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Dilution of RTI Act undermining Constitutional guarantees, say legal experts


What Happened

  • Legal experts and transparency advocates have warned that recent amendments to the Right to Information Act, 2005 — introduced through the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act, 2023 — are undermining constitutional guarantees of accountability and citizen access to information.
  • The DPDP Act's Section 44(3) amended Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act, fundamentally altering the balance between privacy and transparency: the earlier provision allowed disclosure of personal information if public interest outweighed the privacy harm (a proportionality test); the new provision creates an absolute bar on disclosure of any "personal data," regardless of public interest.
  • This means government officials' performance records, asset declarations, and conduct in public duties could now be shielded from RTI scrutiny by invoking the "personal data" category.
  • Experts note that the amendment, combined with rising vacancies in the Central Information Commission (CIC) and weakening of suo motu disclosure norms, collectively erode the RTI framework.
  • Over 30 civil society organisations, backed by 130 opposition MPs, have formally opposed the amendment.
  • Additionally, concerns have been raised about the impact of increased live-streaming of court proceedings — while improving transparency, it requires both the Bench and Bar to exercise restraint to avoid sensational remarks that could prejudice pending cases.

Static Topic Bridges

The Right to Information Act, 2005, enacted on October 12, 2005, provides citizens the right to access information held by public authorities. The RTI Act operationalises the constitutional right to free speech and expression under Article 19(1)(a), which the Supreme Court has held includes the right to receive information (both in Bennett Coleman v. Union of India, 1972, and subsequently). The RTI Act applies to all "public authorities" — defined broadly to include all bodies constituted or substantially financed by the government. It establishes a two-tier information commission system: State Information Commissions (SICs) at the state level, and the Central Information Commission (CIC) at the apex level.

  • RTI Act enacted: June 15, 2005 (assented to); came into force: October 12, 2005.
  • Section 8: Lists classes of information exempt from disclosure — national security, sovereignty, Cabinet notes, fiduciary relationships, personal information (Section 8(1)(j)), etc.
  • Section 8(1)(j) (pre-DPDP): Exempted information relating to personal privacy "which has no relationship to any public activity or interest, or which would cause unwarranted invasion of the privacy" — but allowed disclosure if public interest demanded it (the override clause).
  • Section 8(1)(j) (post-DPDP, 2023): Amended by DPDP Act Section 44(3) to read: "information which relates to personal information" — removing the public interest override entirely, converting a proportionality test to an absolute bar.
  • Section 4: Suo motu disclosure — public authorities must proactively publish 17 categories of information without any RTI application; this is the RTI Act's transparency cornerstone.

Connection to this news: The removal of the public interest override transforms what was a contextual balancing exercise into a categorical exemption, giving public authorities an easy shield to deny accountability by labelling information as "personal data."

Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 — Key Provisions and RTI Interface

The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDP Act) was enacted to establish a legal framework for processing of digital personal data in India, replacing the Information Technology (Amendment) Act framework on data protection. The DPDP Act establishes the concept of "Data Principal" (individual whose data is processed) and "Data Fiduciary" (entity processing data), creating rights of access, correction, erasure, and grievance redressal for individuals. However, Section 44(3) of the DPDP Act amends RTI Section 8(1)(j) as a consequential amendment — creating an unintended (or intended) collision between the privacy regime and the transparency regime.

  • DPDP Act, 2023: Enacted August 11, 2023; rules notified subsequently (DPDP Rules, 2025).
  • Section 44(3), DPDP Act: Amends Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act — the most consequential consequential amendment in the Act.
  • DPDP Act recognises government as a Data Fiduciary but gives itself broad exemptions under Section 17 — the state can exempt itself and its instrumentalities from the Act "in the interest of sovereignty and integrity of India, security of the state, friendly relations with foreign states, public order, or preventing incitement."
  • Data Protection Board of India: The adjudicatory body under the DPDP Act — not a court, but a statutory body under MeitY.
  • Civil society criticism: The amendment enables authorities to deny access to crucial government records — corruption, illegal assets, nepotism — by categorising them as "personal data."

Connection to this news: The DPDP Act's Section 44(3) is the specific legal mechanism through which the RTI Act's transparency guarantee has been weakened — legal experts argue it violates the original legislative intent of both the RTI Act and Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution.

Central Information Commission (CIC) — Institutional Health and Vacancies

The Central Information Commission (CIC), established under Section 12 of the RTI Act, is the apex appellate body for RTI disputes at the Central Government level. It comprises the Chief Information Commissioner (CIC) and up to 10 Information Commissioners, appointed by the President of India on the recommendation of a committee comprising the Prime Minister (Chairperson), Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha, and a Union Cabinet Minister nominated by the PM. Vacancies in the CIC delay second appeals and complaints, creating a pendency crisis that functionally denies citizens their RTI rights.

  • CIC legal basis: Section 12, RTI Act, 2005.
  • Appointment committee: Prime Minister (Chair), Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha, Union Cabinet Minister nominated by PM (Section 12(3)).
  • RTI (Amendment) Act, 2019: Changed the tenure of Information Commissioners — previously fixed at 5 years; now "such term as the Central Government may prescribe" — giving the Centre more control over tenure, raising independence concerns.
  • Girish Ramchandra Deshpande v. CIC (2013): SC held service records and property details of officials are ordinarily private but disclosure can be ordered when accountability demands it — the balance the DPDP amendment has now upset.
  • 2nd Administrative Reforms Commission (2nd ARC, 2005-09, chaired by Veerappa Moily): Recommended strengthening CIC with enforcement powers and suo motu disclosure mandates.
  • Growing pendency: Thousands of second appeals pending at CIC due to unfilled vacancies — effectively making the RTI right unenforceable in practice.

Connection to this news: The institutional weakening of the CIC (through vacancy accumulation and diluted tenure protections under the 2019 amendment) compounds the legislative weakening via the DPDP Act — a two-pronged erosion of the RTI framework that experts warn is systematically undermining accountability.

Key Facts & Data

  • RTI Act: Enacted June 15, 2005; came into force October 12, 2005.
  • DPDP Act, 2023: Section 44(3) amends RTI Section 8(1)(j) — removes public interest override for personal information.
  • RTI (Amendment) Act, 2019: Changed Information Commissioners' fixed 5-year term to Central Government-determined term.
  • CIC composition: Chief Information Commissioner + up to 10 Information Commissioners (Section 12, RTI Act).
  • Appointment authority: President of India, on recommendation of PM-led committee.
  • Girish Ramchandra Deshpande v. CIC (2013): SC on privacy vs accountability balance for public officials.
  • Opposition to DPDP-RTI amendment: 30+ civil society groups, 130 opposition MPs.
  • Section 4, RTI Act: Mandates proactive disclosure of 17 categories of information (suo motu).
  • Constitutional basis of RTI: Article 19(1)(a) (freedom of speech and expression, including right to information).