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20
APRIL 2004
Shanghai Advances the Cause of Open Government Information
in China
While
the Chinese State Council mulls over a draft of China's
first freedom of information legislation, the bustling metropolis
of Shanghai, home to some 16 million people, adopted China's
first provincial-level open information legislation on January
20, 2004. The Provisions of Shanghai Municipality on Open
Government Information (the Shanghai Provisions) represent
the most comprehensive framework to date in China for accessing
government-held information, containing more detail than
the pioneering Guangzhou Municipal Open Government Information
Provisions adopted in 2003 (Note 1) and
other lower-level local Chinese legislation to date. (Note
2) The Shanghai Provisions are scheduled to go into
effect May 1, the same day that Shanghai will launch its
"Transparent Government Program."
The Shanghai Provisions are significant in at least three
respects. First, they represent the latest and most sophisticated
approach to open government information (OGI) in China.
Second, they were formulated through a relatively open process
that included posting a draft for public comment, inviting
diverse input and publishing together with the final rule
an explanation of the drafting process and comments received
and considered. Third, the Shanghai government has launched
unprecedented organizational, training and preparatory work
to help ensure the effective implementation of these Provisions,
a process which China's central government and other provinces
are watching closely.
Like many countries, China has a long and well-entrenched
tradition of government secrecy. Chinese scholars estimate
that some 80 percent of useful information in China languishes
in government files. China's culture of secrecy has meant
that government acts as a bottleneck to a free flow of economic,
social and other information that would facilitate continued
dynamic growth and development. Officials and scholars alike
have noted that the lack of transparency contributes to
corruption, misallocation of resources and distrust of public
institutions.
Shanghai
has worked hard to transform itself into an international
financial, trade and shipping center, with a goal to become
a "global metropolis." Shanghai was an early proponent
of E-government and the nationwide movement for more "open
government affairs," recognizing that making more information
available to its citizens would stimulate economic activity,
help curb corruption and ensure more efficient and effective
governance. Frustrated by uneven implementation of these
policies and spurred on by China's commitments to the World
Trade Organization to introduce greater transparency, Shanghai
determined to institutionalize these programs within a legal
framework.
The Shanghai Provisions build on the innovative concepts
introduced by the Guangzhou Provisions that revolutionize
the way information is to be handled. They establish a presumption
of disclosure, making secrecy the exception rather than
the rule. They provide that citizens, legal persons and
other organizations have the right to request government
information from government agencies, including information
about individuals themselves, and refer to the recently
articulated "right to know." (Note
3) Conversely, they impose a legal obligation on government
agencies to disclose all information not covered by a specified
exemption. The Shanghai Provisions do not on their face
apply to foreigners, but government officials have announced
that foreign individuals, legal persons, organizations and
news media will be given equal access to government information
in Shanghai. (Note 4)
What Information Can be Accessed?
The
Shanghai Provisions define "government information"
as information held in physical form by government agencies
that is related to economic and social management and public
services. Reportedly the intent of adding reference to "economic
and social management and public services" was to distinguish
government-held information that should be made public from
information relating purely to internal agency matters of
little interest to the public. Hopefully these qualifiers
will not be used as grounds to carve out unintended additional
exemptions from disclosure by recalcitrant agency bureaucrats,
who might argue that a given piece of information does not
relate to "economic and social management and public
services."
The
Shanghai Provisions specify a non-exhaustive list of broad
categories of information that must be disseminated on their
own initiative by government agencies, a useful device in
a country where government is not accustomed to sharing
information in the ordinary course. In addition to general
matters relating to development plans, municipal rules and
regulations, budgets and actual expenditures and information
about each government agency, the list requires publication
of information on several issues of particular public concern,
such as information on epidemics (like last year's SARS
outbreak), natural disasters and other emergencies and urban
land use plans and approval documents relating to redevelopment
involving demolition of existing structures and relocation
of residents. The sometimes forcible relocation of urban
residents due to rapid urban redevelopment in Shanghai has
led to protests, litigation and a general public outcry
for more transparency in the process and what Westerners
might refer to as procedural due process. (Note
5) Making the urban planning and redevelopment process
subject to mandatory public disclosure should help regularize
this often controversial process.
All government information is to be accessible by the public,
unless it falls within one of six listed exemptions from
disclosure for information that is (1) a state secret; (2)
a commercial secret; (3) an individual's private information;
(4) related to a matter that is in the course of being investigated,
discussed or processed; (5) related to an administrative
enforcement action that might influence the enforcement
activity or endanger an individual's life or safety; or
(6) otherwise exempted from disclosure by law or regulation.
