Whistleblower Bill
“ When the ruler himself is
right, the people naturally follow him in his right course. If governance is by
men who are derelict, the governed will suffer.”
-
Aleksander Solzhenitsyn
It was in 2001 that the Law Commission of India came up with the idea
to protect persons who make disclosure in public interest relating to acts of
corruption, misuse of powers or acts of criminal offence by public servants.
The basic premise was that honest public servants are normally unwilling to
share information about corrupt officials and their wrongdoings for fear of
adverse reaction, retaliation or fear of bodily harm. It was felt that a direct
correlation exists between the willingness shown by public servants to disclose
the activities of corrupt persons and the protection that could be given to him
if his identity was concealed. It was felt
that if a legislation existed to provide legal protection to such persons then
the amount of information about the corrupt activities of government officials would
exponentially increase.
Historical perspective
The 179th
report of Law Commission of India1 on ‘Public Interest Disclosure and Protection of Informers’ published
in December, 2001 recommended that a law was required to protect
whistleblowers. This report went into a lot of details and discussed similar
Acts in other countries. The Law Commission of India also put up a draft
bill in this report to the Government of India.
In 2004, the
Supreme Court of India in response to a PIL, after the sensational murder of
IIT Kanpur graduate Satyendra Dubey, directed the government to put in place a
mechanism to act on the complaints made by whistleblowers and to protect their
identity. The government notified a resolution in 2004 which made the Central
Vigilance Commission the nodal authority to receive complaints regarding public
interest disclosures. CVC could enquire
into complaints falling within the ambit of this resolution. This resolution however lacked teeth as its
role was limited to making recommendations only and CVC did not have any power
to impose penalties. This, therefore, discouraged
people and restricted the number of persons who made complaints to CVC. This
idea however found further support in the report of the Second Administrative Reforms
Commission(2007)2. The 4th
report of this Commission on “Ethics in Governance” supported the 179th report of the Law Commission of
India and stated that a legislation was indeed required on the lines proposed
by the Law Commission to protect the whistleblowers. This report emphasised the
need to ensure confidentiality and anonymity of all whistleblowers. It also stated that they should be protected
from victimisation or harassment of any kind. One interesting aspect of this report was that
it wanted the inclusion of the Corporate Sector also in this legislation to
unearth cases of wrongdoings and frauds in public interest.
India is a
signatory to the UN Convention against Corruption3 since 2005 which
exhorts countries to take measures to facilitate reporting of corruption by
public officials and to provide protection against any retaliation, for all
such people coming forward with such disclosure.
As a consequence of
all above the Government of India introduced the Public Interest Disclosure and
Protection to Persons Making Disclosures Bill8 in the Lok
Sabha on 26th August, 2010. The Lok Sabha after prolonged
deliberations referred this bill to a Standing Committee on Personnel, Public
Grievances, Law & Justice. This Committee made a number of
recommendations and submitted its 46th report on 9th
June, 2011 which proposed a number of amendments to the original bill. The important ones implied including the
personnel of Defence, Police and Intelligence against whom disclosures would be
permitted, prescribing a time limit for enquiries and also that authorities must
take a final decision within a period of three months. The Standing Committee
also put down a time limit of 07 years beyond which a complaint would not be
entertained. They also shifted the burden of proof for the allegations of
victimisation on the public authority and also laid down penal provisions for
knowingly giving incomplete and false information. This bill was passed by the Lok Sabha on 27th
Dec, 2011. The bill was thereafter taken up for discussion in Rajya Sabha which
after a prolonged period finally passed this bill on 21st Feb, 2014
- the last day of the Parliamentary session - without any discussion. Though
the Parliamentary Standing Committee had made a number of very relevant recommendations,
these were not considered and the Bill was passed in a hurry, before the all
important Parliamentary Elections of 2014.
Indian
Context
In India there have
been a number of celebrated cases wherein whistleblowers, who raised their
voice against the wrongdoing and ill-gotten practices of corrupt persons in
various spheres have been victimized, tortured or at times even done to death.
Satyendra
Dubey, an IIT Kanpur graduate joined NHAI in 2002 as a Project Manager
where he unearthed serious financial irregularities in sub-contracting of work and
irregular mobilization advances to contractors. Though he raised these issues
and even wrote directly to the then Prime Minister, yet nothing was done to
check such malpractices and he was shot dead in the night of 27th
Nov, 2003.
Shanmugam
Manjunath, an MBA from IIM Lucknow, after passing out joined IOC
wherein he came down heavily on petrol pumps which indulged in selling adulterated fuel. He conducted a number of
surprise raids. However, people whose
business interests were being hurt shot him dead on 19 Nov, 2005.
