The Right to
Information has not been simply a tool to combat corruption. For me, it proved
to be life changing. It helped me face and solve a huge personal problem and
helped me reach one step closer to my academic goals. After clearing my higher
secondary examination I had started preparing for CLAT (Common Law Admission
Test). As the date of form-submission came closer, some of my friends who were
already pursuing legal studies conveyed to me, during a course of conversation,
that I was ineligible to appear for any law entrance examination of the Country
since I had passed my higher secondary examination from ‘National Institute of
Open Schooling’ commonly known as N.I.O.S. This information was a complete
shock to me. I felt as though all my dreams had been shattered. I had wanted to
pursue legal studies from my early days of schooling. I had absolutely no idea
how to acquire information that would help confirm the truth of what I had
heard. I lived in a small village and didn't have access to modes of seeking
information. I had very limited knowledge of the internet.
I telephoned
the Bar Council of India office, New Delhi, hoping that I would get the true
and correct information that I needed so desperately, but the response I received
was no relief to me at all. It confirmed the Information passed on to me by my
friends. In anxiety, I kept telephoning the BCI office and in this way
telephoned them more than 20 times with a hope that some other official may
pick up the phone and say that I am eligible but it didn’t happen and I failed
in my every attempt. Thereafter I contacted NUJS, Kolkata which was conducting
CLAT that year and it too confirmed the Information that I am not eligible to
sit in this examination. As a last effort, I started contacting Private
Universities over phone but all of them disappointed me by confirming that the
legal profession had closed its doors to me.
At this time
when I had become entirely depressed and hopeless, I read a piece of
Information in a Hindi daily about the immense power of this beautiful
legislation called the Right To Information. I didn’t know how to write an RTI
application and whom to send it to. But I knew I had to try. So, I picked up a
plain white paper and drafted an application not in its prescribed format but
in the ordinary form of a letter of grievance and sent it to the HRD Ministry,
Government of India. A few days later, I received a reply that the subject
matter of my Information pertains to the NIOS and the same has been transferred
to it. Within a month, I received a detailed reply from NIOS with all relevant
documents which opened the blocked door to my legal studies. The barriers I
faced were created due to the false, inauthentic and misleading Information
passed on to me by several entities. The Information I received through the RTI
revealed that I was absolutely competent to sit any law entrance test.
Unfortunately, I couldn’t appear for CLAT that year because it had become too
late to submit the application. Today, I am successfully pursuing my fourth
year of Law from a reputed private university situated in the capital city of
Odisha. This happened because of the power of ‘Right to Information’. I
sometimes think, that if I had been born in a Pre-RTI era, I wouldn’t have been
able to fulfil my dream of pursuing legal studies.
Ordinary Peoples’ Power
After this
first taste of the power of Information, I have filed more than 200 RTI
applications till date encompassing multiple public issues and including a few
personal as well. When I used to live in Varanasi, inflated electricity bills
were a huge problem for the entire locality. Common people used to receive
electricity bills amounting to Rs.10 lakhs, 20 lakhs, and in one shocking case,
200 crores as well. This happened because the departmental staff did not come
to check electricity meters as per their duty. I met several higher officials
of the department numerous times with a request to send their staff to our
locality but they paid no heed to my pleas. I ultimately filed an RTI
application seeking detailed records of meter checking by the concerned
electricity department and things changed overnight. The next day concerned
S.D.O came and promised to send the staff regularly for meter-checking and
solve all the other related grievances of the public then and there.
Recent Past: The Sorry State of Governance
At a time
when our strongest anti-corruption and transparency legislation has entered a
decade, the attitudes of the States towards the Right to Information Act
reflect a sorry state of Governance. My personal experiences in using the RTI
in the recent past have become unfortunately bitter experiences. To state a few
of these experiences, 5 RTI applications have been stonewalled by PMO, three by
Ministry of Home Affairs, two by Ministry of External affairs, one by President
Secretariat, one by NHRC and one by UGC.
The Govt. of
NCT of Delhi which came to power advocating transparency in the Governance has
also refused similar, genuine Information which the PMO and the President
Secretariat had refused, citing different unjustified grounds. To me, this
showed that almost all the prime democratic Institutions entrusted with the
task of strengthening the democratic structure of our nation are defeating the
very spirit of democracy by refusing to share Information with the people. I
feel that every attempt to conceal Information from the stakeholders of
democracy threatens the foundations of that democracy.
The RTI has
been a personal journey for me but it has also helped me question issues larger
than my own life. It helped me fulfill my dreams and connected me to the fabric
of democracy in India. Information and access to information changed my life. I
celebrate and salute a decade of the vital, fundamental, life-changing,
people's Right to Information law in India, and hope that it will be used by
many others like me in the next ten years. I am convinced it will make
transparency and accountability more real for the ordinary citizen, and help
build a healthier and more robust democracy.
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