All but the state secrets exemption may be subjected to
a balancing test. In the case of commercial secrets and
individual privacy, the Shanghai Provisions stipulate not
only that the rightsholder may waive exemption from disclosure,
but that the rule of exemption may also be overcome if the
public interest in disclosure outweighs the possible harm,
or if laws and regulations otherwise require disclosure.
Information covered by exemptions (4) and (5) may be disclosed
if government agencies determine disclosure would clearly
be in the public interest and not cause substantial harm.
Further, if a request is made for information involving
commercial secrets or privacy that might affect the rights
and interests of a third party, unless the third party has
already agreed in writing to its disclosure, the government
agency is to seek the third party's opinion; failure to
reply will be deemed to constitute refusal to disclose.
While
legal development is still needed in order to determine
the scope of exemptions for "commercial secrets"
(Note 6) and "individual privacy,"
(Note 7) the most troublesome exemption
is that for "state secrets." Invocation of the
overly broad Law on Safeguarding State Secrets, adopted
in 1988, can still basically eviscerate the disclosure mandate
of all OGI legislation in China. This law defines "state
secrets" generally as being "matters that affect
the security and interests of the state," which is
further illustrated with broad categories of information
including secrets concerning "important policy decisions
on state affairs," "economic and social development,"
science and technology development and criminal investigations,
as well as the more conventional areas such as national
defense and diplomatic affairs. Chinese officials and scholars
have called for revision of the law to more clearly distinguish
between what should be kept confidential and what can and
should be disclosed. Although work on a comprehensive revision
is in fact underway, a revised State Secrets Law is not
yet on the National People's Congress legislative plan for
the 2003-07 period. Pending national action, local governments
like Shanghai will be challenged to find ways to narrow
its reach.
A
potential conflict also arises under China's Archives Law,
which governs the handling of agency documents and reference
materials. That law stipulates the general rule that archived
government information is not to be disclosed to the public
for at least 30 years without special approval (and is under
state copyright). Nonetheless, local authorities have recently
started to implement a more open access policy to their
unclassified documents, (Note 8) and Shanghai
has announced plans to open by May 1 a new wing of the municipal
archives, which is to provide OGI services for the public.
How
is Information Accessed?
Government
information is to be made public in one of two ways: disseminated
on the government's own initiative or provided in response
to a specific request. China and its local governments do
not yet have any publication as comprehensive and regular
as the U.S. Federal Register, to which the public is accustomed
to turning for information on federal rules and policies.
Instead, the Shanghai Provisions call for most government
information to be disseminated, through periodic government
gazettes, newspapers and other media, in reading rooms to
be established in government agencies, on government websites
and by other means, free of charge. In addition, each government
agency is to compile and update a catalogue of government
information that it holds, setting forth the title, a simple
description of the basic contents and date of the relevant
document, as well as a guide to how to access that agency's
information.
The
Shanghai Provisions further contain fairly detailed provisions
on how to request government information that is not already
disseminated to the public. The right to request government
information, and the agency's obligation to provide the
requested information, are among the most revolutionary
concepts in the Shanghai Provisions. It may take some time
before Shanghainese begin to actually use this tool, and
for agencies to feel comfortable in disclosing requested
information not already available to the public. Requests
are to identify the requester, which may make the requester
feel awkward, as well as to describe the requested information.
Requests may be submitted by E-mail, letter, fax or in person.
In general, the relevant government agency is to respond
within 15 business days, and explain the reasons for any
denial based on an exemption, a partial disclosure, a third
party objection or a transfer of the request to another
agency that holds the requested information. Agencies may
charge cost-based fees for providing requested information.
Citizens,
companies and other organizations are given the specific
right to request information about themselves relating to
such matters as their registration, tax payments and social
security and also to request that any errors therein be
corrected in a timely manner. Moreover, agency officials
who fail to correct such information as requested are subject
to administrative penalties. This provision does not, however,
explicitly give citizens the right of access to their personnel
files, which traditionally have been kept secret from the
individuals involved but are often of great importance when
seeking to change jobs, apply for credit and the like.
One
unique article in the Shanghai Provisions forbids a government
agency from trying to profit from the sale of information
that it has refused to disseminate or to disclose to requesters.
This appears to reflect a current problem with cash-strapped
agencies trying to earn money by selling commercially information
that should be public record or accessible upon request.
