Delhi High Court quashes RTI Act,CIC Management Regulations 2007

A division bench of the Delhi High Court today quashed the Central
Information Commission (Management) Regulations 2007 in case of
Er.Sarbajit Roy v. DDA. All Central RTI appeals will now be heard by
all 10 Information Commissions jointly.

PR Log (Press Release) – Nov 27, 2009 – A division bench of the Delhi
High Court comprising Justice B.D.Ahmed and Justice Veena Birbal today
quashed the Central Information Commission (Management) Regulations
2007 while hearing India's longest running RTI battle the case of
Er.Sarbajit Roy v. DDA.  All Central RTI appeals will henceforth be
heard by all 10 Information Commissions sitting jointly.

In 2005 the complainant Er.Sarbajit Roy had moved India's first RTI
case to India' FoI watchdog the Central Information Commission (CIC)
complaining that the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) had failed to
comply with proactive disclosure mandated under new India's Right to
Information Act 2005.

4 years later on 22.09.2009 a twin bench of Chief Information
Commissioner Wajahat Habibullah and Information Commissioner
M.L.Sharma found Roy's allegations to be true and constituted a 3
member committee to go into all aspect of servicing RTI Act throughout
the DDA expeditiously. Roy challenging the appointment of the
committee cited the Government of India's legal opinion to CIC for
there to be no provision in law for CIC to form  benches or committees
to decide complaints. The DDA then approached the High Court and
obtained a stay against all proceeding in Roy's complaint.

The Court heard Er.Roy, standing senior counsel for CIC Prof.
K.K.Nigam and standing counsel for DDA Adv. Ajay Verma at length over
2 days. The Court was astounded to learn that the CIC (Management)
Regulations 2007 promulgated by CIC which permits setting up of
benches and inquiry committees had never been notified in the gazette
to have any legal effect. The Court while striking down the
Regulations also interpreted section 12(4) of the RTI Act to be a
"provision restricting the CIC's autonomy" and not as an enabling
provision to frame notifications. Noting that the Department of
Personnel (DOPT) had consistently refused to notify the CIC's wide
roving regulations, the Court remarked "what was not done by Rules
cannot now enter through the backdoor of these illegal regulations".

Responding to the decision Chief Information Commissioner Wajahat
Habibullah said "It is highly impractical to expect the entire bench
to hear every case together especially in the state commissions. We
have asked them to provide an alternative, a system in place so that
their demand could be considered".

CPI Politburo leader Brinda Karat also hit out at the government over
the Government demand to force CIC to only sit as a Full Bench in
Parliament. "Who is the DoPT to make such demands, the CIC is an
independent body. The government has no business getting involved in
this."

There are now concerns that attempts by the government to restrict the
role of the CIC will lead to a massive delay in disposing cases.
Already 26,000 cases are awaiting hearing at CIC with an 18 month
backlog. The wait has just got longer.
# # #

Delhi High Court Infowire, an online website for advocates reporting
daily hearings from Delhi High Court contributed by advocates who
appeared


http://www.prlog.org/10429934-delhi-high-court-quashes-rti-actcic-management-regulations-2007.html


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