blog:rti-against-government-officer
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| + | ====== Why You Should Not Fear Personal-Information RTI Queries — A Guide for Government Officers (2026) ====== | ||
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| + | <WRAP center round info 95%> | ||
| + | **In one line.** When an RTI application targets you personally — your attendance, the files you have signed, your tours, complaints against you — the law protects you with five layers: **§8(1)(j)** (personal information), | ||
| + | |||
| + | This guide explains, for each of the four most common hostile questions, what is legally disclosable, | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== The scenario — what is actually happening ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Somewhere in the last few months, you took a decision an applicant did not like. Perhaps you upheld a penalty. Perhaps you transferred them. Perhaps you refused a routine favour. Now an RTI application has landed at your department, and it is not asking about policy. It is asking about **you**. | ||
| + | |||
| + | * "On what dates did Officer XYZ come to office in January?" | ||
| + | * "List of all files signed by Officer XYZ in the last six months." | ||
| + | * "All tours undertaken by Officer XYZ at state expense since January 2024." | ||
| + | * "All complaints received against Officer XYZ from any source in the last five years." | ||
| + | |||
| + | The pattern is familiar. The applicant is converting the RTI Act into a **personal surveillance tool** or a **pre-FIR fishing expedition**. Many honest officers feel intimidated. Some begin to avoid taking decisions for fear of being " | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Do not.** The Right to Information Act, 2005 was never designed to be a weapon against individual officers performing lawful duties. The Supreme Court, multiple High Courts, and the Central Information Commission have consistently drawn that line. This guide shows you where the line sits. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== The five legal shields — a quick tour ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Shield 1: §8(1)(j) — personal information ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Post the **14 November 2025** amendment to §8(1)(j) by Section 44(3) of the **Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023**, the Act now reads: | ||
| + | |||
| + | >// | ||
| + | |||
| + | The internal " | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Foundational case.** //Girish Ramchandra Deshpande v. CIC & Ors.//, (2013) 1 SCC 212 — the Supreme Court held that service records of a public servant — including copies of memos, show-cause notices, orders of censure, details of assets, liabilities, | ||
| + | |||
| + | This line has been followed in //R.K. Jain v. UoI//, (2013) 14 SCC 794 (ACR only on public interest); //Canara Bank v. C.S. Shyam//, (2017) — transfer policy details; //Harish Chandra Dwivedi v. CIC// (Delhi HC) and a consistent line of CIC orders. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Shield 2: §11 — third-party procedure and your right to be heard ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | This is the most under-used, and most powerful, protection for an officer who is the subject of an RTI. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Section 11(1) requires that where a PIO intends to disclose information that relates to, or has been supplied by, a third party and has been treated as confidential by that third party, the PIO **must, within 5 days** of receipt of the RTI, give **written notice** to the third party. The third party has **10 days** to represent against disclosure. The PIO then decides, within a **40-day total** window, recording reasoning. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Skipping §11 is one of the most common grounds on which FAAs and SICs set aside PIO disclosures.** | ||
| + | |||
| + | * //C. Muniyappan v. State of Tamil Nadu// (Madras HC, 2013) — §11 notice is mandatory; skipping it is procedural illegality. | ||
| + | * //Kolkata Municipal Corporation v. WBIC// (Calcutta HC, 2016) — §11 is not optional for third-party data. | ||
| + | * //Arvind Kejriwal v. CPIO// (CIC, 2010) — the third party has a statutory right to object and to appeal. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **As the subject officer, you are a statutory third party.** When your name appears in an RTI, your PIO has a duty to issue you a §11 notice. If they do not, remind them. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Shield 3: §8(1)(g) — danger to life or physical safety ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | >// | ||
| + | |||
| + | When a hostile applicant asks for your **daily in-out timings**, your **daily vehicle route**, your **field-tour itinerary in real time**, or the **identity of witnesses who deposed against a local mafia**, the §8(1)(g) ground is live. The danger must be a " | ||
| + | |||
| + | * //Dayanand Saraswati v. CIC// — pattern-of-harassment evidence justifies §8(1)(g). | ||
| + | * Various CIC orders have upheld §8(1)(g) for whistleblowers in serious-crime investigations. | ||
| + | |||
| + | If you have reason to believe the applicant has a stalking, intimidation, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Shield 4: §8(1)(e) — fiduciary relationship (for evaluative records) ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | >// | ||
| + | |||
