BCCI and RTI – Why the CIC Refused to Treat the Cricket Board as a Public Authority

BCCI and RTI

BCCI and RTI Latest News

  • The Central Information Commission (CIC) ruled that the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) is not a “public authority” under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, 2005, and therefore cannot be compelled to disclose information under the Act. 
  • The decision revisits a long-standing debate over transparency, accountability, and the legal status of sports bodies performing public functions.

Legal Framework Behind the Dispute

  • RTI Act and definition of “public authority”: Section 2(h) of the RTI Act defines a public authority as a body -
    • Established by the Constitution, parliamentary or state laws, or government notification;
    • Owned, controlled, or substantially financed by the government;
    • Including NGOs substantially funded through public money.
  • The BCCI argued that it is -
    • A private autonomous body;
    • Registered under the Tamil Nadu Societies Registration Act, 1975;
    • Neither created by statute nor substantially financed by the government.
  • Article 12 and the concept of “State”:
    • It includes governments and authorities under governmental control. 
    • Courts have expanded this interpretation in some cases involving bodies performing public functions.
    • However, the BCCI maintained that despite regulating cricket in India, it is not “State” because there is no deep and pervasive governmental control over its affairs.

Earlier Recommendations for Bringing BCCI Under RTI

  • Justice Lodha committee recommendations:
    • The committee criticised the BCCI’s opaque functioning as a “closed-door and backroom affair”. 
    • It recommended bringing the BCCI within the RTI framework to enhance transparency and accountability.
  • Law Commission’s 275th Report (2018):
    • It also recommended that sports bodies performing public functions should come under RTI because they exercise “state-like powers”; BCCI virtually functions as a National Sports Federation.
    • Despite these recommendations, Parliament did not enact any law to include the BCCI under RTI.

Earlier CIC Position and Judicial Developments

  • 2018 CIC order: The BCCI qualified as a public authority and directed it to appoint Public Information Officers (PIOs); create an RTI compliance mechanism.
  • Madras High Court (HC) intervention: The BCCI challenged the order before the Madras HC, which remanded the matter back to the CIC for reconsideration in light of SC rulings. The recent SC order emerged from this reconsideration.

What the Latest CIC Order Held

  • Registration under a statute does not make an entity public:
    • The CIC clarified that the BCCI is merely registered under a statute; it was not created by legislation or government notification.
    • The Commission distinguished between the bodies created by law (e.g., SBI); and private entities later registered under a legal framework.
    • Thus, registration only grants legal recognition, not statutory status.
  • No “substantial and pervasive” government control: 
    • Relying on the SC judgment in Thalappalam Service Cooperative Bank Ltd case (2013), the CIC held that RTI applies only when government control is deep, substantial, and pervasive across administration, finance, and policy.
    • The Commission observed that the BCCI office-bearers are internally elected; no government nominees sit on its committees; government approval is unnecessary for its decisions.
    • Hence, ordinary regulatory supervision was held insufficient to convert it into a public authority.
  • No substantial government financing:
    • The CIC interpreted “substantial financing” under Section 2(h)(d) as funding essential for an entity’s survival.
    • It rejected claims that tax exemptions, police deployment, and use of public stadiums amount to substantial government financing.
    • The Commission emphasised that the BCCI generates massive independent revenues through media rights, sponsorships, broadcasting deals, and ticket sales.

SC Judgments Shaping the Issue

  • Zee Telefilms Ltd. v. Union of India (2005):
    • The BCCI is not “State” under Article 12 because there is no government shareholding; no substantial financial assistance exists; government control is not deep or pervasive.
    • The CIC heavily relied on this reasoning.
  • BCCI v. Cricket Association of Bihar (2016): 
    • Following IPL spot-fixing controversies, the SC imposed major governance reforms through the Lodha Committee recommendations, including:
      • One-state-one-vote principle,
      • Tenure limits,
      • Conflict-of-interest norms.
    • The Court also clarified that even if BCCI is not “State” under Article 12, it can still be subject to judicial review under Article 226 because it performs public functions.
    • Thus, a body may remain outside RTI yet still be answerable before HCs for arbitrary or unfair actions.

National Sports Governance Act, 2025

  • Section 14(2) of the Act provides that sports bodies will be treated as public authorities only regarding the utilisation of government grants or financial assistance.
  • Since the BCCI receives no such grants, the law effectively keeps it outside the RTI regime.

