INFO LEAK DoPT says making RTI Rules 2012 available on
the Net before it is tabled in Parliament Violates privilege of House
The Department
of Personnel & Training (DoPT) has cooked up a breach of parliamentary
privilege to bully another department to identify 'leak' of the notification,
bringing the new Right to Information rules into force.
HT had accessed
the new RTI rules and uploaded the gazette notification on its website -
hindustantimes.com - in early August. The notification was subsequently widely
circulated on the internet by RTI activists.
The new RTI
rules came into effect on July 31. It has introduced a 500-word limit on RTI
applications, allowed public authorities to charge postal charges in excess of Rs. 50 from applicants and spelt out the format for filing
appeals.
The
department, which directly reports to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, appeared
to have taken offence to the public getting hold of the order before it
bothered to collect its copy on August 9, 2012.
"It has
come to the notice of this department that during the intervening period, the
scanned copy of the said rules was available on the internet," RK Girdhar,
the DoPT under-secretary, said in a letter to the government's printing press.
For effect,
Girdhar marked a copy of the letter to the urban development department
secretary who oversees the department of publication.
And he went on
to invent a breach of parliamentary privileges. "The RTI Rules 2012 are
yet to be laid on the table of Parliament and availability of the said rules on
the internet or otherwise amounts to breach of privilege of Parliament,"
the DoPT official said.
"It is
therefore requested to clarify as to whether a copy of the said rules was given
to any agency or individual during the period between July 31 and August 9,
2012? If so, kindly give the details of that agency/individual," Girdhar
wrote.
All rules
under a law have to be placed in Parliament within six months of its
notification. Parliament then has the power to vote out a particular provision
or the whole notification.
But there is
no bar on making them public before Parliament is formally informed.
"This is
ridiculous. How are people expected to file applications or appeals if they do
not know the rules," asked retired naval officer and RTI activist Lokesh
Batra who was reluctantly provided access to the DoPT letter under the RTI Act.
Government
officials agree. To the contrary, a senior government official confirmed,
the entire idea of notifying decisions in the gazette is to inform people about
a decision.
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