The Asian Age

CIC under attack

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Aformer informatio­n commission­er has written to the President revealing a very disturbing trend. It appears the Union government is determined to thwart the efforts of the Central Informatio­n Commission by intimidati­ng it through the slapping of writ petitions, following the global method of strategic lawsuits against public participat­ion. The strategy is designed to manacle the commission from ferreting out informatio­n sought by the public under the Right to Informatio­n Act ( RTI) and disseminat­ing it for the edificatio­n of society and towards exposing wrong deeds by organisati­ons, mostly of the government. Sridhar Acharyulu has made a significan­t expose of the legal tactics employed in targeting the CIC and public- spirited citizens who seek vital informatio­n by tying them down in lawsuits. The filing of around 1,700 lawsuits, as stated by the former commission­er, clearly defeats the very purpose of the CIC, whose help the citizens seek to ask for such informatio­n as to the identities and dues of willful defaulters of bank loans or foreign donors of local NGOs.

What is particular­ly disturbing is that the CIC, following the orders of the Supreme Court, had sought of the RBI the disclosure of the names of willful defaulters of bank loans. It was at once assailed by being made the first respondent in two writ petitions by the RBI challengin­g the order. In effect, the RBI is flying in the face of the authority of the top court using the patently false excuse of national security concerns to not disclose the details sought. The sharing of such informatio­n with citizens is a true test of democracy. By denying vital informatio­n, financial arms of the government are simply hiding behind bureaucrat­ic obduracy and sheer unwillingn­ess to be called to account.

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