Implications of the CIC Decision

  • Transparency concerns: Excluding the BCCI from RTI limits public access to information relating to the team selection processes, governance decisions, etc.
  • Accountability gap: The decision highlights a legal paradox - the BCCI performs significant public functions and regulates cricket nationally, yet it remains outside direct transparency obligations under RTI.
  • Distinction between public function and public authority: 
    • Performing public functions does not automatically make an entity a “public authority” under RTI;
    • Government ownership, financing, or pervasive control remains the determining test.

Source: TH | IE

BCCI and RTI FAQs

Q1: Why did the CIC refuse to classify the BCCI as a “public authority”?

Ans: Because the BCCI lacks statutory creation, substantial government financing, required under Section 2(h) of the RTI Act.

Q2: What was the significance of the SC judgment in Zee Telefilms Ltd. case (2005)?

Ans: The SC ruled that the BCCI is not “State” under Article 12 due to the absence of deep and pervasive governmental control.

Q3: What are the key recommendations of the Justice Lodha Committee?

Ans: It recommended bringing the BCCI under the RTI framework to enhance transparency and accountability.

Q4: How does the National Sports Governance Act, 2025 limit RTI applicability?

Ans: It treats sports bodies as public authorities only concerning the utilisation of government grants or financial assistance.

Q5: What constitutional remedy remains available against the BCCI despite its exclusion from RTI?

Ans: The BCCI remains subject to judicial review under Article 226 for arbitrary actions while performing public functions.

SC Verdict and Railways’ Finances: Why Financial Stress May Rise

Railways’ Finances

Railways’ Finances Latest News

  • A recent Supreme Court order cancelling Indian Railways' "Deemed Licensee" status — which had allowed it to procure electricity without paying surcharges — combined with a decline in freight loading and earnings in April, has triggered serious financial alarm within the Railway Board.

Background — How Electricity Procurement Works

  • Under the Electricity Act, 2003, consumers can procure electricity in two ways:
    • From the Distribution Licensee in their area of supply (the regular electricity company).
    • From alternative sources through Open Access — directly from power generators or the grid.
  • When a consumer uses Open Access, two surcharges apply:
    • Cross-Subsidy Surcharge — levied to compensate distribution companies for the revenue they lose when large consumers bypass them.
    • Additional Surcharge — levied to offset the cost of maintaining the distribution network.
  • These surcharges exist because distribution companies provide subsidised electricity to certain categories like agricultural users and low-income households — and the revenue shortfall from large consumers leaving must be compensated.

Railways' Special Status

  • Indian Railways had been classified as a "Deemed Licensee" — a type of distribution company that supplies electricity rather than consuming it for its own use. 
  • Under this classification, Railways was procuring electricity through Open Access without paying Cross-Subsidy Surcharge and Additional Surcharge — resulting in significant cost savings.

What the Supreme Court Did

  • The Supreme Court's May 8 order cancelled this Deemed Licensee status, meaning Railways must now pay these surcharges like any other large consumer. 
  • The Railway Board estimates this will increase traction energy costs by more than 30%.

Why This is a Big Deal — Railways and Electricity

  • Indian Railways is the largest single user of electrical energy in India. 
  • The total amount spent on traction electricity (electricity used to run trains) in 2024-25 was ₹32,378 crore — one of the biggest components of Ordinary Working Expenses (OWE). 
  • A 30%+ increase in this cost alone would translate to an additional burden of approximately ₹9,700 crore or more — a significant blow to an already strained budget.

The Broader Financial Stress — Multiple Pressures Simultaneously

  • The Supreme Court order arrives at a particularly vulnerable moment for Railways. 
  • The Railway Board's letter to general managers of all zonal railways highlighted several concurrent financial pressures:
    • Rising Expenditure
      • Ordinary Working Expenses (OWE) increased by 11.6%.
      • Pension expenditure increased by 9.1%.
    • Declining Freight Performance
      • Freight loading declined by 1%.
      • Freight earnings declined more sharply by 5% — worse than even the corresponding figures for April 2024.
    • This is a "double whammy" — costs rising sharply while the primary revenue source is simultaneously declining.

The Operating Ratio Challenge

  • Operating Ratio measures how much Railways spends to earn every ₹100. 
  • It should ideally be as low as possible — a lower operating ratio means greater financial efficiency and more surplus available for investment.
  • Indian Railways' operating ratio has remained above 98% for years — meaning it spends over ₹98 to earn every ₹100
  • This leaves a razor-thin margin for capital investment, debt repayment, and network expansion. 
  • The combination of rising energy costs and falling freight revenue risks pushing the operating ratio even higher — potentially above 100%, meaning Railways would spend more than it earns.

