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NGOs Getting Substantial Funding From Govt Come Under RTI Act: SC

The top court said the RTI Act was enacted with the purpose of bringing transparency in public dealings.

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Non-Government Organisations (NGOs) receiving substantial financing from the government are bound to give information to the public under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, the Supreme Court held on Tuesday, 17 September.

The top court said that institutions like schools, colleges and hospitals which receive substantial aid from the government both directly or indirectly in the form of land at discounted rate are also bound to give information to the citizens under the RTI Act.

A bench of Justices Deepak Gupta and Aniruddha Bose said, “If NGOs or other bodies get substantial finance from the Government, we find no reason why any citizen cannot ask for information to find out whether his/her money which has been given to an NGO or any other body is being used for the requisite purpose or not.”

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The top court said the RTI Act was enacted with the purpose of bringing transparency in public dealings and probity in public life.

“We have no hesitation in holding that an NGO substantially financed, directly or indirectly, by funds provided by the appropriate government would be a public authority amenable to the provisions of the Act,” it said.

The bench was dealing with an issue on whether NGOs substantially financed by the government fall within the ambit of 'public authority' under provisions of the Right to Information Act, 2005.

Several schools and colleges and associations running these educational institutions have moved the apex court claiming that NGOs are not covered under the RTI Act.

The bench said that the bodies and NGOs mentioned in the Act as 'public authority' are in addition to those established or constituted by or under the Constitution; by any other law made by Parliament; by any other law made by state legislature and by notification issued or order made by the appropriate government.

“While giving a purposive interpretation, a court is required to place itself in the chair of the legislature or author of the statute”, it said and added that the provision should be construed in such a manner to ensure that the object of the Act is fulfilled.

Clarifying the legal position, the bench said that a society which may not be owned or controlled by the government, may be an NGO but if it is substantially financed directly or indirectly by the government it would fall within the ambit of the provisions of the RTI Act.

Dealing with the “substantial financing” aspect, the bench said that it does not necessarily have to mean a major portion or more than 50 percent and no hard and fast rule can be laid down in this regard.

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