The rebuke came from Information Commissioner Divya Prakash Sinha when he observed serious violations of the processes and provisions of the RTI Act while hearing an appeal filed by legal and transparency activist R K Jain.
Jain had sought to know from the Central Information Commission the action taken on 113 communications received in its legal cell from its dak (mail) section during April-June, 2013. But he was not provided with any information.
During appeal proceedings before Sinha, Jain said he wanted to emphasise on the massive problem of dak receipt management in legal cell of the CIC and expressed serious concern over the "deplorable" projection of the cell before the higher courts.
Underlining the absurdity in the case, Sinha noted that central public information officer (CPIO) and the first appellate authority (FAA) were the same person in this case.
Sinha also said the officers dealing with the case later did not note the trail of the case, ignored the fact and that a timely response was not given.
Initially, the case was handled by SP Beck, who acted as the CPIO and later passed the order as the First Appellate Authority.
In his order as the First Appellate Authority, Beck directed the then CPIO Yogesh Singhal to provide information. The new CPIO also did not provide satisfactory response and referred the matter to FAA again.
It is rather preposterous to note that the same CPIO and JS Law i.e SP Beck is later presiding over as the FAA on the First Appeal filed against the RTI Application on which he was supposed to reply as the CPIO, Sinha said.
Sinha said that Beck, Singhal and Achala Sinha, the then Additional Secretary, CIC, have knowingly or unknowingly created a sheer mockery of the letter and spirit of the RTI Act by creating a situation of impasse by their whimsical approach towards the RTI application.
In addition to Beck and Singhal, Sinha also chided K K Pukhral, the section officer in the legal team.
Serious concern is expressed over the situation of three-ring circus caused in the matter by all concerned, leaving the scope of taking penal action extremely difficult, Sinha said as he left the officials with a warning to be careful in future.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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