Wednesday, March 24, 2010

In India, deadly backlash against freedom of information activists


By Daniel Pepper
Correspondent, CSMonitor
(AXcess News) New Delhi, India -

When Ajay Kumar asked New Delhi authorities last fall why a local politician had authorized the construction of private houses and shops on public land, he didn't imagine the question would land him in the hospital.

The activist had inquired using India's 2005 Right to Information (RTI) Act, which allows any citizen to ask for information from any level of government, from village leaders to the office of the prime minister. It presents a cultural sea change in India, where for more than 60 years state bureaucrats have acted more like colonial masters than servants of the people.

Mr. Kumar was stonewalled by the public information officer at the Municipal Corporation of Delhi, so he followed procedure and appealed to a higher-level public information office in the MCD. When he still heard nothing back, he went to the federal authorities, the Central Information Commission, which directed the MCD together with the police to jointly inspect the property.

But when Kumar arrived on site in January, he was attacked by a mob of two dozen that backed the local politician.

"Neither the police nor the people helped me," says Kumar, who was beaten in the head repeatedly by an iron rod, leaving him unconscious and bleeding profusely. Kumar is now pursuing the matter in court.
Despite the attack, Kumar says, "RTI is the only tool that can bring an end to a corruption in India. Previously there was no point in asking [for information] because the applications were not replied to. At least now, since 2005, these public authorities are in some way compelled to answer queries of the public. It is a starting point."

Kumar is optimistic that he will one day see justice, but critics say attacks like these are becoming increasingly common. In the past two months two respected information activists have been killed, and reports are emerging of many others who are threatened, bullied, and intimidated to silence their inquiries into government misconduct.

Attacks will likely increase

The RTI Act is among the most robust for information seekers around the world, and its strength is becoming clear in the backlash against people seeking to expose corruption.

"What has happened with the RTI Act is that it is threatening people in power," says Colin Gonzalves, a Supreme Court lawyer and director of the New Delhi-based Human Rights Law Network. "We cannot underestimate how hostile the administration is to the implementation to this Act - not just the politicians but also the judiciary. RTI empowers people to say that the administration is the servant of the people that you are answerable to us. The physical attacks on the people I think are going to increase over the years."

In rural areas, the act is often utilized to uncover scams involving federal- and state-funded initiatives to provide employment, housing, food, and other services to the poorest segments of society. "You ask for a list of beneficiaries," says prominent New Delhi-based RTI activist Arvind Kejriwal. "Then you check that list and find out that many peope are dead and the list is bogus."

According to a study published last July by the National Campaign for People's Right to Information, and funded in part by the Google Foundation, in the first two-and-a-half years since RTI went into effect about 400,000 applications for information were filed from rural areas and 1.6 million from urban areas.
While much of the information requested ought to be public in the first place, like the size of a particular budget for a school or road, or why a particular applicant received a job or promotion, most government bureaucrats in India habitually keep such matters under lock and key.

Right to information - on paper

With the RTI Act, failure to furnish applicants their information within 30 days can result in steep fines. This week one RTI applicant was awarded 100,000 rupees, or about $2,200, by the Central Information Commission in compensation for delays.

At a meeting in the capital of the poverty-stricken northern Indian state of Bihar last November, 49 activists spoke about fighting trumped-up arrest warrants and other attempts to silence their efforts. None of the warrants have stood up under scrutiny, they claim. On Feb. 14 in Bihar, well-known RTI activist Shashidhar Mishra was shot dead by unidentified gunmen on motorcycles at the entrance of his home. He had been working to expose local welfare schemes.

A month before, in the tech hub of Pune, a couple hours outside Mumbai, another activist, Satish Shetty, was killed while on his morning walk. Mr. Shetty had a record of exposing land scams in his area. Shetty had received threats on his life and requested police protection, though none was provided. The High Court in Bombay asked the state government to investigate the killing.

The upswing of violence has dire implications to Shailesh Gandhi, a commissioner with the Central Information Commission, the country's highest authority for RTI applications.

"It tells me that the rule of law is almost absent. The truth is that powerful people feel there is no law," Mr. Gandhi says.