Shehla
Masood, an RTI activist in MP was shot dead outside her house on 16th
Aug, 2011 when she was going to attend a rally by Anna Hazare. Similarly, Narendra
Kumar, an IPS officer of 2009 batch and alumni of Aligarh Muslim
University, was killed by the mining mafia in March, 2012 when he was trying to
clamp down illegal mining in his area.
He was run over by a tractor when he was trying to stop the same. Vijay
Pandhare - a Chief Engineer in the Water Resources Department of Maharashtra
unearthed huge irregularities and cost inflation in irrigation projects in
Maharashtra and alleged that over Rs.10,000 crores spent on lift irrigation
projects were a total waste. His activism led to the resignation of then Dy CM of
Maharashtra Ajit Pawar. Similarly, Ashok
Khemka, an IIT Kharagpur graduate and presently an IAS officer of
Haryana Cadre, exposed irregularities in the procurement of seeds by Haryana government
and also brought to their notice the suspicious land deals between Robert Vadra
and DLF. He has been unduly victimised
and posted more than 45 times in his 20 year career. Rahul Sharma, an IPS Officer of Gujarat Cadre and alumni of IIT
Kanpur also blew the whistle on the accused persons involved in Naroda Patiya
massacre case during Gujarat riots by exposing their call data records. He was
shunted out and suspended from service.
The Comptroller
and Auditor General in India has also, of late, acted like a
whistleblower in the recent scams that have been brought to the knowledge of
public - the 2G scam, the Commonwealth games
scam, the Coal scam etc. All these
clearly bring out how public money has been repeatedly squandered away to
benefit some ‘select players’ in government and private sector. These examples
reinforce the concept that there is an essential need to bring some of the
private sectors also under the ambit of the RTI and the Whistleblower law. While
all government departments and its functionaries are regulated by the strict
provisions of the RTI and the proposed Whistleblower act, it is surprising to
see that the private sector has been completely left out and none of these laws
are applicable to it. The recent scams
unearthed by the CAG clearly show that the private sector has often acted in
connivance with the government functionaries and siphoned off the public
exchequer.
Whistleblower
cases - Abroad
Dinesh Thakur an
employee of Ranbaxy Laboratories in US exposed his employers who were
endangering the lives of people by producing drugs in India in unhygienic
conditions. Ranbaxy was penalized to an extent of about $ 500 million by US government. Similarly Enron Corporation of the
US was brought within the ambit of this law way back in 2002 when it was learnt
that the Company’s auditors had cooked up book of accounts to give a rosy
picture about the company and had misled the investors. It is, therefore,
essential that the whistleblowers must be permitted to expose the misdeeds of
the private sector before the common man.
Julian
Paul Assange6, founder of Wiki Leaks made the world sit up
and take notice by publishing secret US military and diplomatic documents which
were unknown to the world. He released
over 2.5 lakh US diplomatic cables, more than 50% of which were confidential,
which clearly showed how criminal laws had been breached, international
agreements were thrown to the wind, extra judicial killings carried out and how
human rights violations were carried out blatantly in different locations. A
number of lawyers, academics and journalists expressed solidarity with Assange
and hailed his act as that of an exceptional
whistleblower of remarkable courage who advocated a transparent and righteous
approach to journalism. The US government however wants to charge him for leak
of diplomatic cables and wants him extradited. The Swedish Police has also issued
an arrest warrant against him for sexual assault and he is presently hiding in the
Embassy of Ecuador in London.
Bradley
Manning of US Army has been charged by his government for leaking over
2.5 lakh US diplomatic cables and 5 lakh Army reports to Wiki Leaks. These relate to sensitive information
pertaining to US strikes in Iraq, Afghanistan etc. He has now been sentenced to
35 years imprisonment and discharged from the US Army. Manning stated that he released
all these secret information ‘out of
moral concern and how humanity was being victimized’, yet the sentence
meted out to him shows how vulnerable whistleblowers are and how such an action
can have a deterrent and an chilling effect on all prospective
whistleblowers.
Edward Snowden, a Systems
Administrator, working for a contractor with NSA, disclosed how US was
intercepting large amounts of telephone and internet data, which violated
rights to privacy and other international agreements. Though US insisted that such interception was
being carried out to prevent acts of terrorism, yet interception of mobile
phone of German Chancellor and others showed that what was being done was
absolutely undemocratic and illegal. Snowden stated that he wanted to ‘inform the public as to that which is done
in their name and that which is done against them’. His act of disclosing
information in public interest has been lauded by all concerned and he has been
named as one of the 100 most influential persons of the world for the year 2014
by the Time Magazine11.
