City
Epaper

Punjab Information Commission disposes of 75 second appeals

By IANS | Updated: November 13, 2025 17:45 IST

Chandigarh, Nov 13 In a significant decision, the Punjab State Information Commission has disposed of 75 second appeals ...

Open in App

Chandigarh, Nov 13 In a significant decision, the Punjab State Information Commission has disposed of 75 second appeals filed by a single appellant, Gurmej Lal, of Ludhiana, for seeking voluminous and unspecific information from multiple public authorities across the state.

Commission Chairman Inderpal Singh Dhanna said Information Commissioner Sandeep Singh Dhaliwal, while pronouncing the order, observed that the appellant had been granted multiple opportunities to reframe his Right to Information (RTI) applications in a specific and point-wise manner as per the provisions of the RTI Act, 2005.

However, despite repeated directions issued through several interim orders, the appellant failed to comply.

The commission noted that the appellant's RTI applications were largely template-based, containing repetitive and non-specific queries, which not only involved third-party records but also required collation of extensive data across departments.

Such demands were found to be in violation of Section 7 (9) of the RTI Act, which prevents the disclosure of information that would disproportionately divert the resources of a public authority.

Expressing concern, the commission highlighted that such indiscriminate use of the RTI mechanism causes unwarranted burden on offices of Public Information Officers (PIOs) and unnecessarily consumes the time of the commission.

This, in turn, delays the adjudication of genuine appeals and increases pendency, thereby defeating the very spirit of transparency and accountability envisaged under the RTI Act.

The commission emphasised that the Right to Information is a tool for transparency, not for harassment.

Applicants are expected to seek information that is clear, specific, and directly related to their grievance or public interest.

Misuse of the law by filing hundreds of vague and bulky applications only serves to obstruct the system rather than strengthen it.

Concluding the proceedings, Information Commissioner Sandeep Singh Dhaliwal observed that the order should serve as a lesson for RTI seekers to exercise their rights responsibly and judiciously, respecting both the intent of the law and the administrative resources of public authorities.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalTrump says second phase of Gaza peace plan to begin "as quickly as we can" as he hosts Netanyahu at Mar-a-Lago

Entertainment"This song is from them to humans": Mohit Chauhan dedicates his song 'Meri Aawaaz' to street dogs

InternationalDefence Secy holds talks with Vietnam Envoy on defence cooperation initiatives

EntertainmentAkshay Kumar knocked out by wife Twinkle Khanna's kick? Check out Khiladi Kumar's hilarious birthday wish for his wife

EntertainmentRekha expresses her love for Agastya Nanda at 'Ikkis' screening

National Realted Stories

NationalAbhishek Banerjee welcomes ECI's decision to conduct SIR hearings at residences of select categories of voters

NationalNITI Aayog report on globalisation of higher education lauds Gujarat's early push through GBU

NationalKarnataka: Man shoots self dead after domestic dispute

NationalBJP, Shiv Sena finalise 137-90 seat-sharing formula for BMC polls

NationalBengal SIR exercise: ECI identifies select categories of voters whose hearings will be done at residences