| + | For **evaluative records** — ACRs, APARs, integrity-certificates, | ||
| + | |||
| + | * //CBSE v. Aditya Bandopadhyay//, | ||
| + | * //ICAI v. Shaunak Satya//, (2011) 8 SCC 781 — examiner identity and model answers are fiduciary. | ||
| + | * //R.K. Jain v. UoI// (2013) — applies §8(1)(e) and §8(1)(j) jointly to ACR. | ||
| + | |||
| + | See **[[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Shield 5: §8(1)(h) — ongoing investigation, | ||
| + | |||
| + | >// | ||
| + | |||
| + | If there is a **departmental inquiry**, a **vigilance investigation**, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Bonus: §24 for Schedule-II agencies ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | If you are an officer in an organisation **listed in the Second Schedule** (IB, RAW, CBI, ED, NCB, listed state agencies), §24 exempts the entire organisation subject to the corruption / human-rights proviso. See [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Question by question — what you actually face ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Each question below maps the hostile RTI to the statutory position, the case law, and the PIO's correct response. These are the four most common hostile queries I have seen in twenty-five years of training PIOs. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Q1. "On what dates did Officer XYZ come to office?" | ||
| + | |||
| + | **What is clearly disclosable (aggregate, institutional): | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Gazetted holidays and working days** — already public. | ||
| + | * **Aggregate attendance statistic** — " | ||
| + | * **Casual leave / earned leave availed** — **not** disclosable as a named record per //Girish Deshpande// | ||
| + | |||
| + | **What is NOT disclosable (personal, invasive): | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Daily in-time and out-time** on a minute-by-minute basis — §8(1)(j) personal information. Unwarranted invasion of privacy, no meaningful public interest in real-time schedule. | ||
| + | * **Biometric log** with specific timings — the SC in // | ||
| + | * **Live / real-time location** — §8(1)(g) is activated. Even the question itself can be flagged as a safety-concern signal. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Case law anchor.** | ||
| + | |||
| + | * //Girish Ramchandra Deshpande// — service-records under §8(1)(j). | ||
| + | * //Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. UoI//, (2017) 10 SCC 1 — informational privacy and proportionality. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **PIO correct response.** Aggregate attendance with broad dates — disclosable. Specific in-out timings — declined under §8(1)(j), with the // | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Q2. "List of all files signed by Officer XYZ in the last six months." | ||
| + | |||
| + | **What is clearly disclosable: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Decision records once the decision is taken and matter is complete** — per **//R.K. Jain v. UoI//, (2013) 14 SCC 794** (file-notings post-decisional) and **//Treesa Irish v. CPIO// (Kerala HC, 2010)** — file-notings are part of the record under §2(i). | ||
| + | * **Signed orders, sanction memos, and formal decisions** — these are the public authority' | ||
| + | * **Specific files requested by number** — fair game, subject to §8(1) clause-wise analysis of each file. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **What is NOT disclosable: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **"All files" blanket request without a specific file number or subject** — may fall under §7(9) (voluminous; | ||
| + | * **Signature specimen, handwriting, | ||
| + | * **Notes / annotations that form part of ongoing investigations** — §8(1)(h). | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Case law anchor.** | ||
| + | |||
| + | * //R.K. Jain v. UoI//, (2013) 14 SCC 794 — post-decisional file-noting disclosability; | ||
| + | * //Treesa Irish v. CPIO// (Kerala HC, 2010) — file-noting is within §2(i). | ||
| + | |||
| + | **PIO correct response.** Ask the applicant to specify file numbers or subjects; offer inspection of the file-movement register for identified files; redact third-party personal data under §10; record §8(1)(j) reasoning for any " | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Q3. "All tours undertaken by Officer XYZ at state expense." | ||
| + | |||
| + | **What is clearly disclosable: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Official tour programme** — date, destination, | ||
| + | * **Tour diary filed with the establishment section** — yes for official purposes and expenditure. | ||
| + | * **TA / DA claims** submitted and sanctioned — yes as aggregate expenditure records (redact personal bank details). | ||
| + | |||
| + | **What is NOT disclosable: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Medical leave or personal leave destinations** — §8(1)(j); these are not " | ||
| + | * **Real-time or future tour itinerary** — §8(1)(g), obvious safety concern. | ||
| + | * **Hotel room numbers, private-meeting details** — §8(1)(j). | ||
| + | * **Family members accompanying (if officially permissible)** — §8(1)(j) as to family names. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Case law anchor.** | ||
| + | |||
| + | * //Subhash Chandra Agrawal v. CPIO, Supreme Court of India//, (2020) — public-expenditure records on judges' | ||
