Nationality Indian Awards National RTI Award | Name Subhash Agrawal Role Businessman | |
Occupation businessman, RTI activist Parent(s) Om Prakash AgrawalPadmawati Books The Change Maker: A Crusade Through Letters Alma mater Delhi Technological University, Faculty of Management Studies |
Online course on rti intricacies of the act by subhash chandra agrawal
Subhash Chandra Agrawal (born 10 January 1950) is an Indian businessman and right to information activist. He holds the Guinness World Record for having written the most published letters to newspaper editors.
Contents
- Online course on rti intricacies of the act by subhash chandra agrawal
- Early life and education
- Letters and right to information
- Controversy
- Personal life
- References

Early life and education

Subhash Chandra Agrawal was born on 10 January 1950 in Delhi to Om Prakash Agrawal and Padmawati. He finished his schooling from Anglo Sanskrit Victoria Jubilee Senior Secondary School, Daryaganj. He attended Delhi College of Engineering (now Delhi Technological University) where he graduated with a Bachelor of Science (mechanical engineering). He earned his post-graduate diploma in marketing and sales management from Faculty of Management Studies, University of Delhi. He wanted to join the Indian Administrative Services (IAS), but his uncle "forced [him] to join the family business, [and] crushed [his] dreams of becoming an IAS officer".
Letters and right to information

Agrawal wrote his first letter to the editor of the Hindi newspaper Dainik Hindustan about a bus conductor of Delhi Transport Corporation who did not issue tickets but asked passengers to pay for them. He then raised concerns about the irregular timings of the Taj Express with the Ministry of Railways. He had written 3,699 such published letters as of 31 January 2006, which is a Guinness World Records entry "for the most published letters written to newspaper editors over an individual's lifetime".

He has utilised the Right to Information Act (RTI Act) as a tool to combat corruption in India. The Central Information Commissioner brought the office of Chief Justice of India under the purview of the RTI Act after Agrawal's application. This decision was subsequently upheld by the High Court of Delhi.
Controversy

Agrawal has been criticised as allowing himself to be manipulated by those with vested interests who use his expertise with RTI as a tool for their own selfish ends. His over use it is alleged hurts the system, also he is criticised for using RTI just to feed the media with stories.
Personal life

Agarwal is married to Madhu Agarwal, a social worker who herself holds the Guinness World Record for having written the most published letters (447) in newspapers in a calendar year (2004). His wife and nephew help him by sharing their ideas. Subhash Agrawal reads six newspapers daily and watches news on television, but not cricket. He lives in Dariba, Chandni Chowk, Delhi.