Revenue Structure of Indian Railways

  • Passenger services in Indian Railways are heavily subsidised — fares are kept below cost for social and political reasons. 
  • This means freight revenue is the lifeline of Railways' finances, contributing over 65% of total revenue.
  • The net earnings trend is deeply concerning — declining from ₹2,660 crore to a revised ₹1,957 crore in 2025-26, leaving virtually no financial cushion for the system.
  • Indian Railways is simultaneously facing:
    • Revenue Side — Freight earnings declining, passenger revenue subdued due to subsidised fares, freight loading falling.
    • Expenditure Side — OWE rising 11.6%, pension costs rising 9.1%, and traction energy costs set to rise 30%+ due to Supreme Court order.
    • Structural Challenge — Operating ratio chronically above 98%, leaving no room for absorbing additional shocks.
  • Together, these pressures constitute a financial perfect storm for Indian Railways.

Way Forward — What Needs to Change

  • For Railways to restore financial health, several structural interventions are needed — 
    • rationalising passenger fare subsidies to reduce cross-subsidisation from freight, 
    • diversifying revenue sources beyond freight and passenger (real estate, advertising, logistics parks), 
    • improving energy efficiency through faster electrification and renewable energy adoption to reduce dependence on grid electricity, 
    • increasing freight competitiveness to win back traffic lost to road transport, and 
    • exploring legal remedies or legislative changes to restore or replace the financial benefits lost from the Deemed Licensee status cancellation.

Source: IE

Railways’ Finances FAQs

Q1: How could the Supreme Court verdict affect Railways’ Finances?

Ans: The verdict may significantly burden Railways’ Finances by increasing compensation liabilities, operational expenditure, and long-term fiscal commitments for Indian Railways.

Q2: Why are Railways’ Finances already under pressure?

Ans: Railways’ Finances are strained by rising infrastructure spending, passenger subsidies, operational inefficiencies, and growing maintenance and employee-related financial obligations.

Q3: What does the Supreme Court ruling mean for Railways’ Finances in the long run?

Ans: The ruling could worsen Railways’ Finances by creating recurring expenditure burdens, limiting fiscal flexibility, and affecting future investment priorities.

Q4: Can the SC verdict impact railway services through Railways’ Finances?

Ans: Pressure on Railways’ Finances may indirectly affect service upgrades, infrastructure modernisation, and resource allocation if financial stress deepens significantly.

Q5: Why is Railways’ Finances an important public policy issue?

Ans: Railways’ Finances matter because Indian Railways is a critical public transport backbone, and financial instability could affect connectivity, affordability, and national infrastructure development.

New Green Card Rule Emerges as New India–US Friction Point

Green Card

Green Card Latest News

  • The Trump administration's US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced a sweeping reversal of a 50-year-old immigration practice — requiring all foreign nationals temporarily in the US to return to their home countries to apply for a Green Card (Permanent Resident Card). 
  • The move could potentially impact thousands of Indians currently in the US at various stages of the Green Card process and has emerged as a new point of contention between New Delhi and Washington DC.

About Green Card

  • A Green Card (officially called a Permanent Resident Card) allows a foreign national to live and work permanently in the United States. 
  • It is the critical stepping stone between temporary visa status and full US citizenship. 
  • There are approximately 1.5 million Indian Green Card holders in the US already, making India the second-largest country of origin for new permanent residents.

What Was the Earlier Rule

  • For over 50 years, the US allowed foreign workers to change from non-immigrant to immigrant status by applying for "Adjustment of Status" from within the US — without having to leave the country. 
  • This meant that students, H-1B workers, and others legally present in the US could complete the entire permanent residence process without ever leaving. 
  • This applied to those married to US citizens, student visa holders, work visa holders, refugees, and asylum-seekers.

What Has Changed — The New Rule

  • From now on, an alien who is in the US temporarily and wants a Green Card must return to their home country to apply, except in extraordinary circumstances. 
  • The USCIS described the change as a return to "the original intent of the law" and closing a "loophole." 
  • The agency will now grant Green Cards to people inside the country only in "extraordinary circumstances". 
  • Experts say the revised rule will apply only to new applications — existing applicants may not be immediately affected.

