Right To Information Act 2005: Obligations & Responsibilities
Right To Information Act 2005: Obligations & Responsibilities
Right To Information Act 2005: Obligations & Responsibilities
Act 2005
Obligations &
Responsibilities
The real Swaraj will come not
by the acquisition of authority by
a few
but
by the acquisition of capacity
by all to
resist authority when abused
-Mahatma Gandhi
‘Democracy requires an informed
citizenry and transparency of
information which are vital to its
functioning and also to contain
corruption and to hold Governments
and their instrumentalities
accountable to the governed’
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What is Information?
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“I believe that the passage of this Bill will see
the dawn of a new era in our processes of
governance, an era of performance and
efficiency, an ear which will ensure that
benefits of growth flow to all sections of our
people, an era which will eliminate the scourge
of corruption, an era which will bring the
common man’s concern to the heart of all
processes of governance, an era which will
truly fulfill the hopes of the founding fathers of
our Republic.”
Dr. Manmohan Singh
Prime Minister of India
Speech in Parliament on May 11, 2005.
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Right to Information:
Key Concepts
Transparency & Accountability in the working
of every public authority
The right of any citizen of India to request
access to information and the corresponding
duty of Govt. to meet the request, except the
exempted information (Secs. 18/19)
The duty of Govt. to pro-actively make
available key information to all (Sec 4).
A reponsibility on all sections: citizenry,
NGOs, Media
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Obligations
S 4 (1) Every public authority shall - (a)maintain all
its records duly catalogued and indexed in a manner
and the form which facilitates the right to information
under this Act and ensure that all records that are
appropriate to be computerised are, within a
reasonable time and subject to availability of
resources, computerised and connected through a
network all over the country on different systems so
that access to such records is facilitated
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The RTI Act 2005: Coverage
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What is a Public Authority?
"public authority" means any authority or body or institution of
self- government established or constituted—
(a)by or under the Constitution;
(b)by any other law made by Parliament;
(c)by any other law made by State Legislature;
(d)by notification issued or order made by the appropriate
Government, and includes any—
(i) body owned, controlled or substantially financed;
(ii) non-Government organization substantially financed,
directly or indirectly by funds provided by the appropriate
Government;
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What does Right to Information mean?
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The RTI Act 2005 - Processes
Application to be submitted in writing or electronically, with
prescribed fee, to Public Information Officer (PIO).
Envisages PIO in each department/agency to receive requests and
provide information. Assistant PIO at sub-district levels to receive
applications/appeals/ complaints. Forward to appropriate PIO.These
will be existing officers.
Information to be provided within 30 days. 48 hours where life or
liberty is involved. 35 days where request is given to Asst. PIO, 40
days where third party is involved and 45 days for human rights
violation information from listed security/ intelligence agencies.
Time taken for calculation and intimation of fees excluded from the
time frame.
No action on application for 30 days is a deemed refusal.
No fee for delayed response
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What is not open to disclosure?
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What is not open to disclosure?
Contd
14
RTI Act 2005-Exemptions contd.
Infringes copyright, except of the state.
Where practicable, part of record can be released.
Intelligence and security agencies exempt (S 24)–
except cases of corruption and human rights violation
Third party information to be released after giving
notice to third party
Most exempt information to be released after 20 years
(with some exceptions).
Provided that the information, which cannot be denied
to the Parliament or a State Legislature shall not be
denied to any person.
Notwithstanding anything in the Official Secrets Act,
1923 nor any of the exemptions (a to i), a public
authority may allow access to information, if public
interests in disclosure outweighs the harm to the
protected interests.
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Central Information Commission:
What can I complain about?
The Central Information Commission is an autonomous body set
up to inquire into complaints received from citizens
You can complain that you have been refused access to
information. You can also complain about how the public
authority has handled your request, for instance;
+ failure to respond to your request within 30 working days (or
failure to explain why an extension to the 45 days is needed)
+ failure to give you proper advice and help within the stipulated
time
+ failure to give information in the form in which you asked for it
+ failure to properly explain reasons for refusing your request, for
instance if the public authority believes that giving you
information would harm a criminal investigation.
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What information does the CIC need?
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What information does the CIC need?
Contd….
if the appeal is preferred against deemed
refusal, the particulars of the application,
including number and date and name and
address of the Central Public Information
Officer to whom the application was
prayer of relief sought;
grounds for the prayer or relief; verification by
the appellant; and
any other information which the Commission
may deem necessary for deciding the appeal
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State Information Commissions
RTI Acts in States
1. Tamil Nadu 1977 11 Kerala 2005
2. Goa 1977 12 Gujarat 2005
3. Rajasthan 2000 13 Chattisgarh 2005
4. Karnataka 2000 14 Haryana 2005
5. Delhi 2001 15 Punjab 2005
6. Maharashtra 2002 16 Tripura 2005
7. Assam 2002 17 Andhra Pradesh 2005
8. MP 2003 18 Uttaranchal 2005
9. J&K 2004 19 Meghalaya 2005
10. Orissa 2005 20 West Bengal 2005
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RTI Act 2005 - Penalties
Penalties
imposable by Information Commission on PIO or officer
asked to assist PIO
For unreasonable delay – Rs 250 per day up to Rs
25,000
For illegitimate refusal to accept application, malafide
serious violations
However, no criminal liability
Immunity for actions done in good faith (S. 21).
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RTI Act 2005 - Access
Universal Access – especially to the Poor
Fee at a reasonable level – though quantum not
specified. No fee for BPL.
Assistant Public Information Officers at sub-district
levels to facilitate filing of applications/appeals
No need to specify reason for seeking information or
other personal details
Provision to reduce oral requests into writing
Provision to provide all required assistance, including to
disabled persons.
Information to be provided in local languages
Provision for damages
Open only to citizens of India.
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RTI Act 2005–Responsibilities of Public
Authorities
Appointing PIOs/Asst. PIOs within 100 days of
enactment (5(1)).
Maintaining, cataloguing, indexing, computerising and
networking records (4(1)(a)).
Publishing within 120 days of enactment a whole set of
information and updating it every year (4(1)(b)).
Publishing all relevant facts while formulating important
policies or announcing the decisions which affect
public (4(1)(c)).
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RTI Act 2005–Responsibilities of Public
Authorities Contd..
Providing reasons for its administrative or quasi
judicial decisions to affected persons (4(1)(d)).
Providing information suo moto (4(2)).
Providing information to Information Commission
(25(2)).
Raising awareness, educating and training (26(1))
Compiling in 18 months and updating regularly local
language guide to information (26(2) (3)).
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Public Awareness and Educational Programmes
Sec 26
Develop and organize educational programmes to
advance the understanding of the public,
particularly the disadvantaged, to exercise right to
information.
Government to:
Encourage public authorities to participate in
programmes; promote timely/ effective
dissemination of accurate info on activities.
Train CPIOs and produce relevant training materials
– user guide and related matter.
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