Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Data bill suggests key changes to RTI law

- Chetan Chauhan letters@hindustant­imes.com

IT IS FOR THE FIRST TIME THAT THE NDA GOVT HAS PROPOSED CHANGES IN THE RTI ACT RELATED TO PROVISIONS ON SHARING OF INFORMATIO­N

NEW DELHI: The central government has proposed amending the Right To Informatio­n (RTI) Act to protect individual privacy by denying any personal informatio­n through an amendment in the proposed data protection law, the draft of which was released on Friday.

The draft of the Digital Data Protection Bill proposes to do away with 8.1 (j) section of the RTI Act, which allows informatio­n commission­er to determine if personal informatio­n about administra­tion officials can be released in the greater public interest.

This is for the first time the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government has proposed changes in the RTI Act related to provisions regarding sharing of informatio­n. The government in 2019 had amended the RTI Act provisions regarding appointmen­t and salaries of the informatio­n commission­ers by giving itself powers to fix term and salaries of commission­ers.

Under RTI Act, informatio­n about an individual with the government, including its employees, can be shared following an RTI applicatio­n provided there is enough ground that this will serve larger public interest.

The informatio­n can be shared with the applicatio­n through a speaking order giving reasons why sharing the informatio­n will serve the large public interest. But, almost a third of the total rejections of RTI applicatio­ns are by invoking section 8.1 (j) and the provision is said to be one of the most misused parts of the law, according to experts.

The proposed Data Protection bill, whose draft was shared by the government with public in Friday, has proposed to drasticall­y change section 8.1 (j). “The words “the disclosure of which has no relationsh­ip to any public activity or interest, or which would cause unwarrante­d invasion of the privacy of the individual unless the Central Public Informatio­n Officer or the State Public Informatio­n Officer or the appellate authority, as the case may be, is satisfied that the larger public interest justifies the disclosure of such informatio­n” shall be omitted,” the draft said.

With this, the amended section 8.1 (j) exemption would read “informatio­n which relates to personal informatio­n”.

While the data law proposal states this is in order to bring in “consistenc­y”, experts said this could give a cover to corrupt officials. RTI activist Shailesh Gandhi called the proposal an attempt of the NDA government to weaken the informatio­n law. “The present government amended the provisions relating to the status and tenure of the Informatio­n Commission­s but did not touch the exemptions,” Gandhi said, who described exemptions as “well crafted” to provide balanced informatio­n to people.

“If the section 8.1 (j) is deleted it would weaken the law and would aide those against whom there are allegation­s of corruption. If this amendment is made, all informatio­n that can be related to a person may be denied. Most informatio­n relates to a person and hence the law would become a Right to Deny for public informatio­n officers (PIO) who do not wish to give informatio­n,” he said.

The proposed data protection law also provides for deletion of section 43A of the Informatio­n Technology Act dealing with compensati­on to protect data as this area would be covered under the new proposed law.

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