http://news.in.msn.com/exclusives/it/article.aspx?cp-documentid=250160299#page=1
  
  Updated: Fri, 15 Jun 2012 18:24:00 GMT | By Damayanti Datta, IndiaToday
  
  Meet the young RTI brigade of India
  
  Students across India are digging up administrative dirt to look for
  truth and to ensure justice through the Right to Information Act.
  
  It was a pleasant February morning in Lucknow. Class V students of the
  City Montessori School at Rajajipuram were reading a chapter on
  Mahatma Gandhi. A hand went up. A girl with hair tied in a ponytail
  asked: 'Who gave him the title Father of the Nation?' Aishwarya
  Parashar, 10, was known to ask bright questions but this time she
  flummoxed the adults around her. Not one to let go of an idea, she
  planned to tap a zillion sources, including the Prime Minister. She
  approached him via the Right to Information (RTI) Act on February 13
  to make sure she received an answer.
  
  Parashar, who has been using the RTI Act since the age of seven, is
  the youngest face in a growing brigade of information warriors. While
  their classmates compete in cramming, they keep their date with
  judges. They may stand out in government offices with their books and
  bags, but the young crusaders take on the system for anything and
  everything-inedible hostel food to corruption in ration shops- looking
  for truth and ensuring justice. As Harshavardhan Reddy, a 22-year-old
  engineering student who has 300 RTI applications to his credit, says,
  'It's very effective. You just need to be fearless and patient.' Often
  expelled from schools or colleges, confronted by angry neighbours or
  authorities or pressured by family, they dig up administrative dirt
  with great glee. 'I get all charged up when I think of myself as an
  RTI activist,' says Hyderabad student K.N. Sai Kumar, 21, who has
  filed over 20 RTIs.
  
  Although written on school notebook paper in a childish hand,
  Parashar's letter could not be dismissed by the nation's top office as
  a display of little-girl feistiness. It was a flawless RTI
  application, as legally binding and enforceable as any. As the letter
  changed hands between the Prime Minister's Office, the home ministry
  and the National Archives, a national secret leaked out: Despite
  continual mention in textbooks, Gandhi was never officially conferred
  the honorific Father of the Nation. Parashar was told on March 26 that
  there were no documents on the information she sought but she was
  welcome to visit the archives and look for it herself. 'I thought I
  was asking a simple question,' she says.
  
  Since 2005, the RTI Act has built an impressive trajectory. In an era
  of global youth rebellion, it seems to be opening up new space for
  India's young to demand people's right to know. New student protests
  are developing into challenging movements around the world: From
  Athens to Rome, San Francisco to London, the Arab Spring to the
  Chilean Winter. The young RTI activists too demand another way to run
  the world, but theirs is no rock-and-tear gas fight with the state.
  They prefer to work within the rule of law, engage with their
  communities and demand change not just in their personal lives, but
  for good governance and against corruption in the wider society.
  
  (Continued)
  
  http://news.in.msn.com/exclusives/it/article.aspx?cp-documentid=250160299#page=2
  
  'It's a very encouraging sign,' says Nikhil Dey of National Campaign
  for People's Right to Information (NCPRI), which began the RTI
  campaign in India. 'We go to schools and notice a high level of
  awareness on the RTI law. There are also many progressive schools that
  have started RTI clubs.' NCPRI often gets to know about young people
  who have filed an RTI application on behalf of family or friends. To
  Kamal Mitra Chenoy, head of the Centre for Comparative Politics at
  Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi, the trend turns on its head the
  widespread characterisation of today's young people as disinterested
  and self-centred. 'With civil society activists using the RTI route to
  unearth scams and corruption, every young person wishes to be a
  change-maker. And they are smart enough to have figured out that the
  system works through legal, civic engagement.'
  
  Bhadresh Vamja, 18, of Saldi, Gujarat, took to RTI to do something for
  his village. Thanks to him, the Gujarat government passed an order in
  April making it compulsory for all fair price shops in the state to
  disclose details of all rations received and stocked in stores. It all
  started last year, when the BCom student of Shri Vivek Vidhya Vikas
  Commerce College started asking why the two fair price shops in his
  village always refused ration to villagers. He filed an application on
  February 11, 2011, with the tehsildar to get details of supplies sent
  to the shops every month. With villagers rallying round him and advice
  from an NGO in Ahmedabad, Vamja started a crusade, filing a series of
  RTIs and police complaints, until the shopkeepers were brought in line
  and full supplies restored.
  
  Often, personal battles turn into public crusades. For Harshavardhan
  Reddy, student of the MIT School of Government in Pune, RTI was
  initially a tool to undo a private injustice: He was denied a passport
  for over two years for no reason. 'I first got to know about the RTI
  Act through a newspaper report in 2009 and decided to try it out for
  myself,' he says. 'I lodged an RTI, dragged the police to the consumer
  forum undeterred by their threats, argued my own case in court for six
  months until I was granted a passport.' Reddy has now filed for a
  range of causes: For poor farmers whose loans have been withheld by
  government-run banks, or who have not received birth certificates,
  title deeds of land or land record statements, to secure salary and
  compensation for labourers, against corrupt teachers or the polluting
  rice mill in his village, Karni in Andhra Pradesh. 'People come to me
  with their problems knowing I will do my best to help them,' he says.
  
