Proposed panel to probe complaints against CIC a conspiratorial attempt to kill it: Ex-IC

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Former Information has written to against "conspiratorial attempt" of the government to "kill" the through proposed committees under IAS officers to hear complaints against Information Commissioners.

"I request the of to save RTI by insulating CIC from these kinds of onslaughts from the government and their subordinate officers trying to prevent people from asking for embarrassing disclosures using RTI. This attempt is highly undemocratic, unconstitutional and smacks of high-level dictatorship and authoritarianism. This must be totally opposed," he said.

Acharyulu termed the move to be against the Right to Information (RTI) Act, and violative of letter and spirit of the Constitution which gave independence to information tribunal.

"It is a ridiculous proposal to make such 'officers' who are supposed to obey the directions of ICs and CIC, as superior authorities to inquire into the complaints against CICs. This is another conspiratorial attempt to kill the institution, which was asking the government offices to disclose the corruption and other cases against its officers," he wrote.

The former Information Commissioner, who gave several landmark verdicts, including issuing notice to former RBI for not obeying a order on following CIC directives, said Information Commissioners and have the power to direct and impose penalties on the and other secretaries if they don't give information.

"It is bureaucracy's desperate attempt to annex the transparency panel under their hierarchy," he said.

He said the must function autonomously without being subjected to directions by any other authority under this Act (Section 12(4) or RTI Act).

"The ICs are at par with Election Commissioners, who in turn function at the level of judges. The CICs are appointed by the on recommendation of the high-power committee led by PM, of the opposition," he said.

He said if the government appoints independent persons from different walks of life with cherished past of being transparent, there will be no complaints against CICs and no such committees will be necessitated.

The Centre has proposed to form committees under to look into complaints against and Information Commissioners, a move seen as an attack on the independence of the transparency panel.

The proposal sent to the (CIC) by the was discussed in a meeting of the Commission on March 27 where all but one of the seven commissioners, including the chief, were present.

It was unanimously opposed by the commissioners, and was urged to send a suitable reply to the government, sources privy to the development said.

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First Published: Tue, April 02 2019. 18:02 IST