The Asian Age

EXISTENTIA­L CRISIS FOR CIC

- Dilip Cherian

After 12 years of operating from different locations, the Central Informatio­n Commission ( CIC) has finally got its own building. The building was recently inaugurate­d by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

But the CIC has more serious issues to deal with than inadequacy of space. Since 2016, the national watchdog for transparen­cy and accountabi­lity has been functionin­g with depleted strength.

The CIC is working with seven informatio­n commission­ers, including the Chief Informatio­n Commission­er, against a sanctioned strength of 11. Of the seven informatio­n commission­ers, three are retiring this year.

There are four vacant positions for 18 months now and the government has failed to fill these despite advertisin­g the vacancies two years back, in 2016.

The situation, reportedly, is repeated in the states with several informatio­n commission­s throughout the country operating without even a chief informatio­n commission­er or with a depleted strength of informatio­n commission­ers.

Many state informatio­n commission­s such as Maharashtr­a, Nagaland and Gujarat have been functionin­g without a CIC.

In West Bengal, Sikkim, Kerala, Odisha and Telangana, vacancies have led to a rise in the number of pending cases.

Beyond vacancies and growing backlog of cases, which are functional issues, there is a deeper existentia­l issue at the CIC.

While the CIC is all about transparen­cy and disclosure of informatio­n to the public, apparently, it is exempted from disclosure­s about its own functionin­g!

A recent attempt by an RTI activist seeking informatio­n on appointing informatio­n commission­ers for the CIC was denied by the department of personnel and training ( DoPT). A wall of silence met the RTI request. It’s all a big secret!

Of course, sometimes it is heartening to note that the CIC will not hesitate in rebuking its own officials for violation of the RTI Act under which the appellate authority functions.

Informatio­n commission­er Divya Prakash Sinha recently pulled up joint secretary ( law) and other officials when they refused to part with informatio­n requested by transparen­cy activist R. K. Jain.

Mr Jain had reportedly sought to know, from the CIC, the action taken on 113 communicat­ions received in its legal cell from its dak ( mail) section during April- June 2013. But he was not provided with any informatio­n.

Mr Sinha said that by refusing to disclose the informatio­n sought, the CIC showed a regrettabl­e disdain for provisions of the RTI Act.

But perhaps the biggest challenge for the CIC is the alarming rise in pending cases and also the time taken to deal with them. A recent study has stated that the estimated time required for the disposal of an appeal or complaint has gone up to as high as 43 years in the case of West Bengal, followed by six years and six months in Kerala and five years in Odisha!

Moreover, the CIC has also been accused of giving misleading informatio­n about the number of appeals and complaints pending before it.

In response to the query on the number of pending cases as of October 31, 2017, in its initial reply, the CIC stated that 21,097 appeals and 3,533 complaints were pending.

However, in a subsequent reply, the CIC changed these figures to 20,484 appeals and 3,460 complaints.

No explanatio­n was given for providing a different set of pendency figures for the same time period.

If informatio­n commission­s, at the Centre and in the states, continue to evade real accountabi­lity to the people, they cannot bridge the trust deficit with the public.

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