Gandhi and his handful of interns, whom he pays from his own pocket, managed to go through almost 6,000 files last year. In the past 14 months he's penalized 120 public information offices for not providing information in a timely fashion, or at all. He hopes to start cracking the whip even harder, he says. "Penalties are important."

Last month headlines blazed across India that the New Delhi High Court ruled in favor of a RTI applicants who sought information about the office of India's Supreme Court Chief Justice, such as his personal assets and decisions relating the appointment of lower-court judges. On Monday, the Supreme Court moved to challenge the order.

And just this last week, a disagreement between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and the leader of the ruling National Congress Party Sonia Gandhi became public after the Mr. Singh advocated amending RTI Act, something activists strongly oppose, fearing it might be watered down.
Shailesh Gandhi agrees: "I am 100 percent convinced that any changes in the Act would be to the citizen's detriment."

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

A papad seller fights for his rights – for 28 years



Source: Indo-AsianNewsService on Mar 14th, 2010
Delhi, March 14 (IANS) Mohammad Samad Khan, a papad seller in West Bengal, has been fighting for his rights with the National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC), the energy giant, for the past 28 years but has not lost hope.

It started in 1982 when the NTPC acquired the land of Khan and others for the Farakka thermal power project in Murshidabad district of West Bengal.

The NTPC had then promised all those who had given their land a job under its rehabilitation scheme which laid down that any one family member would be given employment in the corporation on the basis of educational eligibility and technical experience.

Khan, alongwith 1,000 other people, had given their land to the NTPC, hoping to get a job. But he was not among the lucky ones who got a job. Khan got a letter from the NTPC in 1984 saying he will get a job soon, but despite repeated reminders nothing happened.

In 1988, the NTPC called him for the post of store keeper, but his candidature was rejected.

In 1991, he again knocked at the NTPC's doors, but in vain. He then decided to take the help of the Right To Information (RTI) act for justice.

But when the NTPC did not gave him satisfactory answers, he appealed to the Central Information Commission (CIC), which asked the corporation to give Khan Rs.11 lakh as compensation for not providing him information.

Khan is now in Delhi as the central government had filed an appeal against the CIC order.

'I will continue to fight for my rights,' Khan told IANS in an interview.

Though Justice S. Muralidhar earlier this week set aside the CIC order directing the NTPC to pay compensation, the high court asked the state-owned firm to consider his case for a job.

The high court held that the Commission can grant compensation only when an applicant suffers loss due to denial of information.

Khan had approached the CIC after the NTPC refused to give him certain information regarding his job.

The court ordered the NTPC to give him Rs.5,000 as litigation expenses.

'My fight will continue till the time I get justice. I have no money left but I will still fight,' Khan said.

The court said: 'Considering that the respondent (Khan) is not a resident of Delhi and has come here only for the purposes of this case, it is directed that the learned counsel for the NTPC will arrange to have another set of the entire information and documents provided to him.'

Sonia Mathur, counsel for Khan, told the court that 'Khan has already suffered for the past 28 years and the government should now at least help him out.'

Unused funds lying waste





 
     

Friday, 19 March 2010 17:05
 Source:Written by parivallal   ,M. Stephen.
Reporter.
Anytime Chennai news team.
The annual ward development fund was increased recently by the Chennai Corporation for annual ward development fund for each councilor from Rs 25 lakh to Rs 30 lakh, but the records show that the use of such funds to provide amenities is lagging in execution. 

In fact, one-third of the total development fund allotted to councilors since 2005-06 — approximately Rs 20 crore — was still lying dormant due to delays in procedures or shortage of space to install facilities. The civic body revealed this in a reply to an application filed under the Right To Information (RTI) Act. 

Not even a single paisa has been spent by the three ward councillors during the last three years. Funds allotted to 17 others, including 12 belonging to the ruling party, for the current financial year lay completely untouched till December 2009. The utilisation of the mayor’s special development fund is also poor — of the Rs 2 crore allotted in four years (Rs 50 lakh per year), only 22% has been spent.

V Madhav an activist from porur who demanded information from the civic body on this issue under the RTI information received reply some weeks ago.

