1) The right course is to do nothing. The judgment is perfectly sound
and should be appreciated.
2) The wrong course.is to file a curative petition.
3) The perfect course is to assail the bloody Union of CICs+SICs. The
way they work is that CIC and a few SICs like Karnataka, AP, P&H etc
have "federated" to muck up the RTI Act. The CIC doesn't show its hand
because most of their cases get appealed to Delhi High Court & SC with
strong opponents (like immodest me) who don't allow them to get away.
But, if some poor appellant from Manipur who cant afford a senior
advocate in SC or come in person for every hearing is the opponent,
then the RTI movement / Act gets screwed.
Unfortunately, we (the opponents) never unite, so "they" keep on
getting gift horses like this from the SC.
Sarbajit
On Dec 14, 6:20 pm, "M.K. Gupta" <mkgupta...@yahoo.co.in> wrote:
> U have not minced words while giving your reaction. Every body does not possess that courage. This does not mean that every body feels that it is a shocking nonsense but if some body else feels like that, may not gather courage to display his feelings.
>
> The right course will be to go to the SC again in review etc. on the ground of error of facts and law.
>
> ________________________________
> From: jaiprakash narain <col...@yahoo.co.in>
> To: "humjanenge@googlegroups.com" <humjanenge@googlegroups.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, 13 December 2011 7:49 PM
> Subject: Re: [HumJanenge] SC rules that Info Commission cannot order disclosure of information under Sec 18
>
> It is shocking nonsense.
>
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