Article
38 […] Everyone has the right of access to the collected
personal data that relates to him and the right to judicial
protection in the event of any abuse of such data.
Article
39 […] Except in such cases as are provided by law,
everyone has the right to obtain information of a public
nature in which he has a well founded legal interest under
law.
•
Combined gross enrolment ratio for primary,
secondary and tertiary schools, 2002/03: 95.3
•
GDP per capita (PPP US$) (HDI), 2003: 19,150
•
Total population (millions), 2003: 2
•
Total fertility rate (births per woman), 2000-05:
1.2
•
Under-five mortality rate (per 1,000 live births),
2003: 4
•
Net primary enrolment ratio (%), 2002/03: 93
•
HIV prevalence (% ages 15-49), 2003: <0.1
[<0.2]
•
Undernourished people (% of total population),
2000/03: N/A
•
Population with sustainable access to an improved
water source (%), 2002: N/A
Source:
UN Development Program, Human Development Reports
Data
The
Access to Public Information Act (ZDIJZ) was adopted in
February 2003. It provides that "everyone" has
a right to information of public character held by state
bodies, local government agencies, public agencies, public
contractors and other entities of public law. Requests can
be oral or written. The bodies must respond in 20 working
days.
There
are exemptions for classified data, business secrets, personal
information that would infringe privacy, confidentiality
of statistics information, tax procedure, criminal prosecutions,
administrative or civil procedures, pre-decisional materials
that would lead to a misunderstanding, natural or cultural
conservation, and internal operations. There is a public
interest test with some exemptions. The exemptions also
do not apply to use of public funds or execution of public
functions and employment of a civil servant, environmental
hazards, and improperly classified information.
There
is a right of appeal to the Information Commissioner who
can issue binding decisions. Its decisions can be appealed
to a court. Fines can be imposed for destruction of information
or failure to disclose without authorization. The Commission
heard 106 cases in 2005, up from 62 in 2004. 11 decisions
have been filed in courts. In November 2005, the office
was merged with the Data Protection Commission.
The
Commission also maintains the list of public bodies covered
under the Act. In one of its first decisions, the Commissioner
ruled that the office of the former president was covered
under the Act.
Public
bodies are required to appoint a leading official to receive
requests and to create a catalog of the public information
and make it available on the Internet along with the current
and proposed regulations, programmes, strategies, views,
opinions and other documents of public character. They must
also publish annual reports on the Act.
The
law was substantially amended in July 2005 to implement
the EU Directives on Re-use of Public Sector Information
(2003/98/EC) and Access to Environmental Information (2003/4/ES).
The amendment also created the public interest test and
gave the Commission the power to review information to see
if it has been improperly classified.
The
Ministry of Information Society was tasked to implement
the Act but it has now been closed down and its functions
have been transferred to the Ministry for Internal Affairs.
Most of the state bodies have not produced reports on usage
(only 333 out of 2610 were submitted). Of those that have,
15838 requests were filed in 2004, 80 were denied.
The
Classified Information Act was adopted in 2001 to implement
NATO rules on protection of classified information. It is
overseen by the Government Office for the Protection of
Classified Information. In April 2003, many of the security
files of the UDBA, the former Yugoslavian secret police
were published on a web site in Thailand by the Slovene
Honorary Consul for New Zealand Dusan Lajovic. The documents
were on over one million people including the officials,
collaborators, and targets of surveillance. The current
intelligence agency and the national archives claimed they
did not have a copy of the files in their archives.
The
Personal Data Protection Act provides for individuals to
access and correct their personal information held by public
or private bodies. It is overseen by the Information Commission.
Slovenia
signed the Aarhus Convention in June 1998 and ratified it
in July 2004. Article 14 of the 1993 Environmental Protection
Act states that environmental data is public property. Access
to information is under the ZDIJZ.
Under
the Archives and Archival Institutions Act, most documents
are available 30 years after their creation. Documents with
data that could harm national security, public order or
economic interests can be withheld for 40 years and those
containing personal information can be withheld for 75 years
or 10 years after the death of the person mentioned.
[Footnotes
for this section are currently unavailable but will be posted
the week of July 10. All footnotes and references are also
available in the full study, available
here.]
[Footnotes
for this section are currently unavailable but will be posted
the week of July 10. All footnotes and references are also
available in the full study, available
here.]
"The
law provides for free public access to all information
controlled by state or local institutions and
their agents. The Government provided such access
for both citizens and non citizens alike, including
foreign media. The Government may deny access
to public information only if information is classified,
it contains personal data protected by privacy
laws, and in certain other narrowly defined exceptions."
1)
Voice and Accountability: 1.12
2) Political Instability and Violence: 0.99
3) Government Effectiveness: 1.02
4) Regulatory Burden: 0.89
5) Rule of Law: 0.93
6) Control of Corruption: 0.97