blog:rti-against-government-officer-no-retaliation
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| + | ====== RTI against a government officer — can they retaliate? ====== | ||
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| + | **Legally, no. A public servant cannot retaliate against an RTI applicant — Section 6(2) of the RTI Act bars the PIO from even asking the applicant' | ||
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| + | {{page> | ||
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| + | ===== The question behind the question ===== | ||
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| + | Before explaining the law, name the fear. Most RTI applicants hesitate on one of three axes: | ||
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| + | - **"The officer will know it was me — and might do something." | ||
| + | - **"My name is public — can a private party file a complaint / harassment case?" | ||
| + | - **" | ||
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| + | All three are addressable. None is law-grounded. Read on. | ||
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| + | ===== Layer 1 — §6(2): the no-motive rule ===== | ||
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| + | Section 6(2) of the RTI Act is one of the Act's foundational protections. It reads: | ||
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| + | > //An applicant making request for information shall not be required to give any reason for requesting the information or any other personal details except those that may be necessary for contacting him.// | ||
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| + | What this means in practice: | ||
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| + | * A PIO **cannot ask** why you want the information. | ||
| + | * A PIO **cannot reject** an RTI on grounds of perceived motive (" | ||
| + | * If a PIO does either of the above, that is itself grounds for First Appeal and §20 complaint. | ||
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| + | ===== Layer 2 — §20: personal penalty on the PIO ===== | ||
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| + | If a PIO obstructs, withholds, or retaliates, the **Rs 250/day penalty falls on the PIO personally** (not the department). §20 triggers include: | ||
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| + | * Refusing to receive your application | ||
| + | * Demanding unreasonable fees | ||
| + | * Providing misleading or incomplete information | ||
| + | * Destroying records | ||
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| + | This is a powerful deterrent. Most PIOs take it seriously because the money comes from their own salary. | ||
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| + | → **[[: | ||
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| + | ===== Layer 3 — Whistleblowers Protection Act, 2014 ===== | ||
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| + | If your RTI is adjacent to a corruption complaint (and you've flagged it as such under the Act), the **Whistleblowers Protection Act, 2014** kicks in: | ||
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| + | * Your identity is protected by the complaint-receiving authority (CVC, Lokpal, State Vigilance Commission). | ||
| + | * Retaliatory action — dismissal, transfer, suspension, denial of service — is actionable. | ||
| + | * The Act applies to **both government employees AND citizens**. | ||
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| + | If you are an insider (whistleblower against your own department), | ||
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| + | ===== Layer 4 — §8(1)(g) identity protection ===== | ||
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| + | If disclosure of **your** identity as the RTI applicant could endanger your life or safety — for example, you're filing an RTI against an organised criminal, a violent local leader — **§8(1)(g) protects** the identity of: | ||
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| + | > //the identity of a source of information or assistance given in confidence for law enforcement or security purposes// | ||
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| + | This is usually invoked to protect **informants to law enforcement**, | ||
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| + | ===== Layer 5 — Article 21 + writ jurisdiction ===== | ||
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| + | If a public servant actually retaliates — illegal transfer, denial of service, filing of false counter-complaints — your constitutional remedy is: | ||
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| + | * **Article 21** — the right to life and liberty, which courts have read to include freedom from arbitrary State action | ||
| + | * **Article 14** — arbitrary / mala fide State action is void | ||
| + | * **Writ petition under Article 226** to the High Court — the fastest remedy | ||
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| + | Indian High Courts have routinely set aside punitive transfers / suspensions where the link to RTI activism was demonstrated. | ||
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| + | ===== When you genuinely should worry ===== | ||
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| + | Honest: the law is strong, but three situations merit extra care. | ||
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| + | ==== 1. You work in the same department ==== | ||
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| + | If your RTI is against your own department / your superior, the combination of organisational loyalty and proximity creates practical risk. Use the Whistleblowers Protection Act path, file anonymously where possible, and retain written records of every interaction. Consider seeking legal counsel before filing. | ||
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| + | ==== 2. You are in a rural area where the officer has local influence ==== | ||
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| + | A Patwari or local SHO with village-level connections may not " | ||
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| + | ==== 3. You are a serving government employee filing against colleagues ==== | ||
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| + | Same department = same appraisal chain + overlapping service context. Use the WP Act's channel. Do not file under your own name if the matter is sensitive; the Act allows anonymous complaints to the nodal commission. | ||
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| + | ===== What does NOT constitute " | ||
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| + | * A PIO issuing a §7(8)(i) **reasoned rejection** on a valid §8 sub-clause. That's lawful exercise of the statute, not retaliation. | ||
| + | * A PIO invoking §7(3) to ask for additional fee. Lawful. | ||
| + | * A PIO invoking §6(3) to transfer to another authority. Lawful. | ||
| + | * A higher officer reading your RTI carefully and tightening compliance thereafter. Positive, not retaliation. | ||
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| + | ===== What DOES constitute retaliation — legal triggers ===== | ||
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| + | * Any service-level adverse action **caused by** the RTI — transfer, suspension, denial of leave, withheld promotion, salary cut. | ||
| + | * **False counter-complaints** — obstruction of justice / defamation cases filed without factual basis. | ||
| + | * **Denial of other public services** to you or your family in linked ways (passport, caste certificate, | ||
| + | * **Physical threats / visits** — criminal actionable under IPC regardless of motive. | ||
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| + | **Document each incident immediately**: | ||
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| + | ===== The big picture — why retaliation is rarer than feared ===== | ||
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| + | Commissions treat §20 penalty as a real consequence. Courts treat retaliatory action as arbitrary. Most PIOs know this. | ||
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| + | In our own observation over 20 years of RTI practice: **thousands of RTIs filed against specific officers; a handful of actual retaliation cases make it to the writ courts; almost all are reversed**. The social fear exceeds the legal reality. | ||
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| + | **That said**: if your RTI is sensitive and you have specific reason to expect retaliation, | ||
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| + | ===== Your checklist — filing an RTI that touches a specific officer ===== | ||
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| + | - **Keep a clean record of your request.** Acknowledgement slip, POD, registration number — all retained. | ||
| + | - **File through rtionline.gov.in for Central matters** — the trail is tamper-proof digital, not paper at a department counter. | ||
| + | - **Use the State portal / post** for State matters where online is not an option; never in-person submission to the same officer you're seeking information about. | ||
| + | - **Ask for documents, not opinions** — §2(f) coverage is strong for records; weak for "why did X do Y". | ||
| + | - **Keep copies of the original RTI + receipt**. If the file is " | ||
| + | - **Consider a family-member proxy** — the RTI can be filed by any citizen; you don't have to be the named applicant in sensitive scenarios. | ||
| + | - **If the information concerns a specific officer' | ||
| + | - **If retaliation occurs**: document within 24 hours, preserve evidence, file First Appeal + complaint with CVC / State Vigilance + consult counsel on writ. | ||
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| + | ===== Related ===== | ||
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| + | * **[[: | ||
| + | * **[[: | ||
| + | * **[[: | ||
| + | * **[[: | ||
| + | * **[[: | ||
| + | * **[[: | ||
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| + | ---- | ||
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| + | //Posted: 22 April 2026 · Author: Shrawan Pathak, Editor RTI Wiki// | ||
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| + | ~~NOCACHE~~ | ||
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| + | {{tag> | ||
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