Kashmir Observer

With more than 1200 e-services available in J&K, Why does Online RTI continue to be sidelined by the Government even as it talks about AI?

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Assurance given by Chief Secretary

Infact, in 2022 as well, the Govt had given assurances about the creation of an online RTI platform in J&K and the then Chief Secretary had impressed upon all the Govt offices to make all the offline services online. As per the Govt statement issued on December 16th 2022, the Chief Secretary while reviewing the performanc­e of the Informatio­n Technology (IT) Department in a meeting, directed the officers to prepare a list of all the services provided by the Govt department­s. The Chief Secretary directed the officers to separate the services still offered through offline mode and prepare a roadmap for offering the same through an online platform with end-to-end digitisati­on by January 15th 2023. The Chief Secretary during the meeting asked the officers of the IT department to issue advisories to different Govt department­s for conducting security audits of their official websites as well without any delay.

By January 15th 2023, all the offline services had to be made online but even as we have entered 2024 and first month of this year is also coming to an end the citizens in J&K continue to seek informatio­n under Right to Informatio­n Act 2005 (RTI Act) through the archaic and obsolete ways by going to office and filing an RTI applicatio­n. In many cases, the PIOs are not in office and the applicants have to come back, moving from pillar to post in the Govt offices. Some applicants who are a bit well versed with RTI file it via speed post but in many cases the applicatio­n isn’t responded to at all.

As on date, citizens intending to seek informatio­n under RTI in J&K write down an RTI applicatio­n, take its printout, then purchase the Indian Postal Order (IPO) of Rs 10 which isn’t available in all the local post offices. The applicatio­n is then sent via speed post / registered post or dropped personally in a Govt office. But this isn’t the case with central Govt offices. One can file an RTI applicatio­n on a cell phone and pay applicatio­n fees online. If J & K is directly being ruled by the centre for more than 5 years, why are not the same services being given to people here?

Challenges faced by RTI applicants

Due to non-availabili­ty of the online RTI facility in J&K, the applicants face lots of challenges. They face difficulty especially to deposit RTI applicatio­n fees of Rs 10 in the shape of Indian Postal Order (IPO). To buy an Indian Postal Order (IPO) is a difficult task in J&K. I have not come across a single post office in any urban or rural area of J&K where Rs 10 Indian Postal Orders (IPOs) are available freely. I have been writing about it for last many years now. In a city like Srinagar or Jammu, or Srinagar, one can buy an IPO from a post office that too in GPO , but in districts or tehsil headquarte­rs this is impossible and in smaller villages or towns one cannot even think of getting an IPO from a local post office?

If a person from a remote village of Poonch or Kishtwar wants to file an RTI applicatio­n, the RTI applicant will have to travel all the way from his or her village to district headquarte­rs and again there is no guarantee that IPO will be available or not.

I know many RTI applicants who travelled all the way from Kupwara or Bandipora to Srinagar General Post Office GPO to buy a Rs 10 Postal Order. This is unacceptab­le.

Had online RTI service been available in J&K like central Govt offices, people living in remote areas like Gurez Bandipora or Machil in Kupwara Dachan or Pader in Kishtwar district could also access informatio­n from their mobile phones. To seek informatio­n through an offline mode, an RTI applicant has to travel to Govt offices, pay bus fare and then spend the whole day in the town. This is a more costly affair even for those applicants who live under Below Poverty Line (BPL) category. The BPL applicants have not to pay Rs 10 IPO but to send the RTI applicatio­n via speed post is a challenge for them. They have to travel to a town to send the applicatio­n to the Govt office through a speed post. In some cases these poor applicants travel to their tehsil, block or district headquarte­rs spending at least Rs 300 to 500 plus leaving their work for a day.

Infact last year's theme of Internatio­nal RTI Day (September 28th 2023) was also focussed on Access to Informatio­n through digital mode. The theme was titled as “The Importance of the online space for access to Informatio­n”. At a time when the Govt of India talks about embracing artificial intelligen­ce -AI to reshape the Governance and Public services delivery I am unable to understand why J&K Govt isn’t giving its citizens the access to seek informatio­n electronic­ally ? I request the incumbent Chief Secretary to take this issue seriously and ask the IT Department to launch an online RTI portal in J&K without any delay

Views expressed in the article are the author’s own and do not necessaril­y represent the editorial stance of Kashmir Observer

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