Laws
in different countries7
United
States
US has Whistle Blowers Protection Act
1989 (amended in 1994). This Act
was brought forth because the earlier Civil Requirements Act of 1978 had not
been able to provide relief from official reprisals as transfers to ‘bureaucratic Siberia’, elimination of
duty, reprimand etc. An important
provision of this Act is that ‘if the
disclosure is reasonable and pertinent to public policy, then the time, manner,
place, motives etc. will all become irrelevant’. The burden of proof here
lies on the employer or the agency. The identity of the informant is always
kept secret. This Act also enables the
whistleblower to claim damages and medical expenses etc. in order to restore
the him to his original state.
UK
The Public
Interest Disclosure Act of 1998 was the outcome of the Nolan Committee
Report of 1995, a white paper on ‘Freedom of Information’ or ‘Right to
Know’. This Act came in the background
of collapse of banks wherein it was felt that the employees knew all about the mismanagement
in Banks. It was felt that there must be
a culture of openness within the organisation and that prevention is always
better than cure. The UK Act aims to protect the whistleblowers from
victimisation at work places and even enables them to seek compensation from
their employers. This Act covers all the employees in the public, private and
non-governmental sectors but goes on to exclude Army and Police.
Australia
The Public
Interest Disclosure Act of 1994 came out of the Fitz Gerald Report of
1993 which necessitated that a legislation was required which could prohibit a
person from penalising any other person for making public disclosures about
misconduct, inefficiency or any other wrongdoing within the system. This Act states that penalty can be imposed
for false or misleading information given knowingly.
Malaysia
The Whistle Blower Protection Act of 2010 enables disclosure of an
improper conduct to an Enforcement agency. The Act ensures the confidentiality
of information provider and also provides him immunity from civil and criminal
proceedings. The Enforcement agency to whom information is made available by
the whistleblower can ask for damages or compensation or seek injunction from
the Court regarding the wrongdoings of the company. There is also provision in this Act to give
reward to the whistleblower for the information given.
Other
Countries
Hungary
has a law which protects people in the public and the private sector from any
kind of detrimental action, but there is no specific agency earmarked which can
receive complaints from whistleblowers. Amongst the Eastern Bloc nations,
Hungary seems to be the only country which has some kind of legislation to
promote the whistleblower and protect him from any kind of illegitimate action.
Romania, Luxemburg and Slovenia also have laws that protect the action of whistleblowers
but their scope is limited. In case of Luxemburg and Slovenia, these laws and
the related actions are included under the broader category of anti-corruption
legislations. France does not have any specific whistleblower legislation but
such related policies are governed by French Data Protection Authority. A change
was brought about in 2005 when French companies affiliated with US companies
were brought under the Sarbanes Oxley Act- a federal US law which contained
provisions to protect the whistleblowers.
With the emergence
of platforms as Wiki Leaks, a number of countries and especially the media have
realised the importance of whistleblowers and the fact that these people can be
valuable sources of information. The
cases of Julian Assange, Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden are classic examples
in recent times which have attracted attention of people worldwide. These people have responded to the call of their inner voice and have ‘leaked out information which is of vital interest to the society’.
A number of countries (147
countries) have shown their commitment to the UN Convention against Corruption,
which has a provision for protection of whistleblowers, by enacting
legislations in their countries. The important role played by whistleblowers is
now being recognised by all the nations, slowly and gradually but surely. The Council
of Europe and the OECD have also been actively
espousing the cause of whistleblowers and calling upon nations to come up with
legislation to protect their rights.
In a number of
European countries, time and again the political leadership has made strong
public statements supporting the whistleblower laws but not much has happened
on ground. An interesting observation
made by M. Devine along these lines is ‘whistle
blower protection is a policy that all government leaders support in public but
few in power will tolerate it in private’.
Witness
Protection4
An important related legislation which can give tremendous support
to the Whistleblowers Bill is ‘Protection
of Witnesses Bill5’ which is still pending before the Parliament
since 2003 inspite of clear instructions by the High Court of Delhi in Neelam
Katara V/s Union of India. The objective behind this legislation is to protect
the identity of the right-minded conscience keepers and encourage them to come
forward freely and fearlessly to depose against dreaded criminals and mafia
elements before the Courts. The concealment of their identity would give prime
witnesses the necessary anonymity and immunity and facilitate bringing the
hardened criminals to the book more effectively.
Bill
in its present form
The Whistleblower’s bill in its current form differs on a number of
issues with the proposed Bill as given in 179th report of Law
Commission of India and also the 4th report of II- Administrative
Reforms Commission. The Law Commission had envisaged a vast scope for this Bill
and included disclosures against Ministers and public servants whereas the
current Bill talks about public servants only. The Law Commission had clearly
defined victimisation and placed the burden of proof8 on the public servant but the current Bill neither
defines victimisation9 nor is there any talk of burden of proof. Law
Commission had also imposed a time limit10
for completion of enquiry but the bill in its present form makes it a never
ending process. The Administrative Reforms Commission had strongly advocated
protection of whistleblowers by ensuring confidentiality
and anonymity. The present bill does
not have any provision for anonymous complaints, thereby contradicting the
basic premise that if protection is given, people will come forward and give
substantial information about corruption. The Administrative Reforms Commission
had also suggested inclusion of Corporate
whistleblowers to unearth corrupt practices in private sector but the present
bill is totally silent on this vital issue. The bill also does not have any
provision for financial or other incentive
for whistleblowing, but makes it an onerous task by refusing to take anonymous
complaints and making no efforts towards protecting his identity.
