Some societies, trusts and charitable institutions have been declared as public authority covered under the Right to Information Act by different high courts, according to a compilation by an NGO.
The data, which was compiled in the backdrop of a recent government decision to amend the RTI Act to give immunity to political parties from providing information, shows that many private organisations and autonomous bodies have been declared as public authority by state and central information commissions.
"Many information commissions at the central and state level have held several non-government organisations to be public authorities under the RTI Act because they are financed substantially by some government or the other.
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The compilation includes a series of judgements declaring cooperative societies, cooperative banks, cooperative sugar mills, private organisations and Special Purpose Vehicles (Private Public Partnerships), autonomous institutions, educational and religious institutions as public authorities.
Bangalore International Airport Authority Ltd has been declared as public authority by the Karnataka High Court, Delhi Multi Model Transit System Ltd, and Electronics and Computer Software Export Promotion Council by the Delhi High Court and management bodies of Hindu temples declared public authority by the Madras High Court, it said.
"It is quite possible that some of these judgements may have been appealed against before a larger bench of the High Court concerned or before the Supreme Court," Nayak said.