| + | * //Namit Sharma v. UoI//, (2013) 1 SCC 745 — exemptions narrow, transparency presumption strong on public expenditure. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **PIO correct response.** Disclose official tour records with destinations, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Q4. "All complaints against Officer XYZ from any source in the last five years." | ||
| + | |||
| + | **This is the most sensitive category.** The rule is multi-layered. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **What is clearly disclosable: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Complaints that have been adjudicated and closed, with findings in favour of the officer** — but anonymised at complainant level. The finding itself (exoneration) is a public record and is usually beneficial to the officer to disclose. | ||
| + | * **Complaints that led to a penalty or order** — the order itself is a public record under §4(1)(d) (reasons for quasi-judicial / administrative decisions). | ||
| + | * **Aggregate number of complaints closed without action** — institutional statistic. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **What is NOT disclosable: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Anonymous / unsubstantiated complaints** — §8(1)(j); some complaints carry baseless allegations, | ||
| + | * **Pending inquiry files** — §8(1)(h); disclosure would impede investigation. | ||
| + | * **Vigilance register entries with allegations untested on facts** — §8(1)(e) (fiduciary) + §8(1)(j) (personal). | ||
| + | * **Complainant' | ||
| + | * **Internal noting suggesting suspicion against an individual** — §8(1)(h) during the live phase; §8(1)(j) if never escalated. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Case law anchor.** | ||
| + | |||
| + | * //Girish Ramchandra Deshpande//, | ||
| + | * //Union Public Service Commission v. GS Sandhu// and similar CIC orders — protecting evaluative / interrogatory material. | ||
| + | * //CVC Manual// — treatment of anonymous complaints; used as a reference for SLA-based non-action. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **PIO correct response.** Adjudicated outcomes — disclosable (often favourable to officer). Pending inquiries — §8(1)(h) + §8(1)(e). Anonymous / untested allegations — §8(1)(j) + §8(1)(g) where a pattern of intimidation exists. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== What to do the moment you learn of the RTI — your five-step response ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 1. Verify that you received a §11 notice within 5 days ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | The PIO is required, under §11(1), to issue you a **written notice** of the RTI application within 5 days of receiving it. If you have not received one, ask your PIO whether the request involves your personal information, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 2. Within 10 days, file a written objection — use this template ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | < | ||
| + | To, | ||
| + | The Public Information Officer, | ||
| + | [Department / Directorate / Organisation] | ||
| + | [Address] | ||
| + | |||
| + | Subject: Representation under Section 11(3) of the RTI Act, 2005, | ||
| + | against the proposed disclosure of information that relates to me — | ||
| + | RTI Reference No. __________. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Sir / Madam, | ||
| + | |||
| + | I have received the Section 11(1) notice dated __________ intimating | ||
| + | the proposed disclosure of information that relates to the undersigned. | ||
| + | I represent, as the concerned third party under Section 11, that the | ||
| + | proposed disclosure be declined on the following specific grounds: | ||
| + | |||
| + | 1. Section 8(1)(j) — the queried information comprises personal | ||
| + | | ||
| + | | ||
| + | | ||
| + | Court in //Girish Ramchandra Deshpande v. CIC//, (2013) 1 SCC 212 | ||
| + | and the subsequent line of Supreme Court and High Court decisions. | ||
| + | |||
| + | 2. [Where applicable] Section 8(1)(g) — disclosure of the specific | ||
| + | | ||
| + | | ||
| + | | ||
| + | |||
| + | 3. [Where applicable] Section 8(1)(e) — the information is held in a | ||
| + | | ||
| + | | ||
| + | |||
| + | 4. [Where applicable] Section 8(1)(h) — there is an ongoing departmental | ||
| + | | ||
| + | | ||
| + | |||
| + | 5. The DPDP 2023 framework, and the principle of informational privacy | ||
| + | | ||
| + | | ||
| + | |||
| + | I request that the PIO record specific reasoning under Section 7(1) and | ||
| + | Section 8(1) for any part of the request that is declined, and apply | ||
| + | Section 10 severability where information can be partly disclosed. | ||
| + | |||
| + | In the event the PIO decides to disclose information, | ||
| + | right, as the third party, to file a First Appeal under Section 19(1). | ||
| + | |||
| + | Yours faithfully, | ||
| + | [Name] | ||
| + | [Designation] | ||
| + | [Date, Place] | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 3. Engage your PIO constructively — do not block, guide ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | The PIO is not adversarial to you. The PIO is a clerk with limited time and legal training. **Help the PIO give a correct, reasoned, appeal-proof order.** Supply: | ||
| + | |||
| + | * The case-law citations (listed above). | ||
| + | * The specific §8(1) clauses that apply. | ||
| + | * A clear indication of which parts can be severed and released under §10. | ||
| + | * A note on any safety concern, in writing, with evidence. | ||
| + | |||
