The Gujarat Information Commission’s annual report for 2024-25 presents a striking paradox: an institution that is technologically modernizing at a rapid pace, yet remains fundamentally undermined by the very government apparatus it is meant to hold accountable.
On paper, the numbers tell a story of busy efficiency. The Commission received 6,080 appeals and complaints, disposing of even more—6,413 cases. It leaned heavily into the digital age, conducting 419 hearings via video conference to spare citizens and officials the grind of travel, and pushing information out on social media platforms where it garnered over 3.4 lakh views. A high-profile RTI Week seminar, graced by the Chief Minister himself, suggested top-level political buy-in.
But peel back the veneer of activity, and a more troubling picture emerges. The report inadvertently exposes a systemic inertia that no amount of video conferencing can fix.
The most glaring issue is the sheer concentration of failure. A staggering 72% of all appeals and complaints received by the Commission come from just five departments: Panchayat, Urban Development, Revenue, Home, and Education. This isn't a random statistical blip; it's a chronic condition. It tells a story of citizens hitting a wall every time they try to pry information from the very offices that control their land records, housing schemes, and basic law and order. The fact that the Revenue and Panchayat departments alone account for nearly 40% of all complaints suggests that for the average Gujarati, the battle for transparency begins and ends at the talati’s desk.
Then there is the question of data integrity. The Commission relies on a state government portal where public authorities are supposed to upload their RTI statistics. The report’s own admission is damning: data is uploaded late, often after the annual report is published. For 2023-24, the number of applications was revised upwards by over 24% post-report submission.
This isn't a minor bookkeeping error; it renders the Commission’s own primary document unreliable. Despite the Commission’s follow-up, authorities in seven departments are still not fully compliant. It suggests a culture where meeting the letter of the law is secondary, and where the state’s own digital infrastructure for transparency is treated with casual disregard by those meant to feed it.
The toothlessness of the Commission’s punitive powers is also on display. Despite thousands of appeals, penalties were imposed on Public Information Officers in just 21 cases, totaling a mere ₹1.41 lakh. Whether this indicates near-perfect compliance or a high bar for punishment that is rarely met, the optics are clear: the cost of denying information remains negligible.
Perhaps the most telling section is the one where the Commission makes its recommendations. Many of these are not new. Year after year, it pleads with the government to make PIOs attend hearings personally instead of sending clueless substitutes. It begs for a proper system of record handover when officials are transferred, a basic administrative task whose failure directly spawns countless appeals. It points out that the state’s own online RTI portal is glitchy. Most critically, it reminds the government that a Supreme Court directive on proactive disclosure is still gathering dust, with its own proposal on the matter languishing under "active consideration."
In this light, the Gujarat Information Commission emerges not as a powerful watchdog, but as a persistent, well-meaning nag. It has built a modern, efficient platform for itself, but the view from that platform is of a sprawling administrative landscape where the old ways die hard.
The report is a chronicle of a battle where the Commission wins every skirmish—disposing of cases, uploading orders, holding seminars—but struggles to make progress in the larger war for a truly transparent administration. It is the story of a system where the enforcer is modern, but the enforced are stubbornly, systematically, stuck in the past.
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*Independent writer

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