Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Draft bill provisions may impact RTI Act

- Nakul Sridhar and Jeevan Prakash Sharma

Newdelhi:provisions in the landmark draft bill on data protection submitted by the justice BN Srikrishna committee to the government on Friday could have an impact on some other key laws, including the Right To Informatio­n (RTI) Act.

“... 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 committee’s report says.

The draft Personal Data Protection Bill, 2018 seeks to amend the RTI Act’s Section 8(1)(j), which states that personal informatio­n that doesn’t serve “public activity or interest” cannot be disclosed unless it is deemed to be of public interest. In other words, personal informatio­n can be sought under RTI if it is found to serve a public cause.

Activists say such a provision can be cited to deny public informatio­n. Anjali Bharadwaj, a co-convener of the National Campaign for People’s Right to Informatio­n, said: “With the kind of rampant corruption, people are unable to avail basic entitlemen­ts. Now somebody might say this is personal data, and refuse to share it . ... this Bill could have a very retrograde effect.”

Former chief informatio­n commission­er MM Ansari said the amendment suggested by the Srikrishna committee is inconseque­ntial, as the present RTI Act already protects personal informatio­n. “Under the RTI Act, personal informatio­n and data are already protected. The disclosure of any informatio­n which has no public interest and which has no bearing on any public activity is not allowed,” said Ansari.

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