In recent memory, no other legislation has galvanised citizens as much as the Right to Information Act passed in 2005 by Parliament. In one stroke it brought citizens closer to the government by empowering them to ask questions about decisions taken or not, as debates continued over crucial provisions of the Act being diluted.
Last month, some 13 years since the RTI has been in place, a survey by the Satark Nagrik Sangathan (SNS) and the Centre of Equity Studies, threw up dismal facts. One of the key observations made was that the landmark Right To Information Act, empowering citizens of the country to seek information on governance, was being slowly chipped away leaving questions about whether governments in power were deliberately diluting the Act to protect themselves. The assessment found that several Information Commissioners (IC) were non-functional or were functioning at reduced capacity as the posts of commissioners, including that of the chief information commissioner, were vacant during the period under review.
The Information Commissioners hold the key to information and have the power to order an inquiry if information has been withheld or denied, and as the study observes, also have the powers of a civil court for enforcing attendance of persons, discovery of documents, receiving evidence or affidavits, issuing summons for examination of witnesses or documents. Rarely a day goes by without reports on how the government keeps crucial information hidden, or denies it, to deliberately obfuscate citizens.
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Amid this gloom, comes the book
The RTI story is a story of empowerment. It is a story of how a handful of committed people saw a dream and were soon joined by more. It is an account of their struggle which continues to this day.
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