Public
Participation and OGI
Following
a trend set by the Guangzhou Provisions, the Shanghai Provisions
also require the advance publication for comment of draft
decisions, municipal rules and regulations and programs
or plans that affect the major interests of Shanghai residents
or have a major social influence. The Shanghai Office of
Legal Affairs itself adopted such a procedure in formulating
the Shanghai Provisions, publishing a draft for public comment
in two local newspapers and on the official Shanghai government
website, as well as consulting various legal scholars, government
officials, foreign experts, enterprises and non-governmental
organizations. This was the first time the government had
published a draft regulation for public input prior to adoption,
although the Shanghai Municipal People's Congress had made
public several draft laws for comment, and occasionally
held hearings on them, in the recent past.
The
Shanghai government took the further step to publish concurrently
with the final Provisions an explanation of the drafting
process and the general categories of comments that had
been received, as well as their disposition. This practice
is similar to the so-called "notice and comment"
procedure in the U.S. Administrative Procedure Act, which
calls for an explanation to accompany all final rules that
are subject to public notification and input. Such explanations
serve to let the public know that their comments were received
and considered, even if they were not ultimately incorporated
in the final rule, thus enhancing the credibility of the
process. While in the United States this advance notice
and comment procedure is not part of the Freedom of Information
Act, it certainly can be considered an important component
of open government information. Shanghai and other local
governments including such a provision in their OGI legislation
are breaking additional new ground in terms of public participation
and open government generally.
Making
it All Work
Institutionally,
Shanghai has tried to do a better job than earlier OGI legislation
in designating the responsibilities of and providing incentives
for government agencies to implement an OGI system. The
Shanghai Provisions establish an Open Government Information
Joint Conference comprised of the powerful municipal General
Office, the Shanghai Informatization Commission (SIC), the
Supervision Commission, the Office of Legal Affairs, the
News Office, the State Secrets Bureau and Municipal Archives,
as well as other municipal agencies, to be responsible for
research and coordination of major policy issues involved
in promoting OGI in Shanghai.
The
SIC is designated as the executive agency of the Joint Committee,
in charge of organizing, guiding and promoting implementation
of the OGI system. The SIC may order an agency to comply
with the Shanghai Provisions but has no enforcement authority.
Given its existing functions related to building the technical
capacity for government agencies to provide web-based information
and E-government services to Shanghainese, the SIC was a
reasonable choice to take on this important new task. Since
its functions have been more technical than policy-oriented,
however, its powers and personnel may need to be supplemented
so that it can gain the stature and have the resources to
carry out this new and important task.
Each
government agency is to designate its own special office
to disseminate government information, handle requests,
maintain and update that agency's information, and prepare
information catalogues, guides to requesting information
and annual reports for that agency. Agencies are to formulate
their own implementing rules and appoint an internal office
to supervise OGI work, handle any complaints, and send copies
of information that is disseminated to the public to the
relevant government archives. Each agency is also to publish
contact information for its OGI office and establish a public
reading room or facility when conditions permit, as well
as, according to media reports, a hotline for handling public
inquiries.
Lastly,
the Shanghai Office of Legal Affairs (SOLA) and the Supervision
Commission are to share the task of supervising and evaluating
OGI activities of the various government agencies. It is
not clear from the text of the Shanghai Provisions if the
SIC, SOLA or some other body will provide advisory opinions
to government agencies and requesters that are uncertain
about their rights and obligations under the new system.
Designating an authoritative institution to provide such
opinions might help smooth the introduction of the OGI system
and avoid contentious disputes over rights and responsibilities.
Passing
a good law and designing the institutional structure for
implementation are not sufficient, of course, to ensure
that Shanghai residents will actually use the law or that
government agencies will be willing to provide the required
access to information. Legislative implementation is a huge
problem in China, as elsewhere in the world, especially
when the legislation creates new rights and responsibilities.
Recognizing the challenges it faces, Shanghai is gearing
up to ensure the new OGI system will truly work in practice.
Over
50 officials are busy helping to set up OGI offices within
government agencies, sort through existing information records,
formulate agency guides to information, compile information
catalogues, train personnel and hold meetings for both the
public and government officials to explain the importance
of the Shanghai Provisions and the methods of obtaining
government information. On April 7, 2004, the General Office
published guidance on issues of implementation, which were
drafted by the SIC and SOLA. (Note 9) As
of May 1, the official Shanghai website is to be revamped
to link to each government agency's open government information
and guide thereto.
