Four appeals have been filed before the Delhi High Court seeking disclosure of information relating to Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi's degree.
The appeals have challenged High Court single-judge's August 25 order which quashed the Central Information Commission's (CIC) order of December 2016 to disclose PM's degree details.
A Division Bench of Chief Justice Devendra Kumar Upadhyaya and Justice Tushar Rao Gedela will hear the appeals filed by Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) leader Sanjay Singh, Right to Information (RTI) activist Neeraj Sharma and advocate Mohd Irshad tomorrow.
Single-judge Justice Sachin Datta had on August 25 set aside the CIC directive after the Delhi University approached the High Court.
The Court had ruled that there was no public interest in disclosing the details.
Justice Datta added that the marksheets/ results/ degree certificates/ academic records of any individual, even if that individual is a holder of a public office, are in the nature of personal information, exempt under the Right to Information (RTI) Act.
The issue came to the limelight after former Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal in 2016 asked PM Modi to “come clean about his educational degrees” and “make them public”.
PM Modi had sworn in his election affidavit that he graduated from DU in the Bachelor of Arts (BA) Political Science course in the year 1978.
A year before that, Neeraj Sharma had filed an RTI application seeking details of all BA degrees awarded by Delhi University in 1978. The University denied disclosure of the information related to the degree, stating that it was “private” and had “nothing to do with public interest”.
In December 2016, Sharma moved the CIC against the University’s response.
Information Commissioner Prof M Acharyulu passed an order in December 2016 directing DU to make the register containing the list of students who passed the Bachelor of Arts programme in 1978, public.
On January 23, 2017, the University moved High Court challenging the CIC order.
The Court in January 2017 issued notice to Sharma and stayed the order after noting Solicitor General (SG) Tushar Mehta’s arguments that the order has far-reaching adverse consequences and that all universities in the country which hold degree details of crores of students in a fiduciary capacity.
Subsequently, the Court in August this year set aside the CIC order, prompting the present appeals.