The US Government's Stated Rationale

  • USCIS offered two primary justifications for the change. 
  • First, reducing illegal overstays — "When aliens apply from their home country, it reduces the need to find and remove those who decide to slip into the shadows and remain in the US illegally after being denied residency." 
  • Second, freeing up USCIS resources. It allow USCIS to focus on other priorities including visas for victims of violent crime, human trafficking, and naturalization applications.

Why is This Significant for Indians

  • India has an outsized stake in this policy change. Key data points illustrate the scale of exposure:
    • Approximately 1.5 million Indian Green Card holders already in the US.
    • An additional 1.2 million highly skilled Indian nationals and their dependents are estimated to be stuck in the employment-based Green Card backlog — already waiting years or decades due to country-specific caps.
    • Tens of thousands of new Green Cards are issued to Indian nationals every year.
    • The categories most affected — H-1B temporary workers, students, and tourist visa holders — are disproportionately Indian.
  • The new rule will now require these individuals to leave the US, return to India, and file their Green Card applications at a US consulate — a logistically complex, financially burdensome, and professionally disruptive process.

Key Concerns

  • Subjectivity and Discretion
    • Under the old system, if applicants followed rules, paid taxes, and had their paperwork in order, a Green Card was virtually guaranteed. 
    • The new rule gives the Department of State discretionary powers to approve or reject applications — making the process more subjective and uncertain. 
  • Logistical Nightmare
    • Requiring applicants to physically return to their home countries creates enormous logistical challenges — particularly for those who have lived in the US for years, have US-born children, own property, and are deeply embedded in American professional and social life.
  • Structural Contradiction
    • Critics have noted a fundamental structural contradiction — the US does not process immigrant visa applications in many countries. 
    • This means many applicants would be separated from their families indefinitely while getting no closer to securing a Green Card — effectively creating an immigration limbo.

Conclusion

  • The policy has significant bilateral implications for India-US relations. India's large skilled diaspora in the US — particularly in technology, medicine, research, and engineering — has been a major source of remittances, technology transfer, and soft power for India. 
  • Disruption of their immigration pathways could trigger return migration of skilled Indians — with both brain gain implications for India and talent drain implications for the US. 
  • It could also become a diplomatic friction point between New Delhi and Washington, at a time when the two countries are deepening their strategic and technology partnership.


Source: IE

Green Card FAQs

Q1: What is the Green Card Return-Home Rule and why is it controversial?

Ans: The Green Card Return-Home Rule requires certain applicants to return to their home country before pursuing permanent residency, creating uncertainty for skilled Indian professionals.

Q2: Why has the Green Card Return-Home Rule become an India–US friction point?

Ans: The Green Card Return-Home Rule affects thousands of Indian applicants, raising concerns about talent mobility, immigration fairness, and bilateral people-to-people relations between India and the US.

Q3: How does the Green Card Return-Home Rule impact Indian professionals?

Ans: The Green Card Return-Home Rule may disrupt career continuity, delay residency prospects, and create financial and personal uncertainty for Indian skilled workers in the US.

Q4: What are the broader diplomatic implications of the Green Card Return-Home Rule?

Ans: The Green Card Return-Home Rule could add strain to India–US relations by complicating migration pathways for one of the largest professional immigrant communities.

Q5: Can the Green Card Return-Home Rule reshape immigration debates?

Ans: The Green Card Return-Home Rule may intensify global debates over skilled migration, visa fairness, labour mobility, and the treatment of long-term foreign professionals.

UAPA Bail and Supreme Court’s Evolving Jurisprudence on Personal Liberty

UAPA Bail

UAPA Bail Latest News

  • The Supreme Court has referred to a larger Bench the issue of whether prolonged incarceration and delayed trial can override strict bail conditions under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA).

Understanding UAPA and Bail Provisions

  • The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (UAPA) is India’s primary anti-terror law. Initially enacted to deal with unlawful organisations.
  • The Act has gradually expanded to include provisions related to terrorism, terrorist financing, and designation of individuals as terrorists.
  • UAPA grants wide powers to investigative agencies, especially in cases involving threats to national security. 
  • However, one of the most debated aspects of the law concerns bail provisions, which are significantly stricter than ordinary criminal law.
  • Under normal criminal jurisprudence, courts generally follow the principle of “bail, not jail”, based on the presumption that an accused person remains innocent until proven guilty. UAPA, however, modifies this principle through Section 43D(5).