The Chennai Corporation Mayor M Subramanian said that merely blaming the councillors for not utilizing the funds will not do.

“Councillors cannot handle the fund directly, they can only give a letter to the corporation recommending implementation of development works. Moreover they can only recommend for about 15 types of works like road laying, construction of footpaths and building of noon-meal centres. Money which is not used for ward development go unspent but are credited to the capital account of the corporation and again spent on development works,’’ he said. –

RTI scores, by default



Source:Chetan Chauhan, Hindustan Times

New Delhi, March 21, 2010

   
       
Information to which even Parliament was not privy to for more than 40 years was provided to an applicant under the transparency law because of a communication gap between two ministries.

An Udaipur resident had under the Right to Information (RTI) sought details of the private and public property of the erstwhile Maharaja of Mewar, Arvind Partap Singh.


The home ministry refused information to Amba Lal Nayak, saying the details were not disclosed even to Parliament.
“Its disclosure would entail a breach of privilege of Parliament,” Shashi Bhushan, then joint secretary with the ministry told transparency watchdog, the Central Information Commission.

Under the RTI law, any information that can’t be disclosed to Parliament is not to be made public.

When the princely states were amalgamated into India in 1949, the Union government reached agreements with rulers, but the accords were unofficial. It meant that these couldn’t be disclosed to Parliament.

As the home ministry stuck to this stand, it was apparently not aware that the disinvestment ministry had provided the information to a Rajasthan district court in 2003. The court was hearing a case related to disinvestments of a hotel.

When Nayak brought this to the notice of the CIC, which was hearing his appeal against denial of information, Bhushan said the home ministry had not provided the documents made available to the court.

He even quoted former home minister Y.B. Chavan refusing such information to Parliament in 1967 and the ministry’s decision
to deny the information to even National Archives.

The CIC sought opinion of the Lok Sabha Speaker, who termed the home ministry’s stand as debatable. The CIC asked Bhushan
to examine the records and decide if the information could be made public.

The disinvestment ministry, on the other hand, said the filing of certified copies of private property of Sing was “with the knowledge of the ministry of home”. The home ministry had not applied the privilege clause of Parliament while
providing information.

After hearing the appeal for more than a year, the CIC said the information disclosed in an open court couldn’t be refused under the RTI Act.

Info on 'cash at judge's door' case confidential: SC



Source:Express india:Agencies: Mar 23, 2010 at 1247 hrs IST




New Delhi In the midst of a raging controversy over closure of the 'cash-at-judge's-door' case, the Supreme Court, which had denied that CBI had approached the Chief Justice, now says the information is "confidential".

The Court's interesting reply came on an RTI petition seeking details whether the Chief Justice of India was approached by the CBI wanting permission to prosecute Justice Nirmal Yadav of Punjab and Haryana High Court in the case.

"I write to inform you that the information sought by you...is confidential and is exempted from disclosure under the section 8 (1) (e) and (j) of the Right to Information Act, 2005, you have no right to access the said information."

"Further as the information is not held by or under the control of the CPIO, Supreme Court India, your request cannot be acceded to..." Raj Pal Arora, Central Public Information Officer of the Supreme Court said in an RTI reply.

The reply is in sharp contrast to a statement earlier issued by its Secretary General M P Bhadran who said CBI did not approach the Chief Justice of India in the case.

Justice Yadav's name had figured in the alleged scam after the recovery of a mysterious bag containing Rs 15 lakh at the door of another Punjab and Haryana High Court judge Nirmaljit Kaur, which was said to have been delivered there due to confusion over names.

Justice Kaur reported the matter to the police. Later, the probe was given to CBI on the orders of administrator of Chandigarh.

The CJI had also appointed a three-judge committee to look into the matter. The then Attorney General Milon Banerji had reportedly advised the Law Ministry that there was not enough material to proceed further in the matter.

A CBI court observed that the probe agency filed the closure report after it failed to get sanction from the Chief Justice of India to launch prosecution against her. Meanwhile, Justice Yadav was transferred to Uttarakhand High Court after the decision of collegium.

