Ummid Assistant

Jamia Millia launches courses on China, Afghanistan

IGNOU launches value education programme for teachers

Welcome Guest! You are here: Home » National

PM calls for critical review of RTI

Friday October 14, 2011 04:48:50 PM, IANS

New Delhi: Calling for a critical look at the Right to Information (RTI) Act, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Friday said the law should not adversely affect the deliberative processes in the government.

Addressing the Sixth Annual Convention of Information Commissioners here, the prime minister said the RTI Act had been effective but there were "concerns that it could end up discouraging honest, well meaning public servants from giving full expression to their views".

"Even as we recognise and celebrate the efficacy and the effectiveness of the Right to Information Act, we must take a critical look at it. There are concerns that need to be discussed and addressed honestly," the prime minister said.

He said the legislation for the protection of whistleblowers would further strengthen RTI and hoped the law would be enacted in the next few months.

"It would, among other things, help in prevention of violence against those who seek to expose wrongdoings in our public administration," he said.

Calling for a balance between the need for disclosure of information and limited time and resources available with public authorities, he said it was not desirable to have a situation in which an authority was flooded with requests for information having no bearing on public interest.

Manmohan Singh said there was need to deliberate on ways to deal with the "vexatious demand" without hindering information to those whose demands genuinely serve public interest.

"...I think we need to remember here that a point of view brought under public scrutiny and discussion in an isolated manner may sometimes present a distorted or incomplete picture of what really happened in the processes of making the final decisions. The Right to Information should not adversely affect the deliberative processes in the government," he said.

The prime minister said the government was committed to a comprehensive agenda of legal, executive and technology initiatives to curb corruption and improve governance, and the RTI was a powerful tool in that direction.

"We wish to make the Right to Information an even more effective instrument for ensuring transparency and accountability in administration," he said.

Calling for a critical look at the exemption clauses in RTI Act, the prime minister urged the participants at the convention to come up with concrete suggestions. He said the RTI had provisions to deal with privacy issues but there were certain grey areas that required further debate.

He said the convention was taking place at a time when there was "a vigorous debate on the issues of corruption and governance" and hoped it will give a holistic assessment of the ground situation about implementation of the RTI Act.

The prime minister said the number of appeals or complaints before the commission were very large and public authorities must endeavour to voluntarily put information in the public domain without waiting for applications from information seekers.

"If this is done, a lot of time will be saved both for public authorities as well as for citizens," he said.

Expressing satisfaction over decline in rejection rate of information requested under RTI from 7.2 in 2007-08 to 6.4 in 2009-10 and 5.2 in 2010-11, he said the commission, "through its decisions, had laid down principles for disclosure of information which was not considered fit for disclosure".

"All this indicates that public authorities today are more open and more sensitive to concerns voiced in the act, and they are better prepared to respond to citizens' request for information," he said.

 




 

 

 

 

 

 

Bookmark and Share

Home | Top of the Page

 

Comments

Note: By posting your comments here you agree to the terms and conditions of www.ummid.com

Comments powered by DISQUS

 

 

 

Top Stories

'Occupy Wall Street' growing bigger by the day

As a protest movement against corporate America grows bigger by the day, Citigroup's Indian American CEO Vikram Pandit thinks the sentiments of the Occupy Wall Street  »

Occupying Wall Street will topple capitalism: Iranian leader

Protesters surge, New York mayor warns them to stay away from banks

 

  Most Read

Pakistan to grant Most Favoured Nation status to India

Pakistan has, in principle, decided to grant Most Favoured Nation (MFN) status to India, Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar said in the National Assembly. The minister said during  »

LeT, Babbar Khalsa planned blasts in Delhi: Police

The explosives found in a car in the parking lot of the Ambala Cantonment railway station in Haryana were procured by the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and were meant for the Babbar Khalsa  »

Explosives laden car found in Ambala, NSG team reaches

 

  News Pick

Court admits plea for federal probe in July 13 Mumbai blasts

The Bombay High Court Thursday admitted a petition demanding that the probe into the July 13 Mumbai blasts which killed 27 people be handed  »

Summers of discontent over, Kashmiri youth focus on career

A summer has ended peacefully in the valley and Kashmiri youth have certainly warmed up to it as they look for campus placements, surf for employment avenues on the internet, compete for the coveted civil services and even scout for  »

India's first robotic liver transplant successful

In the first such surgery in India, doctors at a hospital near here have performed a robotic liver transplant to save the life of a four-year-old child. Doctors say it is only the third operation of its kind in the world. The surgery  »

 

Picture of the Day

Girl students of a local school displaying the post cards posted to the AMU VC appealing him to speed up the process for the establishment of AMU centre in Malegaon

(Photo: ummid.com)

 

 
 
 
 
 

RSS  |  Contact us

 

| Quick links

News

 

Subscribe to

Ummid Assistant

 

National

Religion

RSS

Scholarships

About us

International

Culture

Twitter

Government Schemes

Feedback

Regional

History

Facebook

Education

Register

Politics

Opinion

Newsletter

Contact us

Business

Career

     

Education

     

 

 

Ummid.com: Disclaimer | Terms of Use | Advertise with us | Link Exchange

Ummid.com is part of the Awaz Multimedia & Publications providing World News, News Analysis and Feature Articles on Education, Health. Politics, Technology, Sports, Entertainment, Industry etc. The articles or the views displayed on this website are for public information and in no way describe the editorial views. The users are entitled to use this site subject to the terms and conditions mentioned.

© 2010 Awaz Multimedia & Publications. All rights reserved.