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proposes reforms
19
APRIL 2007
European Commission proposes reforms, seeks public input
on greater access to EU documents
The
European Commission yesterday published a Green
Paper and launched a new public consultation process
to reform existing rules on public access to European Parliament,
Council and Commission records. This action represents an
important step in the European
Transparency Initiative, launched in November 2005 with
the goal of a "'high level of transparency' to ensure
that the Union is 'open to public scrutiny and accountable
for its work.'" Recognizing exponential increases in
access requests for Commission documents and a growing body
of case law based on the current Regulation
No. 1049/2001, first established in 2001, the Green
Paper proposes a number of reforms to improve and harmonize
the current system with these court decisions and changing
needs for transparency. The paper submits several specific
matters for public consultation, including: the promotion
of active dissemination of information, incorporating standards
for access to environmental information established by the
Arhus Convention, and finding an appropriate balance between
transparency and privacy concerns. As part of this effort,
the Commission has established a dedicated
Web site to receive comments from the public on proposed
changes to the current Regulation.
The
Commission's efforts take place against an international
background of recent precedent-setting legal action on access
to information, a trend which has yet to be accepted by
the European courts. In October 2006, the Inter-American
Court of Human Rights ruled in the case of Claude Reyes
et. al. vs. Chile that Article 13 of the American
Convention of Human Rights provides a human right of access
to government information as part of its guarantee of freedom
of thought and expression. European courts have repeatedly
declined to find such a right in a comparable provision
of the European Convention on Human Rights, including in
the cases of Leander v. Sweden in 1987 and Guerra
v. Italy in 1998. Helen Darbishire, Executive Director
of Access
Info Europe, recently stated that the IACHR decision
"will be invaluable for activists who need government
information to defend other human rights, protect the environment,
and fight corruption." Access Info Europe and other
right-to-know advocates have urged European courts and authorities
to reconsider earlier rulings rejecting information access
as a human right. The consultation period that began yesterday
with the release of the Green Paper provides a new opportunity
for the expansion of the public's right to know.