Millennium Post

RBI’S defying act

Central Bank has repeatedly denied providing informatio­n sought by citizens under the RTI Act, even flouting Supreme Court’s directive to do the same

- SHAILESH GANDHI

On December 18, 2019, the Supreme Court bench comprising Justices S Abdul Nazeer and Sanjiv Khanna, has given a very concise and brief order which reads as follows“upon hearing the counsel the Court made the following order: Inspection Reports/risk Assessment Reports/annual Financial Inspection Reports of the banks including State Bank of India shall not be released by the Reserve Bank of India until further orders.”

In various Supreme Court judgments, it has been mandated that all orders must give reasons. I have tried to understand the reason for constraini­ng the citizen’s fundamenta­l Right to Informatio­n in this order and have completely failed.

Let us begin at the beginning: In 2010-2011 ten RTI applicatio­ns had been made with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) seeking various bits of informatio­n like audit reports, inspection reports, NPAS, list of Defaulters and so on. The RTI act allows refusal of informatio­n to the citizen only on the basis of the ten exemptions in Section 8. RBI refused to give the informatio­n claiming three of the ten exemptions under clauses:

8 (1) (a) Economic Interests of the country, (d) Harming the competitiv­e interests of the banks and (e) The informatio­n was held by RBI in a fiduciary capacity.

These ultimately reached the Central Informatio­n Commission (CIC) which rejected all these contention­s of RBI as not being legitimate. Detailed reasons were given arguing that the exemptions were not applicable legally. It also noted:

“The RBI is a regulatory authority which is responsibl­e for inter alia monitoring subordinat­e banks and institutio­ns.

Needless to state significan­t amounts of public funds are kept with such banks and institutio­ns. Therefore, it is only logical that the pub

lic has a right to know about the functionin­g and working of such entities including any

lapses in regulatory compliance­s. Merely because disclosure of such informatio­n may adversely affect public confidence in defaulting institutio­ns, cannot be a reason for denial of informatio­n under the RTI Act. If there are certain irregulari­ties in the working and functionin­g of such banks and institutio­ns, the citizens certainly have a right to know about the same. The best check on arbitrarin­ess, mistakes and corruption is transparen­cy, which allows thousands of citizens to act as monitors of public interest. There must be transparen­cy as regards such organisati­ons

so that citizens can make an informed choice about them.”

RBI challenged all these orders and the Supreme Court finally upheld all these in December 2015 stating scathingly: “By attaching an additional “fiduciary” label to the statutory duty, the Regulatory authoritie­s have intentiona­lly or unintentio­nally created an in terrorem effect.”

It further castigated RBI and others who deny the citizen’s right in these words: “baseless and unsubstant­iated argument of the RBI that the disclosure would hurt the economic interest of the country is totally misconceiv­ed. In the impugned order, the CIC has given several reasons to state why the disclosure of the informatio­n sought by the respondent­s would hugely serve public interest, and non-disclosure would be significan­tly detrimenta­l

to public interest and not in the economic interest of India. RBI’S argument that if people, who are sovereign, are made aware of the irregulari­ties being committed by the banks then the country’s economic security would be endangered, is not only absurd but is equally misconceiv­ed and baseless.

It had long since come to our attention that the Public Informatio­n Officers (PIO) under the guise of one of the exceptions given under Section 8 of RTI Act have evaded the general public from getting their hands on the rightful informatio­n that they are entitled to.”

Despite the clear order of the apex court that such informatio­n must be provided, RBI in its arrogance did not comply. RBI did not ask for a review but just defied the judgment with lawless disdain. If such informatio­n

Despite the clear order of the apex court that such informatio­n must be provided, RBI in its arrogance did not comply. RBI did not ask for a review but just defied the judgment with lawless disdain. There is a reasonable possibilit­y that many frauds could have been avoided with citizen vigilance

had been displayed by RBI sou moto as suggested by the CIC, perhaps citizens would have got some warnings in cases like PMC Bank and other such failures. There is a reasonable possibilit­y that many frauds could have been avoided with citizen vigilance.

Since RBI defied the Supreme Court order, contempt petitions were filed in 2016. These were decided by a Supreme Court’s bench comprising Justice L Nageswara Rao and M R Shah in April 2019 with a warning to RBI to comply with its orders and honour its duties as per the RTI Act.

It appears from the Supreme Court order of December 18, 2019, that the banks and RBI are again challengin­g the very clearly reasoned judgment of the apex court. This is really unfortunat­e. It appears that RBI and the banks together are infuriatin­g the citizen’s fundamenta­l right to informatio­n and are now misguiding the Supreme Court.

The earlier judgment of the Supreme Court is a very wellreason­ed one. Even though RBI committed contempt and the Court has given a warning, the Supreme Court has given one more chance to the contemnors to defy citizen’s fundamenta­l rights. Such an approach will give no finality and it appears the only strategy is to frustrate the law.

In many matters regarding fundamenta­l rights, the apex court has refused a stay when writs have been filed by citizens to defend them. In this case, it is impossible to fathom the reasons for giving a stay on an earlier order to the contemnor. Citizens are worried about this and I hope the Court will withdraw this stay.

Courtesy: The Leaflet. Shailesh Gandhi is a former Central Informatio­n Commission­er. Views expressed are

strictly personal

 ??  ?? The Reserve Bank of India’s unsubstant­iated argument that the disclosure of informatio­n would hurt the country’s economic interest is totally misconceiv­ed
The Reserve Bank of India’s unsubstant­iated argument that the disclosure of informatio­n would hurt the country’s economic interest is totally misconceiv­ed
 ??  ??

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