CIC
concedes to the non-compliance by the Political Parties: ADR to file a petition
in a Court of Law
Putting an end to 22-month-long
wait on non-compliance by the six National Political Parties of the 3rd
June, 2013 CIC order declaring them as public authorities, the Central Information
Commission (CIC) observed in its order dated 16th March 2015 that
the RTI Act does not provide the Commission with ample powers to deal with the
cases of contempt and non-compliance. The Complaint (CIC/CC/C/2015000182) was
filed by Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) along with Mr. Subhash
Chandra Aggarwal.
Although CIC did not take any
action against the political parties (INC, BJP, BSP, NCP, CPI and CPI-M) on non-compliance,
however it has made it clear that its 3rd June 2013 order is “legally
correct, and final.” We at ADR firmly believe that RTI Act has sufficient
provisions to deal with the cases of non-compliance and contempt of the CIC’s
orders.
Please find attached the order of the CIC dated 16th March, 2015. For the background of the case click
here.
Highlights
of the 16th March, 2015 CIC order:
- CIC
does not have power to implement its orders: CIC states that “the
Commission is bereft of the tools to get its orders complied with.”
- RTI Act
has Gaps: CIC says “gaps” in the RTI act relating to the provisions
of non-compliance are needed to be addressed.
- CIC
asks DOPT for redressal: CIC sends a copy of the order to the
Department of Personnel and Training (DOPT) for taking action to address the
legal gaps and issues in order to ensure the compliance of the Commission’s
orders.
- CIC
directs complainants (ADR and Mr. Subhash Aggarwal): CIC
suggests that “complainants are at liberty, in view of the facts and
circumstances of this case, to approach the higher courts for appropriate
relief and redressal.”
- CIC’s Decision
that Political Parties are under RTI is binding and final: CIC
says that’s its 3rd June 2013 decision of declaring 6 National
Political Parties is “binding and final.”
- CIC
stands by its order, 3rd June order is legally correct:
Although CIC did not take any action against the parties on-compliance, however
CIC has said “Not only is the 3rd June 2013 order “legally correct,
it is convincing from the standpoint of the aims and objectives espoused by the
RTI Act.”
- CIC
terms Political Parties stand as “wilful”: CIC surmises that “this
is an unusual case of wilful non-compliance and highlights the need to identify
the legal gap and lacunae in the implementation mechanism.”
ADR’s
position
- ADR is
going to file a petition in the Court asking for action against these 6
National Political Parties for non-compliance and contempt of the 3rd
of June 2013 order as well as its implementation.
- CIC’s
decision that law is silent on non-compliance is not correct. CIC should go by
the spirit of the law and not the letter.
- Preamble
of the RTI act as well the Sections 18, 19 and 20 gives ample powers to CIC to
take action on non-compliance by the way of levying fine and awarding compensation,
CIC therefore through this order is only abrogating its own power and authority.
- CIC is
not a court of law. It is only a quasi-judicial body. Therefore, it should not
go into the technicalities of the law.