Bail Difficulty Under UAPA

  • Section 43D(5) of UAPA creates a stringent framework for granting bail. It provides that courts shall deny bail if, after examining the chargesheet or case diary, there are “reasonable grounds” to believe that accusations are prima facie true.
  • This provision effectively shifts the balance in favour of prolonged detention.
  • The Supreme Court’s ruling in National Investigation Agency (NIA) vs Zahoor Ahmad Shah Watali (2019) strengthened this restrictive approach. 
  • The Court held that judges need not undertake an elaborate analysis of evidence at the bail stage. Instead, courts only need to examine the broad probabilities of the accusations.
  • As a result, securing bail under UAPA became significantly harder because courts often defer to the prosecution’s initial allegations. Critics argue that this transforms pre-trial detention into a form of punishment.

The K.A. Najeeb Judgment and Constitutional Safeguards

  • A major shift came through the Supreme Court’s decision in Union of India vs K.A. Najeeb (2021).
  • The Court recognised that rigid application of Section 43D(5) could violate Article 21 of the Constitution, which guarantees the right to life and personal liberty.
  • In this case, the Supreme Court held that constitutional courts have the power to grant bail when an accused has spent a substantial period in jail and the trial is unlikely to conclude within a reasonable time.
  • The judgment clarified that prolonged incarceration without trial cannot continue indefinitely, irrespective of the seriousness of charges. 
  • It stressed that courts cannot become mute spectators if legal delays effectively punish an undertrial person before conviction.
  • Thus, the Najeeb judgment softened the rigour of Section 43D(5) by allowing constitutional principles to override statutory restrictions in exceptional circumstances.

Recent Supreme Court Debate on UAPA Bail

  • The present controversy arose after the Supreme Court granted interim bail to two accused in the 2020 Delhi riots case and referred a larger legal question regarding UAPA bail.
  • The debate intensified because of apparent differences between two recent Supreme Court rulings:
    • Syed Iftikhar Andrabi vs National Investigation Agency (2026). 
    • Gulfisha Fatima vs State (Government of NCT Delhi) (2026). 
  • In the Andrabi case, Justices B.V. Nagarathna and Ujjal Bhuyan raised concerns that smaller Benches may be weakening the principle established in K.A. Najeeb
    • Justice Bhuyan emphasised that courts must not ignore prolonged incarceration merely because offences are serious.
    • The Bench observed that undertrials should not suffer because the State fails to complete trials within a reasonable time. It also noted that seriousness of charges alone cannot justify indefinite detention.
    • Justice Bhuyan further highlighted that UAPA conviction rates remain low, reportedly between 2% and 6% nationally, raising concerns over prolonged imprisonment without conviction.
  • However, another Bench in the Gulfisha Fatima case denied bail to accused persons such as Umar Khalid and Sharjeel Imam, holding that an accused-specific assessment of evidence justified continued detention. 
    • The Bench maintained that the K.A. Najeeb ruling did not create an automatic right to bail merely because of delay.
    • Because of these differing interpretations, the Supreme Court has now referred the matter to a larger Bench for authoritative clarification.

Balancing Security and Liberty

  • The ongoing debate reflects a larger constitutional tension between:
    • National security and anti-terror enforcement, and 
    • Protection of personal liberty under Article 21. 
  • Supporters of strict bail norms argue that terrorism-related offences require exceptional caution. 
  • Critics, however, contend that prolonged incarceration without trial undermines constitutional rights and effectively punishes individuals before guilt is established.
  • The Supreme Court’s upcoming clarification may significantly shape India’s future UAPA bail jurisprudence.

Source: TH

UAPA Bail FAQs

Q1: What is Section 43D(5) of UAPA?

Ans: It restricts bail if accusations appear prima facie true based on case records.

Q2: Why is bail difficult under UAPA?

Ans: Courts follow strict statutory conditions and rely on broad probabilities of accusations.

Q3: What did the K.A. Najeeb judgment hold?

Ans: It allowed constitutional courts to grant bail in cases of prolonged incarceration and delayed trials.

Q4: Which constitutional right is central to UAPA bail cases?

Ans: Article 21, which guarantees life and personal liberty.

Q5: Why has the Supreme Court referred the matter to a larger Bench?

Ans: To resolve differing interpretations of bail principles under UAPA.

Enquire Now