The
introduction of annual reports, due from each agency by
January 31 and from the SIC each March 31, is another important
mechanism, adopted from U.S. practice, to ensure the government
will actually take steps to implement the OGI system. These
reports are to address compliance by government agencies
with dissemination requirements, statistics on disclosure
requests and on the types of information that was disclosed
or denied based on an exemption, statistics on any lawsuits
or complaints received, major problems and plans for improvement
and the like. For the first year, the government has set
a goal for each agency to make public the information that
should be disseminated and an agency guide to requesting
government information by May 1, the effective date of the
Shanghai Provisions. Even more complete information about
each agency, all of their relevant rules and regulations
and a catalogue of government information in its possession,
are to be available for public inspection, including on
the agency's website, by November 1, 2004. The first annual
report on OGI work in the entire municipality is due from
the SIC on March 31, 2005.
The
most effective way to ensure implementation is to give Shanghai's
residents the remedies to compel government agencies to
make government information public. As a local government,
Shanghai has to balance its license to venture into the
relatively uncharted legal territory of information rights
against the constraints of existing national law. Although
Shanghai might have experimented with new institutions such
as an information commission with adjudicatory powers, whose
decisions could still be appealed to the courts, such commissions
are relatively expensive to maintain and would have been
yet an additional innovation to deal with as Shanghai works
to introduce the OGI system. Nothing in the Shanghai Provisions
would preclude the establishment of such a commission down
the road, however. For the time being, Shanghainese are
afforded only the traditional remedies of administrative
punishment, complaint, administrative reconsideration, administrative
litigation over concrete government action or inaction,
and requests for compensation in the event a violation of
the Provisions results in direct economic loss. Administrative
litigation is available under existing law only in cases
of infringement of personal or property rights. Whether
the Shanghai courts will accept cases involving new information
rights that are not endorsed by a national law passed by
the National People's Congress, and how they will enforce
the Shanghai Provisions, thus remain to be tested.
Implications for National OGI Legislation
In
the wake of widespread criticism of the Chinese government's
secretive handling of the 2003 SARS crisis, many observers
predicted that the central government would move quickly
to adopt national legislation on open information that it
has been considering since July 2002. (Note
10) Promulgation of such legislation has been postponed,
however, to give local experiments -such as those in Guangzhou
and Shanghai -- time to flesh out the many challenging issues
of implementation and regulation in this unprecedented area.
For example, determination of what agency or new body should
be in charge of policy and coordinating the implementation
of a national OGI system is one of the thorny issues confronting
the central government. Beijing will be watching closely
how the SIC performs its new OGI executive functions under
the guidance of the Joint Conference.
Meanwhile,
the drafting of a national law on open government information
has been placed on the National People's Congress (NPC)
legislative agenda for the current session running through
2007, and open government clearly is part of the current
Chinese leadership's drive to "administer the country
in accordance with the law." In his work report to
the NPC annual meeting in March 2004, Premier Wen Jiabao
set as a task for government self-improvement in 2004 the
establishment of an open government information system and
increased transparency of government work, to facilitate
the people's knowledge and their supervision of the government.
(Note 11) Moreover, the State Council's
"white paper" on China's human rights situation,
issued March 30, 2004, specifically cited "freedom
of information," work to perfect the open government
information system and increased transparency to better
permit the people to exercise their right to know, right
to supervise government and right of participation in public
affairs as important elements in China's improving human
rights situation. (Note 12)
High-level
policy statements are important, but only when information
rights are granted status under a national law will they
be certain of protection. National OGI legislation will
also spur necessary work on complementary legislation, such
as revising the State Secrets Law and the Archives Law,
drafting a Personal Data Protection Law and expanding the
scope of administrative and judicial relief explicitly to
cover information rights. Shanghai's carefully crafted Provisions
on Open Government Information and experience with serious
implementation should help the central government gain the
confidence to enact much-need national legislation in this
area.
Notes
1.
See, Jamie P. Horsley, "China's Pioneering Foray
into Open Government: A Tale of Two Cities," http://www.freedominfo.org/news/20030714.htm
(posted July 14, 2003). Shanghai, unlike Guangzhou, the
capital of Guangdong province, enjoys special status as
a provincial-level city directly under the central government.
2.
In addition to the Guangzhou Provisions, Shantou Municipality
promulgated Open Government Affairs Information Provisions
on April 11, 2003, effective June 1, 2003, Shantou shi
zhengwu xinxi gongkai guiding, http://www.shantou.gov.cn/script/ReadNews3.asp?gfwjid=133;
and the progressive business center of Shenzhen in Guangdong
province adopted what is reportedly the first OGI legislation
in China on so-called "online OGI," the Measures
of Shenzhen Municipality for Online Open Government Information,
on February 25, 2004, Shenzhen shi zhengfu xinxi wangshang
gongkai banfa,
http://www.chinacourt.org.flwk/show1.php?file_id=92369.
