NEW DELHI — In the labyrinth of New Delhi’s bureaucracy, controversies often begin not with dramatic raids or leaked tapes, but with a simple question filed under the Right to Information Act.
Who appointed him?
That question, raised quietly in an RTI application by Ghaziabad-based applicant Jay Prakash Gupta, has now evolved into an uncomfortable political and bureaucratic controversy surrounding the engagement of Danish Rizwan as an “Advisor” linked to the Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME).
The issue is no longer merely about one appointment. It is now about secrecy, institutional accountability and whether politically connected individuals can operate within the government system without transparent disclosure of their authority, access or privileges.
At the center of the storm stands Union MSME Minister Jitan Ram Manjhi, whose office is increasingly facing allegations that it is attempting to shield Rizwan from scrutiny by invoking RTI exemptions while avoiding direct answers to critical questions.
The story began in December 2025, when Gupta filed an RTI application seeking extensive details regarding Rizwan’s role inside the MSME ecosystem. The queries were unusually comprehensive, almost forensic in structure. They sought copies of appointment orders, file notings, background verification records, approvals from the Appointments Committee of the Cabinet, access permissions to ministry files, meeting attendance records, office allotments, ID cards, vehicle facilities, security arrangements and even permissions relating to the use of the State Emblem and National Flag.
The RTI also sought to know whether any complaints, vigilance concerns or adverse inputs existed against Rizwan and whether any correspondence had taken place with the Cabinet Secretariat, the Department of Personnel and Training or security agencies. Initially, there was little indication that the RTI would become politically explosive. But the reply from the National Small Industries Corporation (NSIC), to which the application had been transferred, changed that.
In a significant admission, NSIC confirmed that Danish Rizwan had indeed been engaged as an Advisor “on contractual terms” following the recommendation of Minister Jitan Ram Manjhi. “Upon recommendation of Hon’ble Union Minister (MSME) to engage Sh. Danish Rizwan as Advisor, he has been engaged on contractual terms by NSIC,” the response stated.
The corporation also confirmed that “necessary police verification of credentials” had been conducted. That single paragraph transformed the RTI from a speculative inquiry into a document-backed controversy. Because immediately after acknowledging the appointment, NSIC refused to disclose almost everything else.
Copies of appointment orders, office memorandums, file notings and related approvals were denied under Sections 8(1)(e) and 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act — exemptions dealing with fiduciary and personal information.
The reply became even more puzzling when NSIC claimed that questions relating to ID cards, office space, vehicles, security arrangements and other official facilities “do not pertain to NSIC and are not applicable.”
That answer triggered deeper suspicion.
If NSIC had formally engaged Rizwan as an Advisor, critics asked, how could records relating to facilities, office access or identification not pertain to the organization? Within bureaucratic and political circles, the controversy began attracting attention not merely because of the appointment itself, but because of what appeared to be a carefully layered institutional opacity around it.
Gupta challenged the reply through a First Appeal under Section 19(1) of the RTI Act. His appeal accused the public authority of providing an “evasive” and “legally untenable” response. The appeal argued that an individual appointed through a public institution and linked to a Union minister could not claim blanket privacy protections regarding the terms of engagement, especially if public resources and official infrastructure were involved.
It also questioned why NSIC acknowledged police verification but refused to provide records related to it. Most importantly, the appeal attacked the logic of separating the engagement from the facilities allegedly associated with it. If NSIC was the engaging authority, Gupta argued, then records relating to office access, ID cards or official privileges should logically remain within its custody.
But the First Appellate Authority sided entirely with the CPIO.
The FAA ruled that the records pertained to a “third party” and remained protected under the same RTI exemptions. It also maintained that information not held by NSIC could not be furnished. “Contention of applicant/appellant that information provided is false, incomplete or legally untenable holds no ground,” the order stated while dismissing the appeal.
That rejection has now pushed the matter into a more politically sensitive phase. Not satisfied with the outcome, Gupta has approached vigilance authorities and the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC), seeking what he describes as a “final resolution” into the matter.
According to sources familiar with the complaint, Gupta has alleged that the repeated denial of records indicates a deliberate attempt to shield politically inconvenient information from public scrutiny. The complaint reportedly argues that the use of fiduciary and privacy exemptions in this case defeats the spirit of transparency because the engagement involves public institutions, public infrastructure and potential access to official systems.
The political implications are becoming increasingly difficult for the MSME ministry to ignore. At a time when the government frequently invokes transparency and accountability in governance, the Danish Rizwan controversy has opened a parallel conversation about the ecosystem of unofficial or semi-official advisors who operate around ministries and ministers.
In Delhi’s administrative culture, such figures are not uncommon. But the Rizwan case is unusual because the government has simultaneously acknowledged his engagement and refused to explain the contours of his authority.
That contradiction now sits at the heart of the controversy. Was Rizwan merely a contractual consultant attached to NSIC with limited functional responsibilities? Or did he exercise broader access and influence within the MSME establishment? The available records do not answer that question. Nor do they clarify whether he attended ministry meetings, accessed files, occupied office space or enjoyed security and transport privileges.
The refusal to disclose appointment documents has only deepened speculation. For Minister Jitan Ram Manjhi, the issue is becoming politically awkward because NSIC itself explicitly tied the appointment to his recommendation. Opposition voices and RTI activists are now increasingly portraying the matter as an example of political patronage insulated by bureaucratic secrecy.
Inside government circles, the controversy has also revived an older debate over the expanding influence of contractual advisors, consultants and politically connected intermediaries operating around ministries without a clearly visible accountability structure. Transparency campaigners argue that if an individual can influence official functioning, attend meetings or access institutional resources, the public has a legitimate right to know under what authority such access exists.
The Danish Rizwan episode may ultimately be decided in the corridors of vigilance institutions or before information authorities. But politically, the damage may already be underway. Because sometimes, in governance, it is not merely the appointment that becomes controversial. It is the effort to hide the paperwork.













