Whistle Blowing Doc Final

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    WHISTLE BLOWING :- AN INDIAN PERSPECTIVE

    Submitted by

    Mohammad mudasser 09BM8024

    Amit Sarangal 09BM8082

    Ashish Doneria 09BM8013

    Sujit Singh 09BM8054

    Ravi Shankar 09BM8088

    Ravinder Pal Singh Dhillon 09BM8039

    Saurabh Kumar Gupta

    Anshul Bhatia 09BM8010

    Shilpa Gautam 09BM8085

    Renjith Peediackal 09BM8040

    Ravi Shankar (dual degree)

    Yash Vardhan Aggarwal 09BM8063

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    Whistle Blowing

    DEFINITION

    Whistle Blowing is a practice in which a person raises his voice and reports about the malpractices,fraud, misconduct, corruption in an organisation; usually after failing to remedy the matters from

    the inside, and at the cost of great personal risks. A person engaging in such an activity is called a

    Whistle blower and it requires a lot of courage on his part to bring out such matters. The individual,

    while reporting about the sensitive issues, might consider going out of the organisational hierarchy

    and complaining to the external agencies and public to get a positive action.

    The Concern here is how many amongst us would want to stand up against the corrupted system?

    Whistleblowing is not successful in india because of the risk associated such as the fear of being

    counter attacked by those in position

    y The loss of job & career,y Blackmailing & extortiony A threat to ones family or even his own life as in the case ofSatyendra Dubeyand S.

    Manjunathwho stood up against the prevailing corruption, and were murdered brutally.

    The two incidents mentioned above may be the ones who have caught the media attention. There

    would have been many incidents which might have gone unnoticed or the voices of the whistle

    blowers would have been quashed by paying them either intangible or tangible rewards. Instances

    of whistle blowers being punished, demoted, suspended are not rare.

    While whistleblowing is traditionally associated only with insiders, the RTI Act by democratizing

    access to information has made a potential whistleblower of every citizen and similarly susceptible

    to reprisal. The seriousness and persistence of these attacks necessitates protection for these

    activists, as well as systemic changes to ensure a favourable climate for activism for state

    accountability.

    The current set of proposed protections are inadequate for this purpose because they are targeted

    primarily at institutional reprisal (e.g., termination, delayed promotion). Other provisions such as

    confidentiality of whistleblowers identity do not apply or need innovative thinking to be feasible

    (e.g., direct physical protection). It is thus important to expand the current set of protections in a

    manner meaningful to the scattered army of activists across the country.

    US MEASURES ON WHISTLEBLOWING

    It is really important to consider the interest of the whistle blowers for an unadulterated system. It is

    evident that these people take a huge risk by exposing the corruption in the organisation. Protection

    Initiatives regarding the whistle blowers began in US by passing the U.S. Whistle Blowers Protect Act,

    1989. Later the U.S. Congress passed the Sarbanes Oxley Act granting legal protection to whistle

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    blowers in publicly traded companies and 10 years of imprisonment to anybody retaliating against

    them.

    Looking at the prevalent conditions in our country, enactment of the Whistle Blowers Protection Act

    is really important. India does not have a law to protect a whistle blower; however there is a Public

    Interest Disclosure Act, in which a person can file a complaint against any Central Employee or

    Central Government Institution to the Central Vigilance Commission. Sadly, the act is silent about

    the corporate whistle blowers.

    THE PUBLIC INTEREST DISCLOSURE ACT

    Main Provisions of The Public Interest Disclosure And Protection To Persons Making The Disclosures

    Bill, 2010

    Scope: The bill will apply to authorities and companies under Central and state government control

    and cover all public servants and ministers.

    Exclusions: Public servants of organizations referred in Article 33 (armed forces and intelligence);

    private companies and non-governmental organisations such as charities, trusts, voluntary

    organisations and similarly placed civil society organisations.

    NOTABLE DEFICIENCIES OF THE WHISTLEBLOWER BILL

    Limited Scope: The private sector, armed forces and intelligence agencies have been excluded. The

    private sector (including NGOs) is rapidly expanding both in terms of economic resources but also by

    becoming the primary/co-provider of citizen services (the State retreating in order to become the

    facilitator). Moreover current scandals such as Satyam, IPL etc show that corrupt practices are

    either already prevalent or gaining foothold in the Indian private sector as well

    Limited Application: Protection for the whistleblower will kick-in only after s/he makes a complaint.

