• About Us
  • Feedback
  • Events Calendar
  • Archives
  • Newsletter
Advanced Search
  • Home
  • News
  • Views
  • GovNow
  • GovNext
  • Login
  • Register
News
  • Top Stories
  • Public Reporter
  • Photo Story
  • Protests & Petitions
  • GNtv
Views
  • Day's Debate
  • Columns
  • Think Tank
  • Interview
  • GNtalk
  • Backstory
GovNow
  • Parliament
  • Your MP
  • Bureaucracy
  • Judiciary
  • Policy
GovNext
  • RTI
  • eGov
  • GreenGov
  • GovPitch
Follow Us
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • RSS
Home › GovNext › RTI › CIC: Preparatory info on cabinet papers to be disclosed under RTI

CIC: Preparatory info on cabinet papers to be disclosed under RTI

A note prepared but later withdrawn open for disclosure
PTI | September 07 2010

Share

Exemption clauses of the RTI Act related to Cabinet documents will apply only when proposals formulated are "actually" taken up for consideration by the Cabinet, the Central Information Commission has held.

The information which went into preparation of a cabinet note "but is not a part of it" will qualify for disclosure as per provisions of the Right to Information Act, a full bench of the Commission said.

"A note that is withdrawn would therefore not constitute a Cabinet Note and would consequently qualify for disclosure," the Bench comprising Chief Information Commissioner Wajahat Habibullah and Information Commissioners Satyananda Mishra and Deepak Sandhu held.
Section 8(1)(i) of the RTI Act exempts from disclosure cabinet papers including records of deliberations of the Council of Ministers, Secretaries and other officers till the decision has been taken.

"Exemption under Section 8(1)(i) will apply only when a Note is submitted by the Ministry that has formulated it to the Cabinet Secretariat for placing this before the Cabinet. All concomitant information preceding that, which does not constitute a part of that Cabinet Note, will then be open to disclosure," the Bench said.

The case relates to Human Rights activist Venkatesh Nayak who sought from the Department of Personnel and Training a copy of the draft Public Interest Disclosure and Protection of Informers' (PIDPI) Bill approved by the Cabinet.

"The key issue for decision here, therefore, would appear to us to be to distinguish what constitutes the stage of 'formulation', when disclosure of draft legislation leading to policy is mandatory, as against the stage of 'finalisation', when it will constitute a document exempt from disclosure," it said.

The Bench said once a draft is submitted to the Cabinet Secretariat, with all its necessary attachments for submission to the Cabinet, it would remain exempt from disclosure till such time as the decision has been taken and action to be taken thereon is "complete and over".
 

Related stories

Stories you might like

CIC puts pending RTI cases on website
DU teachers to use RTI to expose semester results
RTI at premium: Chhattisgarh assembly charges Rs 500 per query
Air India defies CIC order, shields Patel
How info on designs of metro leaked and posted on website: SC

More stories in this section

CIC puts pending RTI cases on website
Government trying to make amendments in RTI Act
DU teachers to use RTI to expose semester results

In This Section

  • Most Emailed
  • Most Popular
  • Most Commented
  • The man who nailed Nithari’s lies...
  • Fighting corruption through RTI ...
  • File complaints with Maha police online ...
  • Extensive broadband usage to make OECD richer...
2G anna hazare Bihar BJP CBI china congress corruption Delhi DoT e-governance facebook Gujarat High Court India jairam ramesh Kapil Sibal Karnataka Maharashtra Manmohan Singh Mumbai parliament P Chidambaram Pranab Mukherjee prime minister rajya sabha RTI supreme court US Uttar Pradesh
more tags
News
  • Top Stories
  • Public Reporter
  • Photo Story
  • Protests & Petitions
  • GNtv
Views
  • Day's Debate
  • Columns
  • Think Tank
  • Interview
  • GNtalk
  • Backstory
GovNow
  • Parliament
  • Your MP
  • Bureaucracy
  • Judiciary
  • Policy
GovNext
  • RTI
  • eGov
  • GreenGov
  • GovPitch
Follow Us
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • RSS
Copyright ©2010 Governance Now
  • Copyright Info
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Help
  • Advertise with us
  • Careers
  • Contact Us
Developed by LDI