Chennai:
Rights activists and civil society have welcomed the Central
Information Commission’s (CIC) ruling that political parties should come under
the ambit of Right to Information Act stating that it will usher in
transparency in the political system.
Coordinator of Tamil Nadu Election Watch and associate
professor of humanities in Indian Institute of Technology Sudarshan Padmanabhan
said that it is just the beginning and there is need to keep pressure on the
government to make it reality.
He rejected political leaders claims that the act will be
misused and said there are adequate checks and balances in the act. “There has
been lack of inner party democracy in the party besides parties entering into
murky financial dealings. Now this will all be probed by people,” he says.
RTI activist and National Alliance for People’s Movement
Arul Doss says the ruling gives more teeth to the act as well as empowers the
common man in questioning the running of political parties which control the
vital organs of the state.
Arul said the biggest challenge now is how to take it
forward and called for the formation of separate entity headed by apex court
judges and RTI activists to ensure that the political parties comply with the
ruling.
“Now one can question how the parties are generating funds
and what they are doing with it. This is a boon for RTI activists,” said Arul
Doss.
He also stated that CIC should also bring the private
entities under RTI.
Research scholar and RTI activist R Natrajan said that the
ruling would make parties cautious in nominating candidates with shady past.
“Since the political parties come within the ambit of RTI people will now be
trying to verify the background of each and every candidate nominated by the
party and whether they have any criminal antecedents,” said Natrajan.
He also hoped the parties would not challenge the order as
opposing it will earn them a bad name.
But Shankar K, a RTI activist and a assistant professor says
it is too early to predict whether this will become a reality. “The politicians
will try hard to scuttle the order. They may even take it to parliament so that
they can remain outside the purview of RTI,” he says.
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