Applicant Abhishek Shukla had sought a reply from the Supreme Court whether the CJI was approached by the CBI seeking permission to prosecute Justice Nirmal Yadav.

Section 8(1)(e) of the RTI Act cited by CPIO Arora exempts disclosure of information which is held "fiduciary relationship" whereas the section 8(1) (j) exempts disclosure of information which is "personal". In both cases, information can be given, if larger public interest is served.

The Supreme Court has also refused to disclose the report of Justice Gokhale Committee, constituted by the Chief Justice of India to probe the allegations, a document which is reportedly accessed by some RTI applicants already.

The apex court did not give the minutes of collegium meeting which recommended the transfer of Justice Yadav to Uttarakhand High Court after allegations of corruption surfaced against her.

Source:Arun Joshi , Hindustan Times,Jammu, March 21, 2010

   
   
       
   
       

Despite widespread allegations of human rights violations in Jammu and Kashmir, rights groups have not filed even a single application under the Right to Information (RTI) Act in the past five years since the law was enacted, Chief Information Commissioner Wajahat Habibullah told Hindustan Times on Sunday.

“I was surprised as I told some of them that they could utilise this forum to seek information on these issues,” Habibullah said.

The alleged existence of mass graves in Kashmir was a “fit case to seek information under the RTI,” he said.

Khuram Pervez, liaison officer of the International People’s Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in Indian-administered Kashmir, said 2,700 mass graves were found in Uri, Baramulla, Kupwara and other parts of North Kashmir till Oct 2009.

But the Central Information Commission was “neither a punitive body nor an investigative body”, Pervez said, adding that it could only seek information from the state police.

“Why should they (the police) give information against themselves?”

Kashmiri political leaders —separatist and mainstream —have been petitioning global human rights bodies such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch for their intervention in cases involving alleged human rights abuses.

Private groups in Kashmir such as the Association of Parents of Missing Persons and the Kashmir Bar Association are also vocal about human rights violations. Allegations of abuse include rape, custodial killings and forced disappearances.

There were massive protests in Srinagar last month after the deaths of Wamiq Farooq (13), who died after being hit by a tear-gas shell, and Zahid Farooq (16), who was allegedly shot at point-blank range by the BSF on February 5.

RTI reply punches hole in Maya ads


Source: Mohd Arshi Rafique,The Indian Express:Tue, Mar 23 04:22 AM




  The Chief Minister Mayawati on her birthday on January 15

last year announced the release of 13,072 prisoners lodged in
different jails of Uttar Pradesh. While the advertisements 
released on the occasion suggested Mayawati had a big heart, 
an RTI reply by the Prisons Department says the undertrials
actually got freedom as a result of normal process.

Also, while from the advertisements it appeared that the prisoners were released at one stroke of the Chief Minister's pen in January, the RTI reply says the undertrials had already been released much before that — between June 2008 and October 2008.

The reply by Prisons Department came on an RTI plea by Salim Beig, a resident of Moradabad and member of Amnesty International.

Categorically mentioning that the prisoners were not released on the Chief Minister's order, the RTI reply by P K Mishra, DIG (Prisons), says that as many as 13,620 jail inmates were released with due clearances from the courts where their cases were pending.

It states that 13,226 undertrials were released under Section 436 (1) of CrPC, which says that if a person is granted bail, but is unable to furnish the bail bond within seven days, he should be declared indigent, and released from jail on his own personal bond.

Another 364 undertrials were released under Section 436 (A) of the CrPC.

 

Difficult to answer RTI queries regarding judgements: SC


Source:18 Mar 2010, 2030 hrs IST, PTI
   
NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Thursday said its 

officials handling RTI matters cannot be expected to
answer queries relating to judgements
passed by it because of "limited resources" available with them.


"As far as the Central Public Information Officer is concerned, it may be very difficult to comment on a decision or give a report whether a thing has been done in a judgement or not. It is the job of a lawyer".

"The CPIO may not be in the best position to actually understand the import of the decision," counsel for Supreme Court Devdutt Kamat said during a hearing at Central Information Commission.

He said, "CPIO has limited resources and limited infrastructure. Under the RTI regime, whatever is available in the registry, definitely, he will give but if this request is allowed we are going to land in lot of problems".