| + | A one-page note with these points, handed to the PIO within 48 hours, usually results in a correct disclosure order that the applicant cannot easily overturn on appeal. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 4. If the PIO proposes to disclose — exercise your §19(1) right ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | A third party whose objection has been overruled can file a **First Appeal under §19(1)** within 30 days. This is identical in procedure to an applicant' | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Step 5. If the pattern suggests harassment — escalate beyond RTI ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Section 66E of the Information Technology Act, 2000** — violation of privacy (covers capture / transmission of private images; may apply where RTI is used to triangulate a personal surveillance pattern). | ||
| + | * **BNS, 2023 — Section 78** — stalking; pursuing a person in a manner that causes reasonable fear of safety can invoke criminal provisions even when the medium is paperwork. | ||
| + | * **Magistrate' | ||
| + | * **Writ petition** under Article 226 — citing // | ||
| + | * **Vigilance complaint** if the applicant is themselves an insider using RTI for malicious purposes. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== How to guide your PIO — a one-page ready reckoner ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Officers often ask me what to hand over to their PIO. Here it is. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Guidance note for the PIO (template) ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Apply §11 procedure strictly.** Issue notice within 5 days of the RTI. Wait 10 days for the third party to respond. Record in writing. | ||
| + | * **Identify the §8(1) clauses that apply.** Use §8(1)(j) for personal, §8(1)(g) for safety, §8(1)(e) for evaluative-fiduciary, | ||
| + | * **Record reasoning for each part.** The harm test must be specific, not formulaic. | ||
| + | * **Apply §10 severability.** If part of the record can be released — do so. Do not issue blanket refusals. | ||
| + | * **Anonymise third parties.** Complainant names, whistleblower identities, and family-member names should be redacted under §10. | ||
| + | * **Cite the case law.** //Girish Deshpande//, | ||
| + | * **Where §8(1)(g) is invoked, attach a threat assessment.** A two-sentence note is enough if the threat is documented (prior FIR, hostile correspondence, | ||
| + | * **Retain the denial order for appeal.** A well-reasoned §8(1) order usually survives the First Appeal and the Information Commission. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== How the organisation should respond — institutional SOP ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | A single hostile RTI is usually containable. A **pattern** of hostile RTIs across an organisation requires an institutional response. | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Establish a third-party-RTI review committee** — usually the Vigilance Officer + Head of Administration + senior legal officer — to review RTIs that target individuals rather than decisions. | ||
| + | * **Create a standardised §11-notice template** with attached citations, so every PIO issues a correct notice without re-inventing. | ||
| + | * **Train your PIOs on the // | ||
| + | * **Maintain a record of repeat applicants.** If one applicant files multiple RTIs naming specific officers, the pattern is an institutional fact. This is not a basis to refuse a lawful RTI, but it **is** a basis for the §8(1)(g) safety assessment and for a vigilance / legal response. | ||
| + | * **File Section 20 counter-proposals where the RTI is vexatious.** The Information Commission has invoked §20 against applicants found to have misused the RTI Act for harassment (rare but precedented — several CIC orders reference the rule). | ||
| + | * **Communicate the outcome to the named officer.** The officer whose name appeared in the RTI is entitled to know what was disclosed and what was refused. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Red flags — when an RTI is weaponised ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * Multiple RTIs in a short window, all naming the same officer. | ||
| + | * Progressively personal — attendance, then files, then tours, then family. | ||
| + | * Coincides with a disciplinary action, transfer, or complaint by the targeted officer. | ||
| + | * The applicant has a documented hostile history with the department. | ||
| + | * Questions are phrased like an FIR — "who, what, when, where, why" about the officer, not about government decisions. | ||
| + | * The applicant asks for information that would be obviously dangerous (real-time location, house address, family details). | ||
| + | |||
