http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/toi-edit-page/rti-is-being-sabotaged-by-not-allocating-enough-resources-to-make-it-work/

RTI is being sabotaged by not allocating enough resources to make it work
May 19, 2015, 12:00 AM IST Shailesh Gandhi in TOI Edit Page

India's Right to Information (RTI) Act has caught the imagination of
people in this country, while being appreciated across the world. A
great change has come in India this decade in the power equation
between the sovereign citizens of the country and those in power. This
change is just beginning and if we can sustain and strengthen it, our
defective elective democracy could metamorphose, within the next one
or two decades, into a country where the promise of democracy is
actualised.

However there are also signs of regressive forces which could stymie
these promises. Everyone in power generally feels transparency is good
for others, whereas they should be left to work effectively.

Former PM Manmohan Singh, harried by the uncovering of various scams
through RTI, said at the Central Information Commission's convention
in October 2012: "There are concerns about frivolous and vexatious use
of the Act in demanding information the disclosure of which cannot
possibly serve any public purpose." Current PM Narendra Modi has taken
preemptive action by not appointing a chief information commissioner
at all, which renders RTI dysfunctional.

Bureaucracy is also hardening its stand. It has realised that in most
cases the commissioners are not really committed to transparency.
This, coupled with the long wait at the commissions and their
reluctance in imposing penalties is slowly making it difficult to get
sensitive information which could aid citizens to expose structural
shortcomings or corruption.

A greater danger comes from the selection of information commissioners
through political patronage. Most have no predilection for
transparency or work. Their orders are often biased against
transparency and in many places a huge backlog is being built up as a
consequence of their inability to cope. Consequently a law which seeks
to ensure giving information to citizens in 30 days on pain of penalty
gets stuck for over a year at the commissions.
Commissioners are slowly working less and less. In the Central
Information Commission six commissioners had disposed of 22,351 cases
in 2011, whereas in 2014 seven commissioners disposed of only 16,006
cases! Civil society and media are rightly critical of the government
for not appointing the balance four commissioners, but at the current
rate of disposal 11 commissioners will not dispose of over 25,000
cases a year.

It is evident that at this languorous pace of working RTI will slowly
become like the Consumer Act, mainly in existence for the
commissioners. Eternal vigilance is the price of democracy. We have a
very useful tool in RTI to make our democracy meaningful and
effective. It will work and grow if we struggle to ensure its health.

We need to put pressure on various institutions so that they don't
constrict our right to information, ensure a transparent process of
selection for commissioners and adequate disposal of cases at the
commissions. If we are lazy this right will also putrefy.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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