The bill, it seems has lost its focus somewhere, by concentrating
only on protecting the crusaders against corruption and not corruption per se. Even their protection does not seem to be
foolproof. The Whistleblower bill, which initially had grand plans to encourage
disclosure of corrupt practices and
protect honest persons from victimisation, in the current form has come as a dampener
for activists by refusing to protect his identity, not defining victimisation
and leaving him vulnerable once again to the criminal and mafia elements - he
was supposed to expose.
Conclusion
In the current scenario when our country is saddled with a number of
scams, governance has taken a toll and the confidence of the common man and the
investor has been shaken it is absolutely essential to cleanse and re-energise
systems that are vital for improving the governance and investment climate in
the country. People who are conscience-keepers and have the interests of the
country - first and foremost- should be given due protection under the law to
come forth and expose the wrongdoings, malafide and inappropriate practices in
the public as well as private sector. This legislation will go a long way to
encourage people to come forward and share information about corruption and
misuse of powers by public servants so as to bring them to book.
The bill, though in the present form is a watered down
version of the original one with lofty ideals, yet it is a step in the right
direction. This on the one hand will act as an incentive to all the right
minded people to come forward and expose acts of corruption and misuse of
official powers/position, on the other hand this legislation will put the fear
of law in minds of the wrong doers and show the society’s resolve to act
effectively against the corrupt officials.
(3212 words)
( published in Indian Police Journal, Apr- Jun 2014 )
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Keywords
Whistleblower, 179th
Law Commission of India, 2nd Adminstrative Reforms Commission, UN
Convention against Corruption, Comptroller and Auditor General of India, Satyendra
Dubey, Shanmugam Manjunath, Julian Assange, Edward Snowden, Witness Protection,
Public Interest Disclosure and Protection to persons making disclosure Bill,
Corporate whistleblowers.
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Abstract
Whistleblower Bill was brought in with
grand plans to encourage the right minded and socially conscious citizens to
come forward and expose acts of corruption, misuse of power and criminal acts
of public servants. The thought behind was that if the honest officials are
protected from victimization and their identity kept a secret, the amount of
information about such corrupt activities would increase.
However the original bill, which was
contemplated over a decade back, has undergone many changes and is today a much
watered down version of the original version. The Law Commission (2001) had
recommended two very vital issues namely defining victimization and putting the
burden of proof on the public servant- both of which have been overlooked in
the current bill. Similarly the Administrative Reforms Commission had advocated
confidentiality and anonymity of complainants and also the fact that frauds in
Corporate sector, must also be brought under the ambit of this bill. Both these
aspects have also been lost sight of in the current bill which is now awaiting
assent of the President of India.
Yet, the proposed Public Interest Disclosure and
Protection to Persons making the Disclosure Bill, 2010, is a step in the right
direction. It does provide scope for disclosures against public servants,
enquiries can be conducted and there is penalty for lodging false complaints.
With corruption so endemic in our
society, only time will tell whether the proposed Bill does encourage honest,
law abiding and socially conscious persons to come forward and disclose acts of
corruption and misuse of power or does this bill too, like many earlier ones
become another paper tiger.
(269 words)
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References
- 179th Report of the Law Commission of India
- ‘Ethics in Governance’, IV Report of the Second Administrative Reforms Commission.
- UN Convention against Corruption, 2005 (http://www.unodc.org)
- ‘Witness Identity Protection and Witness Protection Programmes’, 198th Report of the Law Commission of India, 2006.
- Law Commission of India’s Consultation paper on Witness Protection, Chapter III, 2004
- The New Digital Age, Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen, John Murray Publishers, 2013.
- Whistleblower Protection Act 1989(USA), Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998(UK), Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act 2004(Canada), Public Interest Disclosure Act 1994 (Australia), Protected Disclosure Act 2000(New Zealand), Whistleblower Protection Act 2010(Malaysia).
- ‘Public Interest Disclosure and Protection to persons making the Disclosure Bill, 2010’, PRS Legislative research, (www.prsindia.org)
- Whistleblowers’ Protection Bill: Anti-graft only in name, G Sampath, Live Mint & the Wall Street Journal, 4th March, 2014 (www.livemint.com)
- Misuse of Whistleblowers Act needs to be checked, Raavi Birbal, The New Indian Express,6th April, 2014.
- The 2014 TIME 100, (www.time.com/time100-2014)
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