  For Sai Kumar, it all started in 2011 after he filed two RTI
  applications to seek information on the functioning and funding of the
  government-aided school where he studied and his mother, K. Rukmini
  Bai, worked as a teacher. As a result, his mother was sacked without
  notice. He took up the battle and the school was forced to take her
  back in February. 'I used to be hot-headed and would get angry with
  every wrongdoing I came across,' says the final year BSc student of AV
  College, affiliated to Osmania University in Hyderabad. 'My RTI
  experience in the last few months has made me more balanced. Fighting
  corruption is now a passion for me and I am working on rti queries
  relating to the Right to Education.'
  
  But the road for RTI activists is not easy. As Nikhil Dey points out,
  'Framing an RTI application can be quite complicated for a newcomer.'
  If the information is incomplete, then one has to apply again, pursue
  it and also get the backing of lawyers and judges. According to the
  RTI Ground Realities Survey conducted by the Consumer Unity & Trust
  Society in 2010, only 32 per cent people know that an application can
  be filed on plain paper, 27 per cent about the fees, 14 per cent about
  the mandatory response time of 30 days. Moreover, RTI activists often
  wage a lonesome and dangerous battle, over 50 having paid with life
  for their courage since 2005. 'It is always difficult for anyone who
  raises important questions. But young people are mostly on safer
  ground as they raise questions on broader civic issues,' adds Dey
  
  (Continued)
  
  http://news.in.msn.com/exclusives/it/article.aspx?cp-documentid=250160299#page=3
  
  For many, like Parashar, there is usually an activist parent in the
  background, inspiring or urging the child to seek information through
  the RTI Act. In September 2009, it was the peak of the swine flu
  pandemic and Parashar, in Class III then, got agitated over a garbage
  dump right in front of her school. Her mother Urvashi Sharma, a social
  worker and RTI activist, helped process her application to the Chief
  Minister's Office (CMO) to remove it. A month later, when another RTI
  application was made to get the status of her request, the CMO told
  that her application was lost. A third RTI was filed to the CMO,
  seeking information on the officer who misplaced the application. 'I
  haven't heard from them but the garbage was removed and that land was
  handed over to my school, which set up a public library,' says
  Parashar.
  
  For others, like 18-year-old Mobashshir Sarwar of Delhi, RTI can
  become a nightmare. On a collision course with his school affiliated
  to Jamia Millia Islamia, in the last two years, he has been expelled
  and even barred from taking his Class XII exams. Sarwar has retaliated
  by dragging the school to court. The bone of contention has been the
  100-odd rtis he filed seeking information on sensitive issues: Expense
  ledgers, teacher appointments, by-laws to hostel food. 'The director
  called me the 'habitual information seeker',' says the bespectacled
  boy. 'I was asking too many uncomfortable questions.' When pleas to
  the authorities went unheard, he was forced to file a writ petition in
  the Delhi High Court on March 18, 2011. 'Later, the court asked the
  school what the trigger was and they alleged misconduct, misuse of RTI
  to defame. Would there be anything to defame if they were honest and
  going by the book?' he adds.
  
  The collateral damage was extensive, too, for Sarwar. Earlier this
  year, while his peers were busy preparing for their final
  examinations, the boy from Madhepura, Bihar, was running from pillar
  to post to get permission to take his exams. 'They said I had low
  attendance, when I actually attended classes regularly,' he says. That
  led to another writ petition against the school and he was granted
  permission only on the eve of the exam. 'It was sheer harassment,' he
  says. In the last two years, he endured relentless humiliation,
  physical assaults and even death threats. It amused him when a dozen
  guards followed him around whenever he went to school. 'I get security
  like Rahul Gandhi and the Prime Minister.' His parents, Sarwar Asmi
  and Nusrat Bano, provided support and encouragement. When the school
  expelled him, his father advised him to go to court. His only regret
  was that he lost out on friends due to the run-ins with his school;
  'Everybody is scared to even hang out with me.'
  
  To the young crusaders, the charm of RTI far outstrips the dangers. It
  allows them to break the monotony of everyday life and dream of
  leaving behind a legacy. For some, RTI activism is a great learning
  experience. 'I've been to court so many times that I know all about
  procedures and laws,' says Sarwar, who is preparing for law school
  entrance exams. Vamja has filed over 25 RTI applications through a
  youth group he runs to help villagers understand their rights. 'RTI
  makes them learn new subjects every day,' he says. For some, the RTI
  Act is all about giving back to society. 'What's the point if we can't
  do good for people,' asks Sarwar. Parashar wants to be like Mahatma
  Gandhi, her role model. 'I want to study medicine and serve the
  poor,'she says. Sai Kumar feels RTI has earned him the respect of his
  friends and teachers. The fact that people come to him with their
  problems gives Reddy a sense of purpose: 'They know I will do my best
  to help them'.
  
  Not so long ago, the nation bemoaned apathetic and disengaged
  students. It's time to rethink those assumptions. As Chenoy says, 'You
  have got an entire generation that realises something is wrong and
  something has to change.' They have the time, the energy, the will,
  the wherewithal and the right to improve quality of life for
  themselves and for others. The RTI Act is giving them the space,
  support and recognition that they need.
  
  - With Ashish Misra, Shravya Jain, Aditi Pai, Mona Ramavat, Devika Chaturvedi
  
  Source: www.indiatoday.in
  
Saturday, June 16, 2012
[rti4empowerment] Meet the young RTI brigade of India:MSN News:Updated: Fri, 15 Jun 2012 18:24:00 GMT | By Damayanti Datta, IndiaToday
__._,_.___
                                                          .
  __,_._,___
      
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

 
No comments:
Post a Comment