Information Commission Bangladesh | |
Formation: | 1 July 2009 |
Native Name: | তথ্য কমিশন বাংলাদেশ |
Native Name Lang: | bn |
Headquarters: | Dhaka, Bangladesh |
Region Served: | Bangladesh |
Language: | Bengali |
Leader Title: | Chief Information Commissioner |
Leader Name: | Dr. Abdul Malek |
Leader Title2: | Information Commissioner |
Leader Name2: |
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Parent Organization: | Ministry of Information and Broadcasting |
Website: | Information Commission Bangladesh |
The Information Commission Bangladesh is an independent statutory body responsible for ensuring citizens have access to information according to the Right to Information Act, 2009.[1] The commission is mostly made up of bureaucrats.[2] Abdul Malek, former secretary to the government of Bangladesh, became Chief Information Commissioner on 22 March 2023.
The Information Commission of Bangladesh was established on 1 July 2009 by the Awami League government. It was based on the Right to Information Ordinance, which was passed in 2008 by the Caretaker Government during the 2006–2008 Bangladeshi political crisis and ratified by the parliament on 29 March 2009. The first chief information commissioner was M Azizur Rahman, a retired government secretary. Sadeka Halim, a professor at University of Dhaka, and Mohammad Abu Taher, another retired secretary, were the first two commissioners. They were selected through a selection committee led by a judge of the Bangladesh Supreme Court. Security and intelligence agencies are exempted from provisions of the commission.[3] [4] [5] The inclusion of two former civil servants as commissioners drew criticism.
Out of the three commissioners, one of them must be a woman.[6] To removal procedure for a commissioner is the same as that of a judge on the Bangladesh Supreme Court. The two commissioners have the rank of a government secretary since 2014.[7]
Decisions of the commission regarding request for information can be appealed in courts.[8] The commission provided information for 95 percent of the 6,369 requests it received in 2016. It also fines designated officers for not providing the requested information.[9]
1. | 2 July 2009 | 10 Jan 2010 | [10] | ||
2. | 31 March 2010 | 3 September 2012 | |||
3. | Ambassador Mohammed Farooq | 11 October 2012 | 9 January 2016 | ||
4. | Professor Md. Golam Rahman | 7 February 2016 | 6 January 2018 | ||
5. | Martuza Ahmed | 18 January 2018 | 17 January 2023 | ||
6. | Dr. Abdul Malek | 22 March 2023 | [11] |
1. | Mohammad Abu Taher | 2 July 2009 | 1 July 2014 | ||
2. | Professor Sadeka Halim | 5 July 2009 | 4 July 2014 | ||
3. | Khurshida Begum Sayeed | 28 September 2014 | 31 January 2018 | ||
4. | 16 September 2014 | 15 September 2019 | |||
5. | Dr. Abdul Malek | 30 January 2020 | 21 March 2023 | ||
6. | Suraiya Begum | 29 May 2018 | 28 May 2023 | ||
7. | Masuda Bhatti | 24 August 2023 | incumbent | [12] | |
8. | Shahidul Alam Jhinuk | 24 August 2023 | incumbent |