Kamat submitted before the Commission that if information sought by any RTI applicant is in the "possession" of the registry of the apex court, it will definitely be given.

"But information as far as judgement is concerned. What is a judgement, what is the import of a judgement, what are the directions given in a judgement? That advice is best appropriate to be left to a lawyer," he said.
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RTI helps senior citizen get post back after 11-year-long legal battle


Source:Viju B, TNN, Mar 22, 2010, 05.25am IST

MUMBAI: Qamar S Qazi’s story could be representative of what may happen to some state charitable trusts that are mired in litigation as trustees fight to retain powerful posts.

The Right To Information (RTI) Act
came to the rescue of the 76-year-old Panvel resident who was ousted from the trust after he fought a 11-year-long legal battle. A former assistant commissioner of customs and central excise, Qazi was removed from the post of general secretary of Anjuman Tanzeem Achra, a charitable education trust, through a no-confidence motion in 1999.

But the original papers of the trust’s no-confidence motion, which were kept in the charity commissioner’s office, were substituted with forged papers in alleged collusion with office staff. Following this, the charity commissioner’s office passed an order to oust Qazi.

It was only when Qazi applied to the charity commissioner’s office for a copy of the no-confidence motion that he discovered, to his horror, the documents were substituted. It was found that the attendance lists also had serious discrepancies; many members were dead or their names were fictitious and some were abroad when the ‘alleged’ election took place. “We found out that 80% of the signatures were fake. This was later confirmed by the additional chief state examiner of documents,’’ Qazi said.

On discovering the forgery, Qazi lodged a criminal case against the existing trustees at the additional magistrate’s court, Mazgaon, in 2000. The court directed the Dongri police to investigate the case and the police report established that a forgery had been committed. The court then ordered the police to file a charge sheet. However, despite directives from the magistrate, the charity commissioner’s office did not subsequently take any action on the forgery committed by the existing trustees.

Qazi then filed a query under the RTI Act, asking about the status of the case and it got rolling after 7 years. “Within a month, I got a reply from the charity commissioner, stating that the earlier fake no-confidence motion passed by the trust had been set aside and a fresh inquiry had been initiated against the trustees,’’ he said.

Qazi also filed a writ petition, asking that the inquiry be completed within 30 days. The court directed the petition to be withdrawn, giving him the liberty to approach the appropriate forum.

He then approached the charity commissioner’s office. The deputy charity commissioner set aside the erroneous order of the assistant charity commissioner and again directed another inquiry be initiated. Further, the joint charity commissioner in his February 22 order stated that some members who ‘allegedly’ took part in the no-confidence meeting were not, in fact, present and quashed the earlier order passed by the assistant charity commissioner in 1999. Qazi, who has now regained the post of the general secretary of the trust, said that the RTI Act exposed the fraudulent methods used by the members to remove him from the trust. The RTI Act can bring about positive changes even in the way charitable institutions function in the country, he added.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Meet brings together 250 RTI users from across Gujarat


Source:Caroline Andrade / DNA
Thursday, March 18, 2010 10:18 IST


Ahmedabad: The RTI is perhaps the most useful weapon
that the common man can yield against any authority. A state-level three hour
long RTI convention organised on Wednesday and attended by
around 250 RTI users from Gujarat, saw participants discuss how
they used the Right to Information Act to expose loopholes and
inefficiency of the system.



The  convention was held in Paldi. Arvind Kejriwal of Parivartan India,
Harinesh Pandya, secretary of Janpath and founder of Mahiti Adhikar,
Gujarat Pahel and Prof Jagdeep Chhokar, Association for Domestic
Reforms ADR, were also present at the event.

Deepak Patel of Gujarat state primary teachers' association said that he
used RTI to seek details about teachers in all schools of Gujarat.

"But I was given details of only 600 schools. I then identified the non-qualified
teachers in these schools and also found that the district education officers
were not carrying out proper inspection in schools," said Patel.