| + | When three or more of these red flags cluster, the organisation should **shift from routine §11 treatment to active legal protection** of the officer. This is entirely lawful and supported by the Supreme Court' | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Frequently asked ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q1. Can an RTI ask about my personal leave?** \\ Aggregate count yes; specific dates and destinations no — §8(1)(j). See // | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q2. Can an applicant see my APAR?** \\ Generally no — §8(1)(e) + §8(1)(j). Exception requires an overriding public interest, which is rarely met in individual-officer queries. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q3. Can an applicant demand a list of all files I have ever signed?** \\ The applicant can ask for specific files; a " | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q4. My attendance is on a biometric system — is the biometric log disclosable? | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q5. What if there is a vigilance complaint pending against me?** \\ §8(1)(h) applies during the inquiry; §8(1)(e) for the examiner / inquiry-officer record. Post-closure and order, the final order is a public document. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q6. Do I have to appear before the PIO or the FAA?** \\ You are not required to appear in person, but you may ask to be heard. The §11 procedure is in writing by default; hearings are discretionary and usually held only at Second Appeal before the SIC / CIC. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q7. What if the PIO goes ahead and discloses my information without §11 notice?** \\ File a complaint under **§18** of the RTI Act to the Information Commission and a **§19(1) First Appeal**. The procedural violation is a strong ground, per //C. Muniyappan// | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q8. Can the applicant be penalised for vexatious filing?** \\ The Act does not have a direct " | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q9. Is my home address ever disclosable under RTI?** \\ Virtually never. §8(1)(j) + §8(1)(g) together shield it. Even if you have given your home address to the employer, the RTI applicant has no public-interest basis to obtain it. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Q10. What if the applicant is a former colleague with a grudge?** \\ The law does not care about motive (§6(2) bars motive inquiry), but the **content** of the request is what is tested. Personal-surveillance content does not become lawful because the applicant has standing as a citizen; the exemptions apply regardless. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== The closing line ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | In twenty-five years of training PIOs, First Appellate Authorities, | ||
| + | |||
| + | Learn the five shields. Respect the §11 procedure. Cite the case law. Keep a paper trail. **Take your decisions fearlessly, and let the law do what it was written to do — protect you when you are right, and hold you accountable when you are wrong.** | ||
| + | |||
| + | The RTI Act is not your enemy. Weak PIO practice, and ignorance of your own statutory rights, are. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Related reading ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
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| + | |||
| + | ===== Sources and citations ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Statutes ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * Right to Information Act, 2005 — §§ 2(f), 2(i), 4, 8(1)(e), 8(1)(g), 8(1)(h), 8(1)(j), 10, 11, 19, 20, 24. | ||
| + | * Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 — §44(3), amending RTI §8(1)(j), effective 14 November 2025. | ||
| + | * Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 — §78 (stalking). | ||
| + | * Information Technology Act, 2000 — §66E (violation of privacy). | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Supreme Court ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * //Girish Ramchandra Deshpande v. Cen. Information Commr. & Ors.//, (2013) 1 SCC 212 — service records as §8(1)(j) personal information. | ||
| + | * //R.K. Jain v. Union of India & Anr.//, (2013) 14 SCC 794 — ACR disclosure only on overriding public interest. | ||
| + | * //Canara Bank v. C.S. Shyam & Anr.//, (2018) 11 SCC 426 — transfer-policy service-record privacy. | ||
| + | * //Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) & Anr. v. Union of India & Ors.//, (2017) 10 SCC 1 — fundamental right to privacy; proportionality test. | ||
| + | * //Central Board of Secondary Education v. Aditya Bandopadhyay//, | ||
| + | * //Institute of Chartered Accountants of India v. Shaunak Satya & Ors.//, (2011) 8 SCC 781 — examiner confidentiality. | ||
| + | * //Namit Sharma v. Union of India//, (2013) 1 SCC 745 — exemptions narrowly construed; transparency presumption. | ||
| + | * // | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== High Courts ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * //C. Muniyappan v. State of Tamil Nadu// (Madras HC, 2013) — §11 notice mandatory. | ||
| + | * //Kolkata Municipal Corporation v. WBIC// (Calcutta HC, 2016) — §11 compliance for municipal records. | ||
| + | * //Treesa Irish v. CPIO// (Kerala HC, 2010) — file-notings are part of §2(i) record. | ||
| + | * //Harish Chandra Dwivedi v. CIC// (Delhi HC) — §8(1)(j) applied to officer service records. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== CIC ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * Multiple orders of the CIC on §11 third-party procedure, §8(1)(j) applied to officer attendance / APAR / integrity certificates, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Author' | ||
| + | |||
| + | Based on twenty-five years of RTI practice, including training sessions delivered to Public Information Officers, First Appellate Authorities, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ---- | ||
| + | |||
| + | //Last reviewed: 21 April 2026.// | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{tag> | ||
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blog/rti-against-government-officer.txt · Last modified: by 127.0.0.1
