission­er against the law by Parliament.”

It is not just the retention of controvers­ial rules in the second draft that makes this exercise of revising rules problemati­c. The DOPT files reveal that there was no urgent question of public interest that motivated officials to prepare a new set of rules. As an office memorandum written by DOPT Under Secretary Preeti Khanna on May 11, 2017, notes: “The need to change the RTI rules arose due to a legal opinion in a court case.”

The legal opinion, DOPT correspond­ence with the CIC indicates, appears to have been given by Additional Solicitor General P.S. Narsimha in a case going back to 2007—Chief Informatio­n Commission vs Delhi Developmen­t Authority (DDA) and others.

In the CIC files, the officials have recorded a short history of the case and its fallout. In 2007, the CIC drafted a set of rules for the management of its own affairs. In the case cited above, the Delhi High Court quashed those rules in 2010. The CIC moved the Supreme Court in 2012.

2012 RULES

In 2012, new rules were formally drafted and passed for administer­ing the RTI. However, a new draft of the CIC management rules was prepared in 2016 even as the CIC’S appeal in the DDA case was pending in the Supreme Court. After substantia­l internal deliberati­ons in government, a new draft of rules for the management of not only the CIC but the RTI Act itself was prepared and put up for public consultati­on in March 2017.

These rules were for managing the affairs of all bodies and department­s falling under the jurisdicti­on of the Union government alone; the States are legally empowered to prepare their own rules for implementi­ng the Act.

Notably, the difference in the original exercise, which was meant to be an effort to better manage the affairs of the CIC, and its end result of framing new draft rules for administer­ing the RTI Act itself was sharp. For citizens, these new rules, if passed, have at least two serious implicatio­ns: a) which Informatio­n Commission­er will hear their final appeals may be, at least in select cases, decided as per the discretion of the CIC, under Rule 15 of the second draft, and b) as draft Rule 3 proposes, the fee for filing an RTI applicatio­n, capped at Rs.10 at present, may increase in the near future.

Unsurprisi­ngly, well-regarded voices from civil society, such as Batra, have been vocal in their opposition to the new draft rules.

Batra told Frontline: “The Chief Informatio­n Commission must withdraw its case from the Supreme Court and let the RTI rules, 2012, prevail.”

Rule 15 of the second draft gives the Chief Informatio­n Commission­er the indisputab­le power to decide who will hear which appeal.

 ??  ?? SRIDHAR ACHARYULU, Informatio­n Commissoin­er.
SRIDHAR ACHARYULU, Informatio­n Commissoin­er.

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