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The movement for
Right to Information
Maharashtra Right to Information Act, 2002, was enforced on
August 11, 2003 with retrospective effect from September 23,
2002 and has been repealed on 11th October 2005.
Right to Information Act-2005,
the national act, has come in full force from 12th October
2005.
This legislation is a class
apart from most others. It seeks to regulate not the actions
of the citizens, as most other legislation do, but that of
the people who govern. It fortifies citizens' fundamental
right to know what the government and dependent organizations
are doing for them.
Sweden, where the incidence of corruption
is almost negligible now, has a right to information law for
more than two centuries now - right since 1776.
People's right to have access to official
information was asserted by the United Nations in its first
session itself. Resolution 59 (1) of the UN General Assembly
held in 1946 states: "Freedom of information is a fundamental
human right and. the touchstone of all the freedoms to which
the UN is consecrated.''
It is during the last decade that a large
number of countries have begun enforcing legislations to provide
access to government information. The World Bank, the International
Monetary Fund and other international funding agencies are
also pressing countries to adopt access to information laws
to increase government transparency and reduce corruption.
The process is being accelerated and strengthened by citizen
activists through local, national and
international fora.
Citizen activists in USA and Japan have harnessed
the respective right to information laws there to expose corruption
in government departments and local bodies and elicit information
on hazardous drug manufacture or environmental degradation.
There has been a slight setback especially in the USA since
the terrorist strike of September 11 and additional restrictions
are being placed on disclosure of certain information.
Article 19 of The International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights(ICCPR), signed among others
by India, defines the parameters of people's right to information.
It lays down that every citizen shall have the right to freedom
of opinion and expression, which shall include "Freedom
to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds,
regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing or in print,
in the form of art or through any other media of his choice.''
The covenant has at the same time placed `reasonable restrictions'
on this right only to the extent of safeguarding `rights or
reputation of others' and protecting national security or
of public order, or of public health and morals.''
A series of Supreme Court verdicts have recognized
that the right to know is inherent in Article 19 (1)(a) of
the Constitution of India, which guarantees that `` all citizens
shall have the right to freedom of speech and expression ''.
A citizen has a fundamental right to information so as to
formulate and express his or her views. Citizens' fundamental
right to know is further strengthened by Article 21 while
guarantees the right to life and personal liberty and by Article
14 which guarantees the right to equality, since all stakeholders
must have an access to facts affective their lives.
The Apex Court ruled in 1982: ``The concept
of an open Government is the direct emanation from the right
to know which seems implicit in the right of free speech and
expression guaranteed under Article 19(1)(a). Therefore, disclosures
of information in regard to the functioning of Government
must be the rule, and secrecy an exception.''
The demand for legally enforcing people's
right to know was first raised by Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sanghatana
(MKSS) in Rajasthan in the early 1990s. Led by social activist
and former administrator Aruna Roy, MKSS exposed mind-boggling
percolation of funds sanctioned on public works like roads,
bridges, water tanks, wells, school buildings and so on by
highlighting the entries in official records and the actual
work done, or, in many cases, not done at all.
``At the time of the framing of the constitution
we had the right to freedom of expression, but no right to
information,'' says Aruna Roy. ``We could not access a master
roll, a bill, a voucher, a list of people below the poverty
line, anything within the government. It was all a big secret.''
The MKSS succeeded in making the Government
of Rajasthan concede a notification allowing citizens to inspect
all records of a panchayat. The next victory was to make the
government concede the citizens' right to receive a photocopy
of panchayat documents. This was the first step to a giant
leap forward in ensuring transparency in governance.
The first model draft of a legislation on
the right to know was prepared by The Press Council of India
(PCI), which emphasized that any information which could not
be denied to the people's representatives in the Parliament
and the state legislatures could not be denied to the citizens
as well.
The chief ministers conference in 1997 on
responsive administration was unanimous that The Government
of India and all states should have their own legislations
of the right to know.
