HomeNewsOpinionRTI Amendment | People’s right to know must be cherished, guarded

RTI Amendment | People’s right to know must be cherished, guarded

The RTI, first passed in 2005, opened the black-box of governance and policy-making and allowed the average Indian to ask difficult questions to those in power. The recent amendment overturns these privileges.

July 31, 2019 / 16:00 IST
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Image: Reuters
Image: Reuters

Vinayak Dalmia

Secrecy is the freedom tyrants dream of - Bill Moyers, former White House press secretary.

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On July 22, Lok Sabha amended the Right To Information (RTI) Act allowing the Centre to determine the term of office, salaries, allowances and other terms of the information commissioners (ICs) who were originally deemed to be on a par with the election commissioners (ECs).

It is easy to fall into a common trap of nostalgia, but 2019 does seem like a far cry from 2005 when the RTI Act was first passed. It opened the black-box of governance and policy-making and allowed the average Indian to ask difficult questions to those in power. Some governments paid a price for this transparency and it made them queasy and uncomfortable. It was a price worth paying and it remains so till this day. Baring some exceptions (such as affairs of national security et. al) secrecy is a lazy and dodgy tool used by those in power. It allows governments to hide their inefficiency, incompetence and worse still their ulterior designs.