Direct answer. RTI applications by activists, journalists, and ordinary citizens have triggered scam investigations, forced billion-rupee disclosures, reshaped constitutional debates, and produced direct relief for millions. This index collects 8 landmark cases — fully sourced and explained — to show exactly what a single ₹10 application can accomplish.
The RTI Act, 2005 is 21 years old. In that time, India's transparency landscape has been irreversibly changed by people who asked governments uncomfortable questions on a ₹10 postal order. This index collects the cases that demonstrate the Act at its most powerful — not as legal theory, but as documented, sourced journalism and litigation.
Each case-study page answers the same set of questions: who filed, what they asked, what the authority replied, what journalism and litigation followed, and what it means for you as a citizen.
These RTIs forced public authorities to disclose information they had actively concealed:
These RTIs uncovered wrongdoing and directly triggered investigations or penalties:
These RTIs produced investigative stories cited widely in Indian media:
This case shows RTI as direct leverage for personal redress:
Every case on this page started with a citizen asking a specific question of a specific public authority, paying ₹10 (or nothing), and waiting 30 days. The outcomes — Supreme Court judgments, chief ministers' resignations, parliamentary debates, crore-level spending disclosures — were not planned. They followed from documents that the RTI Act obligated the government to provide.
Your RTI may not change the Constitution. But if you are owed pension records, your EPF is stuck, your ration card was cancelled, or you suspect contractor fraud on a road near your house — the same Act, the same ₹10, the same 30-day clock applies.
No. Most RTI applications produce mundane but essential results — a pension record, a mutation file, a contractor bill. The cases on this page are the landmark 1% that shaped national discourse. They are included here to demonstrate the ceiling of what the Act makes possible, not to imply that every RTI will trigger a scam investigation.
Yes. The information disclosed in court or by the Election Commission is now public. But you can file your own RTI to get granular data not in the public record — for example, the specific party-wise Electoral Bond redemption figures from the ECI's published data, or bond sale schedules from the SBI.
The CIC publishes all its decisions at cic.gov.in/CIC/decisions. Use the search function with the RTI applicant's name, the public authority name, or a keyword from the case.