Search blog.co.uk

HALL OF FAME

by ripfkerala-fightcorruption @ 2008-03-11 - 13:04:07

Citizen has the right to know Cabinet decision”

Print media reports are there on 02-03-2008 in the ‘Indian Express’ and the ‘Hindu’ that the State Information Commission in a complaint by T.Asafali, president of the Thalasserry based People’s Council for Civil Rights, ordered that a copy of the Cabinet decision with relevant notes sought by the citizen should be given to him within 15 days.

Indian Express reports that, “when a complaint against the rejection was lodged, the public information officer of the Home Department, K.K. Ramani was summoned by the State Information Commissioner. The Commissioner found that the rejection of information under sec. 8(1) (i) of the RTI Act was not justifiable. The Commissioner found that PIO of Home Department is responsible for the disposal of the request and ordered to supply a copy of the Cabinet decision with relevant notes to the citizen who made the request for information.

Which Information Commissioner did it?

But the name of the Commissioner who issued such an order / directive has not seen mentioned in the media reports. On an informal inquiry with the Commission officials it is told that such an order was passed against a complaint No. CP 456/2006 registered with the Commission, but they are reluctant to disclose the name of the Information Commissioner.

Why such a secrecy?

The Commission’s Quarterly journal “Kerala State Information Reporter” Vol I (issues I, II & III) contains important orders issued by the Commission. In all these orders included in the Reporter, the details of appellants and the respondents are given but by which Information Commissioner(s) and at what level(s); whether by a single bench/division bench/Full bench; have taken such decisions have not seen mentioned. The Annexure V to the Annual Report2006-2007 also do not have such details. So the decisions of the Commission are lacking transparency and accountability in the administration of RTI Act. Such decisions of the Commission without the authenticity of its promoters throttle the RTI Act.

But in the case of 4 decisions of SIC in their website (www.infokerala.org.in)it can be seen that the 1st (AP No.57/2007/SIC) and the $th (AP No.74/2006/SIC)were decided by the Division Bench of two Information Commissioners, the 2nd (CP No.130/2007/SIC)by a single Information Commissioner and the 3rd (AP No. 161/2006/SIC)by the Full Bench of 4 Information Commissioners and also the names of the Information Commissioners are seen mentioned in the web-copy of decisions.

The Commission is the custodian of RTI Act. People appeal to the commission against the difficulty in getting access to the official information and the commission is the powerful tool to break the iron curtain of the official non-cooperation.An informed citizen is a better judge of the leadership. Secrecy leads to misunderstanding; and misunderstanding leads to misinterpretation of facts.ACCOUNTABILITY and its exercise is central to healthy functioning of any system. The Commission is rather sick in this regard.

(Section 4 of the RTI Act, 2005 provides for pro-active disclosure of the particulars of 1) Commission’s organization, functions and duties 2) the procedure followed in the decision making process, including channels of supervision and accountability, and 3) the norms set by it for the discharge of its functions.)

This provision is equally applicable to State Information Commissions also. The other State Commissions and the Central Information Commission have such pro-active disclosure. We demand transparency and accountability in SIC decisions and effective usage of RTI through e-governance.

However, RIPF put such kind of orders / directives of the Information Commissioner in disguise, to give access to Cabinet Notes to the citizens in the ‘HALL OF FAME’. Please read this and if you also have more about such kind of valuable decisions, put it in the hall of fame and offer your comments.


 
 

Trackback address for this post:

authimage

Comments, Trackbacks:

No Comments/Trackbacks for this post yet...

Leave a comment :

Your email address will not be displayed on this site.
Your URL will be displayed.
Allowed XHTML tags: <!, p, ul, ol, li, dl, dt, dd, address, blockquote, ins, del, a, span, bdo, br, em, strong, dfn, code, samp, kdb, var, cite, abbr, acronym, q, sub, sup, tt, i, b, big, small, img>
URLs, email, AIM and ICQs will be converted automatically.
Options:
 
(Line breaks become <br />)
(Set cookies for name, email & url)
Validation code:
Please enter the above code here:
For protection from spambots (case-sensitive).

Footer

The content of this website belongs to a private person, blog.co.uk is not responsible for the content of this website.