Patel then filed a complaint with the information commissioner, RN Das
which in turn sent a notice to the state government. "The government clearly
stated that it was the duty of the DEO to carry out inspections. In response,
the DEO said that they were short-staffed. The RTI application also brought
to fore the fact that some reports were prepared by the DEO without any
official actually carrying out the inspection," said Patel.

Vinod Pandya of Gujarat state Talimi Snatak also came across many
loopholes in the education system after he filed an RTI application
seeking information about private primary schools and non qualified
teachers."I asked for a full data for Ahmedabad district and city schools
and in the process got to know that 70% teachers were non-qualified
. I also learned that in 95% of the cases, the teachers were not being
paid proper salary and even their provident funds were not in order,"
said Pandya.

Pandya later filed a PIL in the high court and the government promised
to sack non qualified teachers. "However, even after 2 years nothing
has happened," said Pandya.

Girish Vishrambhai Dodia of Surat, son of a slain RTI activist
, Vishrambhai Dodia said his father lost his life due to a fight
between an electricity company and the police department.
"He had filed an RTI petition seeking inquiry against illegal
electricity connection that involved a whole lot of influential
people of the city," said Dodia.

Dangers of being an RTI activist- Lucknow

 

 Source:TNN, Mar 21, 2010, 02.01am IST

LUCKNOW: Information often comes at a price. 
In some cases even at the cost of life. The RTI activists narrated these 
facts before the MLAs who had come to attend a seminar on `RTI Act
and the view of the state legislators' organised at the Indian Institute of 
Management, Lucknow (IIM-L) on Saturday.

Substantiating the point was an IPS officer and president of RTI Forum,
Amitabh Thakur, who emphasised the goal of transparency and accountability
of the RTI Act. Thakur dwelt at length about the Section 8(1)(a) to
8(1)(j) of the Act under which information can be withheld and the
way these sections are presumably misused by the public authorities in denying information.

He went on to quote three examples, that of Satish Shetty of Pune,
Shashidhar Mishra of Begusarai and Venkatesh of Eeranapalya.

These persons, he said, were murdered for being RTI activists. 
The forum calls them `RTI martyrs'.

MLA from Sultanpur Anup Sanda narrated his experiences as
a social worker which were quite in consonance with the woes
of the RTI activists. He said that there was a huge delay in the
information being disseminated to the RTI activists. He was quick
to emphasise upon the need to have stringent penalties for the
public authorities violating the provisions of law.

Siddharth Shankar, MLA from Malihabad, claimed RTI to be a
fundamental right. He admitted that red-tape was marring the very
tenets of act which needed to be addressed. Likewise, Banda MLA
Vivek Singh said that with RTI Act even the masses had acquired
the rights, previously limited to the MPs and the legislators.

Dev Dutt Sharma asked the legislators to move the issue of present
state information commissioner Ranjit Pankaj being a convict and
still occupying the coveted seat, to which the legislators consented.

Nutan Thakur, an RTI activist and member of National RTI Forum,
urged the legislators to do something to increase the number
of employees in the State Information Commission so that the
burden of the SIC is reduced. The legislators agreed and
assured to raise the matter in the forthcoming Assembly session.

Mata Prasad Pandey, former Vidhan Sabha speaker, said that
he would try his best to initaite efforts for making amendments in the Act.

The National RTI Forum is an association looking into matters
related to RTI activists, including their training, guidance,
support and security related aspects as also about the RTI Act
and its broader policy related issues.

TI covers info on tax refunds


Sources:TNN, Mar 12, 2010, 12.04am IST



CHENNAI: Getting tax refunds from the income-tax (I-T)

department is a hassle for many citizens, who either do not
receive it or get it only after many years.

In a landmark ruling,
the Central Information Commissioner 
has passed an order
which said information on refunds is covered under the 
Right to Information (RTI) Act.

The Central Information Commissioner while passing the
order, said "To deny the appellant information sought b
him under clause (e) or clause (j) of section 8(1) is nothing
but misappreciation of law."

"The information sought by the appellant is covered under
section 2(f) of the RTI Act and he has a right of seek 
information under section 2(j) thereof.

It is clarified that the appellant has not
sought any information which the
public authority is holding in fiduciary capacity,"
M L Sharma,CIC, said in his order.