    RTI activists who often come under threat just by virtue of filing an RTI application will not be

    covered unless they file a complaint. For a rural activist working for instance to expose corruption in

    NREGA, the state vigilance commissioner may not be easily accessible

    Narrow Definition of Permissible Disclosures:

    There is no catch-all phrase to define the principles (e.g., endangering public health or safety,

    harming the environment) relying instead on enumerated corruption and criminal offences under

    existing Acts

    Disclosure is time-bound: Landmark cases such as Bhopal gas leak, Delhi anti-Sikh riots, Babri Masjid

    demolition, Godhra have all exceeded the five-year statute of limitations applied to disclosable

    conduct; however the seriousness, culpability and need for resolution of these issues is far from

    diminished

    Maladministration is not covered: While it was part of the previous draft (2002), has been removed

    in this draft. Gross negligence (e.g., callous disaster management) are thus out of ambit

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    Human rights violations for excluded organizations (Article 33) are not covered as exception

    (contrary to the provision in the RTI Act)

    Single authority to receive disclosures: Bill allows the complainant to make disclosures only to

    centre/state vigilance commissions. Whistleblower legislation in other countries permits a range of

    options (including media and members of parliament) for the individual to make disclosures

    Limited Protections to whistleblower:

    No protections for RTI activists whose identity will already be in the public domain (through RTI

    applications)

    Identity of the whistleblower can be revealed at multiple junctures, including to the head of the

    department of purported corruption and/or investigative agencies. Conditions that will necessitate

    revealing complainants identity are not clear the more number of people privy to this information,

    the harder it will be to trace source if identity were to be maliciously leaked

    No deterrent punitive action (e.g., immediate termination, loss of pension and mandatory

    imprisonment) is specified against those found guilty of victimization

    Intimidation by physical harm need not just be focused on the whistleblower immediate family

    could also be targeted

    Imprisonment and fine for individuals found making false/frivolous complaints. There is risk of

    misuse of this clause to act as a deterrent to the whistleblower in the absence of strict accountability

    measures for the Competent Authority

    CENTRAL VIGILANCE COMMISSION

    Suitability of Central/State Vigilance Commissions as Competent Authority:

    CVC does not have its own investigation capability and must outsource investigation to the police,

    CBI etc, which are not even statutorily independent (accusations about the misuse of CBI against

    both Congress and BJP while they are/were in power)

    Several States in India have not yet set up mechanisms such as the Lokayukta. If this Bill were to

    become law, potential whistleblowers in such States will not have any means for reporting

    wrongdoing. However this Bill itself can provide the impetus for setting up Lokayukta type

    mechanisms in such States. Investigation is not time-bound and thus there is potential to use delay

    as tactic. The previous draft mandated that all inquiries must be completed within 6-months, up to a

    maximum of two-years with reasons for delay to be recorded in writing. However there is no such

    provision in current bill.

    What Can Be Done? Some Potential Measures

    Protections for RTI Activists

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    For RTI activists, identity protection is irrelevant given that this information will already be in the

    public domain through the RTI application. Therefore a credible mechanism is needed to ensure

    protection from physical reprisal

    One provision being mooted is fixing accountability on the local police station / Tahslidar / SDM /

    District Collector / Head of District Police. This could be done by the following: if an activist perceives

    threat to life or limb, s/he could file a complaint/FIR with the local police station, who must

    mandatorily take the complaint and the RTI matter into cognizance. In case the activist is still

    attacked, the onus would be on the policeman to prove due diligence and a failure would result in

    action against the office. The complaint would also help focus investigation on the named persons

    To safeguard against refusal of police to lodge FIR, a draft FIR and complaint against police station

    could also be mailed to the Lokayukta and/or collector and/or state IC. In case of complaint against

    the police for refusing to file FIR, policeman could be treated as a conspirator and prosecuted as

    such

    Possible deterrent may include the automatic initiation of independent transparent investigation in

    case of unnatural death of RTI activist, and transfer of investigation of issue that was being probedby the activist to the Competent Authority

    Accountability of Competent Authority

    Presumably to ensure protection for the whistleblower and independence for the Competent

    Authority, enquiry and investigation under this Act will be exempt under RTI, and even the courts

    wont have any jurisdiction over the CA. Further all/ most disciplinary action against public officials

    named in complaint will be taken internally. However the effectiveness of this Act is wholly

    contingent on the accountability of the CA and thus some external checks must be instituted. Some

    potential measures include:

    A multi-constituency apolitical Transparency Committee through an open appointment process to

    review investigation of contentious cases

    A consolidated activity report could be made public suo motu (can be the same one as that

    presented to the Parliament). The report could include aggregate information for:

    Complaints: number received; categorization (frivolous, vexatious, genuine etc)

    Investigation: organization/department; type (and size if applicable) of corruption; processing time;

    resolution

    Whistleblower:number; designation/level; categorization (genuine/malicious); punishment

    Reprisals: number; type; resolution

    Should whistleblowing be incentivized like the Whistleblower Reward Fund in Ghana, which gives

    the complainant 10% of monies recovered as result of complaint. If yes, what about non-pecuniary

    complaints like environment, health? For rewards not linked to recovery, is there a danger of

    overwhelming the CA by monetarily motivated false complaints?