The secrecy surrounding science has often been expected to be
forgiven and forgotten. It is assumed that the relevant observations and
inferences derived would be too much for an untrained mind to handle.
Accordingly, we are encouraged to gratefully acknowledge the conclusions
beginning with, ‘In simple terms . . .’ The activities that would have appeared
clandestine in one context thus often appear merely Byzantine here, convoluted
when it comes to comprehension but otherwise innocuous.
There was a time when activists dealing with issues of science and technology
were seen as inhabiting a different category than those working on subjects
more widely understood. But we soon realized that even ‘technical’ issues
greatly impact the most basic of people’s concerns. We have learnt to develop a
broader understanding of our problems in an age when even global warming has
been known to be most damaging for the economically backward classes.
With people finding themselves the biggest stakeholders in the government’s
decision making, the layman decided to lay down the rules this time. The Right
to Information (RTI) Act, proudly and endearingly addressed as the ‘People’s
Act’, came into being. The Act strengthened the common man’s ‘audacity’ as an
outraged ‘govern-mentality’ looked on. The demand that followed, that of having
a say in the decision-making process, was here to stay.
On more than one occasion, the Indian government has earned approving nods from
giant corporations for its ‘no nonsense’ approach when it comes to talking
business. Environment waivers have been awarded to several such groups with the
benign generosity of a Eucharist priest. True to our reputation, we leave no
stone unturned in being the hospitable host. We encourage our foreign friends
to protract and perpetuate their stay here, often at the cost of the very
household that accommodates them. Regulations, laws, rules, guidelines,
strictures, all are dismissed with the wave of a hand. If we cannot bend, we
shall amend.
Relatively, when it comes to giving information to its own people, we see the
same government practising remarkable parsimony. When genetically modified (GM)
foods came to be known as bad news, Monsanto-Mahyco’s anxiety over their
consumers getting ‘out of the market’ was only expected. But what to make of a
situation in which the Review Committee for Genetic Manipulation (RCGM) has
been petulantly guarding the meeting minutes close to its chest? Those who were
supposed to be our knowledge providers found it difficult to transcend their
sympathy for (the imagined) ‘competitive position of the third party’. With
even the Ministry of Environment and Forests clearly expressing its
reservations about the competence of a court of law to rule on science and
technology issues, where do the consumers go? Do they wait for the much touted
‘third party verifiable information’ by disinterested groups (if any such
exist) to surface? Or do they take the declaration of pro-GM parties as a word
of honour? Even if the latter is to be so, and if pleasant surprises are all
that these groups have got to unravel, why not make their data public, clear
the mist of suspicion generated by ‘environment groups’ and let GM foods be
welcomed by the people in a warm embrace?
It is precisely because such disclosures were not initiated by either the
companies or our own regulatory boards that groups like Greenpeace decided to
take up the issue. A need for participatory consumerism was felt and one of the
longest RTI battles to be began in 2005. Random, unofficial and, at times,
irrelevant, information was fed to the people in crumbs and the farce is being
played out till the time of writing this piece. For instance, in response to an
RTI filed by a Greenpeace activist, the Department of Biotechnology (DBT) put
forth the argument that the requested data on toxicity and allergenicity on
mustard, okra and rice cannot be provided as it is under generation and has not
been submitted to the RCGM. Contrarily, the DBT Appellate authority went on to
put on record that the same data is under the RCGM’S consideration.
In an ideal situation, all such knowledge should have been accessible in the
public domain, as it is one of the many ‘obligations of public authorities’
under Section 4 of the RTI Act: 'It shall be a constant endeavour of every public authority to take steps . . .
to provide as much information suo motu to the public at regular intervals.'
The failure is all the more flagrant when seen in the light of Section 4(c),
under which a public authority is required to 'publish all relevant facts while formulating important policies or announcing
the decisions which affect public'.
Again, in Section 4 (3) it is made clear that 'every information shall be disseminated widely and in such form and manner
which is easily accessible to the public'.
While all these provisions have been passed over, there is Mahyco on the other
hand that presented a harried application to the Central Information Commission
complaining that Section 2(n) of the Act has been violated because Mahyco’s submissions
as the ‘third party’ were never invited. The company never chose to enlighten
anyone on how information about whether they were manufacturing something toxic
and allergenic would ruin their ‘competitive advantage’. Even if reason is
thrown to the winds and it is assumed for a moment that such a thing were to
happen, this case should be treated as the quintessential representative of the
spirit of the Act, which mandates that ‘larger public interest warrants the
disclosure of such information’. In the same application, Mahyco pleads that
its arguments be considered in favour of ‘the principles of natural justice’.
It is most intriguing to discover that those who do not flinch from putting the
lives of millions at stake subscribe to such humanitarian philosophies.
The DBT insists on becoming the sentinel to Monsanto-Mahyco’s commercial
interests instead of the health and survival issues of the citizens of India.
Activists accused of keeping their fingers glued to the panic button have been
facing the exasperation that comes from stating the obvious over and over
again. Something like the 2006 field trials should have cautioned the Genetic
Engineering Approval Committee suitably, when not just the farmers and the
village panchayats but also the usually in-the-know state governments were
clueless about the presence of transgenic crops in their fields. But the fact
that field trials of GM crops are still on at the time of writing this is a
distinct indicator of the seriousness, or the lack thereof, with which public
health is treated in this country.
Foucault was right in believing that it is through discourse, or knowledge,
that we are created. But if discourse is perpetuated by those in power, how
does one know what kind of counter-discursive elements need to be generated to
resist that imposition if the powerful keep knowledge locked in their sanctum
sanctorum? Groups like Toxics Link have already used the RTI to uncover
alarming data on bio-medical waste and import waste. The GM foods debate is yet
another case where the direct co-relation between the right to know and the
right to live rings true. It is precisely to uncover such vital information
that the Act was designed. By turning its back to people’s Right to
Information, the government is only lending certitude to the suspicion that it
has something to hide. Even if we accept the government’s assurance that it is
worthy of its people’s confidence, it is all the more perplexing to witness the
government’s camouflage tactics in relation to its professed commitment to
transparency. In a country where mice and men are made equally vulnerable
subjects of experiment and people’s representatives turn into indifferent
kings, the fates of its people can easily be shoved into dark grottos by alien
pied pipers.
In fact, this case highlights what might well become one of the main challenges
to the transparency regime in the years to come. The world is becoming more and
more specialized and information is being expressed increasingly in a language
that the layperson cannot understand. Therefore, even if people can exercise
their right to information, it is not much use unless they can comprehend the
information they get, and that too, in the correct context.
Perhaps the best example is the arena of medical sciences where more and more
patients are unable to understand the prognosis, the treatment or even the
nature of their diseases. And this is not because the whole matter is too
complicated but because professionals have adopted the habit of talking in a
language and using terms that only fellow professionals can understand.
In such a scenario, it is incumbent on governments to take an initiative in
demystifying all these ‘technologies’ which critically affect the lives of
people. It is the concurrent responsibility of people’s groups to develop
information-clearing houses where such mystified information can be accessed
from governments and other ‘technical’ institutions and made available to the
people in simple terms and in a relevant context. It is admirable that
Greenpeace has started doing this about many of the issues they work on,
including the whole area of GMOs.