The Shenzhen Measures, which went into effect April 1, 2004,
require government agencies to disseminate and post online
on their own initiative some 35 items of information, but
do not provide a mechanism for requesting information that
is not disseminated. Beijing, another special municipality
directly under the central government like Shanghai, published
draft Measures for Managing Open Government Information
for public comment on February 20, 2004, Beijing shi
zhengfu xinxi gongkai guanli banfa (zhengqiu yijian gao),
http://www.beijing.gov.cn/fg/zxfggzjwj/t20040220_108994.htm.
Those measures, on which comments are due by the end of
April, are much more skeletal than other local legislation,
although they enunciate important general principles including
the right of natural persons, legal persons and other organizations
to request government information, the advance publication
of draft documents for public comment, limited exemptions
for state secrets, commercial secrets and individual privacy,
the no-cost principle for information that should be disseminated,
and designation of a Chief Information Officer for each
government agency.
3.
The "right to know," does not appear in China's
Constitution or any national law to date. This concept first
appeared in scholarly literature in the early 1990s, and
recently was enunciated as one of the civil and political
rights China is protecting as part of its human rights program,
in China's "white paper" on Progress in China's
Human Rights Cause in 2003, released by the State Council
Information Office on March 30, 2004, available in English
at http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/whitepaper/hr2004/hr2004.html
(March 31, 2003). That white paper further states that Chinese
citizens enjoy freedom of information, another right not
mentioned to date in any Chinese law.
4.
"Shanghai Turns Spotlight on Local Practice,"
China Daily, April 7, 2004, http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2004-04/07/content_321335.htm.
5.
Roughly 100,000 Shanghai houses were reportedly demolished
in 2003, and Shanghai has demolished 40 million square meters
of old housing since 1990, forcibly evicting about 2.5 million
people in the process. "Forced Eviction and Demolition
Continues After New Year, The Epoch Times, January
13, 2004, http://english.epochtimes.com/news/4-1-13/18307.html
; "Arrested
Shanghai property protestors go on hunger strike,"
October 1, 2003.
6.
Article 10 of the Law of the People's Republic of China
Against Unfair Competition defines "commercial secrets"
broadly to mean "technical information or operating
information that is not known by the public, can bring about
economic benefits to the rightsholder, has practical utility
and about which the rightsholder has adopted secrecy measures."
7.
Although privacy rights have been asserted in some cases,
there is no law clearly establishing such rights. Instead,
the Constitution, Article 38, protects "personal dignity"
and Article 40 protects the freedom and privacy of correspondence.
The General Principles of Civil Law, Article 101, protects
the right of reputation, without defining the concept. Recently,
regulations on the use of computers and the Internet prohibit
damaging "privacy," again without defining the
term. See, Yingxi Fu-Tomlinson, "Personal Data Protection
in China," The China Business Review (2002).
8.
See, e.g., Hongtou wenjian jinqi peng zhengming zai
sheng dang'anguang chasun, ['Red-header' documents
to be available for investigation in the provincial Archive
Bureau against identification starting this year], online
at: http//gz.gov.cn/_webnews/view.asp?id=XW200304251513557402,
December 11, 2002.
9.
Guanyu
"Shanghai shi zhengfu xinxi gongkai guiding" de
shishi yijian [the Opinions on Implementing the Shanghai
Municipal Government Open Government Information Provisions]
10.
Woguo zhuoshou zhiding "Zhengfu xinxi gongkai
taioli [Our Country Grasps the Formulation of Open
Government Information Regulations], China Youth Daily
online at: http://news.gznet.gov.cn/hot/xxhgk/20030203/200211200073.asp
(November 20, 2002); Sun Yafei, Feidian:
Jiasu xinxi gongkai bufa [SARS: Increasing the Pace
of Information Openness, Nanfang Zhoumo, April 31,
2003.
11.
The Chinese text of the Premier's Report on the Work
of Government, delivered March 5, 2003, is available at:
http://www.peopledaily.com.cn/GB/shizheng/1024/2394441.html.
The official English translation available at: http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200403/16/eng20040316_137651.shtml.
12.
Translating from the Chinese text of the Civil and Political
Rights section, 2003 nian zhongguo renquan shiye de
jinzhan (quanwen) [Progress in China's Human Rights
in 2003], http://www.people.com.cn/GB/shizheng/1026/2418866.html
(March 31, 2003); an English translation of which appears
at http://english.peopledaily.co.cn/whitepaper/hr2004/hr2004(2).html.
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FOI
NEWS ARCHIVE: 2004 | 2003
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