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The advice of the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) to national carrier Air India, effectively barring it from sharing information regarding the prime minister's charter flights with RTI applicants, has come under scrutiny.
Speaking to The Quint, former Information Commissioner Shailesh Gandhi said that the advice has no legal basis and that Air India is under no compulsion to follow it.
The December 2016 directive, sent to Air India via email, came to light in March 2018 — when the airline denied information to an RTI applicant, Retired Commodore Lokesh Batra, attaching the PMO's email.
According to the PMO's directive, information regarding the PM's air travel cannot be disclosed via RTI applications under clause (g) of Section 8 (1) of the RTI Act. An RTI applicant can be denied under the said clause if it endangers the life of a person.
Batra, however, says he cannot understand how information pertaining to only dates of the invoices of his foreign trips endangers the prime minister.
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Air India, on the other hand, told Batra on 21 March, that their hands are tied.
Batra had earlier filed an RTI with the PMO, regarding bills raised on the PM’s foreign trips. Citing the same clause (g) under Section 8(1), the PMO had declined information to the applicant.
However, Batra approached the Central Information Commission (CIC), which ordered PMO to comply.
Shailesh Gandhi, former Information Commissioner with the CIC, says that the PMO’s stand is completely flawed.
Gandhi further alleges that “such an advise from the PMO is not as per the law,” and asserts that “Air India is under no compulsion follow such advise.”
Batra says that he has asked Air India to reconsider its decision or else he will take the matter to the CIC. “You need to follow the law of the land and not get influenced by any external instructions. In any case, my RTI has not asked for any documents but information on dates which even PMO, MoCA & MEA are providing. I request you to think over and send me a final response before I file a case with the CIC,” Batra wrote to Air India.
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