Airport operators/MIAL sit
on valuable public property,
avail of concessions, but will not be accountable
RTI activist Sanjay Shirodkar has been working to bring Mumbai
International Airport Ltd (MIAL) under the RTI Act, since 2007. MIAL has
resisted all orders, even going to the High Court on the matter. Shockingly,
the public Airports Authority of India (AAI), which has a stake in the company,
has defended the private agency. Similar battles are being fought in Bangalore
and Delhi
One day,
while waiting at the Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport for his cousin
to arrive, Sanjay Shirodkar noticed a number of cars belonging to various
'embassies' parked outside. He asked security agency personnel and designated
traffic police why the cars were allowed to park there for such a long
duration, when other vehicles were not permitted to stop there for more than a
few minutes, only allowing travellers to alight. But he got no answer. Mr Shirodkar was also hassled about the high
price charged for mineral water at the airport stalls. That was back in 2007.
Mr
Shirodkar proceeded to write a letter to the Mumbai International AirportLtd
(MIAL) as well as the Airports Authority of India (AAI) seeking information
under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, about the mineral water price policy.
He received a reply from the deputy general manager ofAAI, quoting an internal
note from the legal department, saying that "MIAL will not come under the
purview of the public authority and thus the provisions of this (RTI) Act will
not be applicable to MIAL.''
Mr
Shirodkar says, "I was shocked that the public department, the AAI, which
has a 26% stake in the public-private partnership (PPP) and has allowed the use
of 2,000 acres of its land-which amounts to at least Rs50,000 crore-was
actually protecting the private agency, MIAL, instead of monitoring it and
ensuring that it performs its duty transparently, and it was encouraging the
agency to keep information away from the public domain.''
Undeterred,
Mr Shirodkar invoked a second RTI query on 15 November 2007 with regard to the
rules for parking of vehicles. He asked:
> Is
parking free for all embassy vehicles at all airports in India? If yes, then
please give a copy of the government resolution (GR) or any such notification
to show this.
> At
which furthest point can embassy vehicles be parked from the terminus?
> Is there
any privileged parking facility for embassy vehicles when the ambassador/high
commissioner is in the car, or for the staff of the embassy as well?
>
Please provide a list of all embassy offices and their respective official
number plate details (by which they are recognize for privileged parking, if
applicable).
The reply
from AAI on 26 December 2007 said that embassy vehicles could go only up to the
designated VIP area where they can park free of charges. This implies that they
were not permitted to park outside theairport terminal for long durations.
This set
Mr Shirodkar thinking about public-private partnerships which have become the
backbone of several large-scale (read, large money), development infrastructure
projects. More so in the case of airports, which are sensitive areas in the
context of the threat of terrorism, how was MIAL flouting the basic rules on
parking? He, therefore, decided to find out what concessions MIAL enjoyed from
the state and central governments.
In an RTI
query, dated 17 November 2007, Mr Shirodkar requested information from a number
of related government departments at the Mantralaya state headquarters,
including the General Administration Department (GAD), and whether AAI had
offered/provided any discounts/concessions/exemptions/waivers to MIAL on
interest free debt, entry taxes,
property tax, lease of land, stamp duty and registration charges, change of
land use, octroi and road cess, if any.
All
departments kept mum for months, till a fortnight back, when the GAD replied
stating that "MIAL has been given a stamp duty concession of Rs250 crore
and it operates on 2,000 acres of government land.'' Now, is this not
sufficient premise for MIAL to come under the RTI Act, with such
"substantial funding from the government," Mr Shirodkar asks.
Interestingly,
in the case of the Delhi airport, which is also privatised under the banner of
Delhi International Airport Pvt Ltd (DIAL), Lt Col Anil Heble (retd), an RTI
activist and resident of Delhi, filed two applications on 12th June and 15 June
2006 with the public information officer (PIO) of the Ministry of Civil
Aviation for information related to the construction of a newsecurity wall in
place of the existing wall in Shahabad Mohamadpur village.
The PIO,
Ministry of Civil Aviation, forwarded the applications to various PIOs of the
Airports Authority of India, New Delhi. When Lt Col Heble did not receive any
reply, he filed a complaint with the Central Information Commission on 19 July
2006.
The bench
of the then central information commissioner (CIC), Dr OP Kejriwal, ordered
that DIAL abide by the provisions of the RTI Act. The decision read: "The
Commission heard both sides. DIAL responded saying that they were not a public
authority as they held a 74% stake in the joint venture company set up by GMR.
On making further inquiries, the Commission was told that the government had a
26% stake in DIAL.
"The
Commission is of the opinion that a holding of 26% is quite substantial for any
company and therefore, Section 2(1) which states that any body owned,
controlled or substantially financed is a public authority, is applicable to
DIAL and hence it is bound by the directions of RTI. The Commission therefore
directs DIAL to provide for the directions of the RTI. This must be done within
15 days of the issue of the order.''
Mr
Shirodkar had made a similar appeal to the CIC. The order of 11 June 2008 was
predictably, ditto as in the case of Mr Heble. "In an identical case, in
respect of Delhi International Airport Pvt Ltd (DIAL) the Commission vide its
decision dated 17 January 2007 has observed that a shareholding of 26% is quite
substantial for any company and therefore Section 2(1) is applicable to DIAL…''
Accordingly, MIAL "is covered under the definition of public authority and
is therefore directed to furnish the information asked for within 15 days from
the date of issue of the decision.''
In yet
another case, Bangalore resident Benson Isaac also appealed to the CIC
regarding the Bangalore International Airport Pvt Ltd and on 14 May 2008, KK
Mishra, state information commissioner, Karnataka, gave a ditto verdict.
But, MIAL
did not take the CIC's order lying down. Advocates Duttmenon Dunmorrset filed a
writ petition in the Delhi High Court in 2008, challenging the decision of the
CIC, and pleading that it be exempted from the provisions of the RTI Act since
it has 74% stake in the PPP. The High Court recently directed the matter back
to the CIC, Sushma Singh.
As of 16th
May, Sushma Singh has sent the copy of the GAD's official reply to Mr
Shirodkar; and has asked MIAL to reply on the 26% "substantial'' stake by
the AAI in MIAL and that MIAL is using 2,000 acres of land belonging to the
government.
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