At around the same time, a working group
under the chairmanship veteran citizens' right activist H
D Shourie, founder of `Common Cause' prepared another draft
bill, which formed the basis for the Freedom of Information
Bill, 2000, of the Government of India.
Even before the Government of India drafted
its bill, in a significant pro-active step, in 1999, Ram Jethmalani,
the then Union Minister for Urban Development, issued an administrative
order empowering citizens to inspect and receive photocopies
of any file in his ministry. Though the jurist-turned-minister
quoted the apex court rulings recognizing right to know as
the fundamental right, he was restrained by the Cabinet Secretary
from giving effect to the order.
This prompted the Centre for Public Interest
Litigation and Common Cause to file a writ petition in the
Supreme Court seeking effectively three relief: 1) that the
Cabinet Secretary's restraint on Mr Jethmalani's order be
declared unconstitutional and violative of the citizens right
to information; 2) that section 5 of the Official Secrets
Act, which makes it an offence for a public servant to disclose
any information that has come to his knowledge in his official
capacity, be declared unconstitutional; 3) that the government
of India be directed to frame and issue suitable administrative
instructions on the lines of the Press Council's Right to
Information Bill, to effectuate the citizens right to information,
pending suitable legislation on the subject.
The Freedom of Information Bill was introduced
in the Parliament a year later in 2000. Yet, as it remained
to be adopted by the Parliament for more than two years, the
Supreme Court in November 2002 the Supreme Court directed
that if the legislation was not passed before the next date
of hearing, the court would proceed with orders. The Bill
was finally adopted by the Parliament on December 16, 2002
and cleared by the President on January 10, 2003. But the
Central government did not enforce the Act.
Citizen activists are far from being satisfied.
It is a toothless legislation not adhering to the draft prepared
by the Press Council. It does not provide for an independent
appellate machinery and penalty for willful and mala fide
refusal to disclose information or for incorrect disclosure.
Besides, the choice of the title ``Freedom of Information''
and not ``Right to Information'' suggests that the fundamental
right of the citizen has not been wholeheartedly acknowledged.
While the debate on the central government
legislation goes on, a few states have since 1997 enforced
their own laws on right to information, with varying degree
of impeccability. Tamil Nadu and Goa were the pioneers in
1997, though the Tamil Nadu legislation woefully lacks in
merit. Rajasthan and Maharashtra followed in 2000 and Delhi
2001. Madhya Pradesh enacted its legislation on January 31,
2003, significantly, after the President had given his assent
to the central legislation.
Maharashtra's act of 2000 was modeled after
the flawed act of Tamil Nadu. Veteran social activist Shri
Anna Hazare, who has been spearheading a campaign for the
past several years for a legislation with teeth demanded a
fresh act, branding that of 2000 as a legislation not granting
any right to citizens but instead, conferring a right to deny
information on the government to deny information.
Acceding to his demand, the state government
appointed in 2001 a committee, comprising senior serving and
retired bureaucrats like former Union Home Secretary Dr Madhav
Godbole, eminent jurists and Shri Hazare himself to prepare
a new draft. The committee handed over one of the world's
best drafts, but the Bill based on the draft couldn't get
immediate approval of legislators. Came a renewed threat of
agitation by Shri Hazare and an Ordinance was promptly promulgated
to pacify him. It lapsed in barely four months.
The legislature finally adopted a Bill replacing
the Ordinance, but it was, however, referred to the Government
of India for its ratification, though, citizen activists argue,
the central act on the matter had still not come in force
then and there was no question of a state legislation clashing
with a still non-existent one of the central government. Madhya
Pradesh went ahead and notified its own act under similar
circumstances, but the Maharashtra government thought otherwise.
To aggravate the matter, Government of India did not bounce
back the state bill, but kept it tossing from one desk to
another in New Delhi.
Came a threat of fast-unto-death by Shri
Hazare from August 9, and things moved at a break-neck speed
both in New Delhi and back in Delhi. While Hazare's fast entered
barely the third day, the Act was gazetted on August 11, 2003.
And now the All India law on Right to Information, the Right
to Information Act-2005.
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