Thursday, February 10, 2011

Re: [HumJanenge] Re: SEBI give wrong info under RTI, collectsunauthorised data

Your sickening reference to vir and barkhs is uncalled for. I wonder how u got hold of this group which has no activists, but I am out of it.

Sent on my BlackBerry® from Vodafone Essar


From: Sarbajit Roy <rti.sarbajitroy@gmail.com>
Sender: humjanenge@googlegroups.com
Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2011 21:36:19 -0800
To: Sucheta Dalal<suchetadalal@yahoo.com>; humjanenge<humjanenge@googlegroups.com>
ReplyTo: humjanenge@googlegroups.com
Subject: [HumJanenge] Re: SEBI give wrong info under RTI, collects unauthorised data

Dear Ms Dalal

Many thanks for sending this to me, but I am not an RTI activist as some people still persist in believing. I am forwarding your mail to that Humjanenge email RTI group of activists you kindly wrote about in Moneylife some time back. Perhaps they have some activists
still left in that group, although as I am now the moderator of it after PMK1504 resigned, and have tried to weed out all the activists from Humjanenege.

It is curious though that you have not mentioned the name of the so-called RTI activist who filed these RTIs to SEBI. I surmise this is possibly due to the fact that you are also considered to be on a footing with Vir Sanghvi, Barkha Dutta etc when it comes to intervening in Govt actions, possibly causing the regulator to tap your phones too.

Sarbajit Roy

On Thu, Feb 10, 2011 at 7:01 PM, Sucheta Dalal <suchetadalal@yahoo.com> wrote:
SEBI lies under RTI

Would like RTI activists to see this and react. Pls do post on our website so that your views are available at one place. I think we ought to take a stand. 


Moneylife » Markets » Regulations » Rot inside SEBI: Regulator collects call data of 2,327 subscribers without authorisation
 
Rot inside SEBI: Regulator collects call data of 2,327 subscribers without authorisation
February 09, 2011 07:05 PM Bookmark and Share 
Sucheta Dalal and Yogesh Sapkale

The market regulator routinely collects call data of individuals it is investigating. It took the persistent efforts of an RTI activist to ferret out the fact that SEBI had collected records of a massive 2,327 subscribers, although it is legally not authorised to do so

The Securities and Exchange Board of India's (SEBI) celebrated investigation into the Pyramid Saimira scam was the starting point of the regulator seeking call records of people it is investigating. 

At a time when industrialist Ratan Tata has approached the Supreme Court (SC) demanding protection of privacy and when the government has admitted that it is duty bound to protect conversations obtained through phone tapping, it is pertinent to know that government agencies such as SEBI have been routinely demanding call data without authorisation. Worse, most telecom operators have been supplying information without even knowing the facts. 

In the landmark case of the People's Union for Civil Liberties versus the government, the SC ensured that the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) explicitly designate the agencies that can obtain telephone data. This includes the director general (DG) of police or commissioner of police at the state level and eight national agencies-the Intelligence Bureau, DG-Narcotics Control Bureau, DG-Directorate of Enforcement (ED), DG-Central Economic Intelligence Bureau, DG-Directorate of Revenue Intelligence, Director of Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), DG-National Investigation Agency (NIA), Member (Investigation)-Central Board of Direct Taxes and Directorate of Signal Intelligence, Ministry of Defence (for J&K, North East and Assam areas only). SEBI is not on the list and has been trying hard to be included. 

The DoT, in a letter, dated 10 December 2009 (a copy of which is available with Moneylife), clearly said that SEBI is not an authorised enforcement agency for intercepting or monitoring calls. P Chidambaram too had turned down SEBI's request when he was the finance minister. 

Yet, in the Pyramid Saimira case, the market regulator sought records of several entities only to learn, long after its first report, that a SEBI manager had forged a letter (at the behest of a former promoter of the company), which caused wild fluctuations in the stock price and triggered a massive investigation that has killed the company. 

The story gets even more curious when a Right to Information (RTI) activist filed a query in August 2010 seeking information on the total number of telephone/mobile connections in respect of which information was sought from service providers. SEBI's first reaction was to reject the request on the grounds that it would hamper ongoing investigations. 

The RTI activist filed an appeal in November 2010, saying that he had not asked for specifics, but only the total number of cases in which information had been sought. When the appeal was allowed, SEBI responded on 7 December 2010 saying that it has sought call records for a total of 13 numbers, of which call records for five had not been received from the service provider. 

Refusing to believe that the number was so tiny, the RTI activist filed a second query on 20th December. This time he asked for file notings/green notes of various SEBI divisions dealing with the issue. 

All of a sudden, on 21st December, SEBI sent another reply giving point-wise additional information, which says it has been collecting call record data of about 2,327 subscribers. In effect, just 14 days later, the market regulator reported that there were not 13 but 2,327 subscribers whose call records had been sought. Of these, 1,774 records were sought by simply writing a letter to telecom operators. We learn that SEBI often seeks information without even initiating a formal investigation. In addition, it has authorised fairly junior officials to deal with the telecom companies. 

This raises a lot of questions. Giving wrong information under the RTI Act is a serious offence. In this case, SEBI provided the information in a letter dated 21st December saying that "in continuance" of its earlier letter with false and incomplete data (that it sought only 13 telephone records), it was providing "point-wise additional information" with regard to the query. Would this information have been provided if the RTI applicant had not filed a follow-on query seeking green notes and file notings? Was SEBI trying to fudge facts? Clearly, the benefit of doubt does not go to the regulator. It also introduces a new element of how the regulator tries to fudge facts to hide the fact that it is seeking unauthorised data. 

The questions now is whether the government will legitimise SEBI's actions or stop it from seeking such information.


 
Sucheta Dalal,
Managing Editor, MoneyLIFE Magazine
Trustee Moneylife Foundation
www.moneylife.in - Tel: 022-24441060
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do
nothing."
     --- Edmund Burke



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