News

  • 2 September 2011

    SA Committee Adopts Protection of Information Bill

    A committee of the South African Parliament has passed a Protection of Information Bill. While somewhat toned down from the original proposal offered a year ago, the final version is still considered objectionable by critics and possibly unconstitutional. (See previous FreedomInfo.org report.) The bill now goes to the whole Parliament, where vote before Sept. 15 is expected. […]

  • 31 August 2011

    Indian Cabinet Rejects Controversial Sports Bill

    The Indian Cabinet Aug. 30 rejected a proposal to regulate national sports federations that included a provision to bring them under the right to information law. (See previous FreedomInfo.org report.) The disapproval was overwhelming according to news reports, but the sports minister later vowed to try again.  The sports minister said any revised draft legislation […]

  • 31 August 2011

    Judge Says FOIA Covers White House Visitor Logs

    By Harry Hammitt Hammitt publishes Access Reports, a biweekly newsletter.   This article is reprinted with permission from his latest issue: Access Reports, Aug. 24, 2011, v. 37, n. 17 Relying heavily on previous district court rulings directly on point, Judge Beryl Howell has ruled that visitors’ log records for the White House and the Vice […]

  • 29 August 2011

    Statewatch Says EU Report Makes Pitiful Reading

    The European Commission’s annual report on access to documents makes “very pitiful reading,” according to the public interest group Statewatch. The Report from the Commission on the application in 2010 of Regulation (EC) No 1049/2001 regarding public access to European Parliament, Council and Commission documents (pdf). The Commission’s annual report on public access to its […]

  • 29 August 2011

    U.S. Survey Finds More Desire for Transparency

    A lack of resources has made news organizations “increasingly less inclined to file freedom of information lawsuits,” but citizens have “a growing interest in government transparency and are becoming more active in asserting their right to government information,” according to a new study in the United States. The surveys were conducted by the Media Law […]

  • 29 August 2011

    South Africa Coalition Critical of POIB as Debate Nears End

    Work on the Protection of Information Bill by the South African parliamentary committee is nearing conclusion, with some compromises being made, but the Right2Know Coalition says the bill “still fails the Freedom Test.” Deliberations are expected to continue this week, beginning with debate on whether to allow a public interest defense, a major coalition demand. […]

  • 25 August 2011

    OGP Members Begin Work on National Action Plans

    Efforts by the eight conveners of the Open Government Partnership to draft their national “action plans” are slowly emerging, according to a FreedomInfo.org survey. However, in most countries the development of a plan does not appear to involve the wide public consultation called for in the “road map” for OGP aspirants to follow. In the […]

  • 25 August 2011

    Brazilian Senator Takes Stand Undercutting FOI Bill

    Former Brazilian President Fernando Collor de Mello, now a powerful senator, has proposed revisions to the proposed freedom of information bill that proponents quickly condemned. His proposals are raising concerns about the bill’s future notwithstanding the support for it by new president Dilma Rousseff. (See previous FreedomInfo.org reports.) International freedom of expression group Article 19 […]

  • 25 August 2011

    Guinea Conakry ATI Law Available in English

    The Guinea Conakry access to information law, promulgated late last year, but not immediately published, is now available in English. The law was issued by the outgoing military government in November 2010, signed by General Sékouba Konaté, just prior to the presidential election in which Alpha Conde became president. The English translation has been posted […]

  • 25 August 2011

    FOI Notes: Africa, UNESCO, United States, United Kingdom

    West Africa: The Africa Freedom of Information Centre has issued a study on access to information in Liberia, Ghana and Nigeria. Follow this link, and got to bottom of listings. UNESCO: The online report on the 2010 UNESCO World Press Freedom Day meeting, on the theme of: “Freedom of Information: The Right to Know” is available. […]

  • 22 August 2011

    Ghana RTI Coalition Summarizes Consultations

    The Right to Information Coalition-Ghana has listed the main criticisms of pending RTI legislation following a series of parliamentary consultations. The consultations were marred by a lack of adequate notice, according to the Coalition statement Aug 19.  The sessions were held in the Volta, Eastern, Northern, Ashanti, Western and Greater Accra regions and according to […]

  • 19 August 2011

    Debate Over Definition Emerges in South Africa

    A new controversy emerged this week in deliberations over the Protection of Information Bill in South Africa as proponents suggested that the key term “national security” in the bill doesn’t need to be defined. “Which means we’d go from an outrageously broad definition (thus open to abuse) to no definition at all (thus inviting abuse […]

  • 19 August 2011

    Variety of Topics on Agenda for ICIC Meeting in Canada

    A dozen sessions on a wide variety of topics are planned for the 7th International Conference of Information Commissioners (ICIC 2011) in Ottawa, Canada, on Oct. 4 and 5. The topics of sessions are: Oversight: Is there an optimal model for protecting access to information rights? Freedom of Information across frontiers: The lifeblood of human […]

  • 17 August 2011

    China to Allow Appeals Over Failure to Provide Information

    Chinese citizens will be able to sue the central government and local governments if their requests for information are denied according to a judicial explanation (in Chinese) from China’s Supreme People’s Court, according to a report from China’s official news agency, Xinhua. The explanation, which was issued on Aug. 13, “confirmed that citizens may file lawsuits […]

  • 17 August 2011

    Aguino Still Withholding Support for FOI Legislation

    Philippines President Benigno Aquino has “specific questions and concerns” about freedom of information legislation, according to a spokesman in comments after the Aquino administration bypassed another opportunity to make the bill a priority. The inaction brought a round of condemnations from the bill’s frustrated supporters. The legislation was not placed on a list of priority […]

  • 16 August 2011

    U.S. Efforts to Write OGP Action Plan Criticized

    Consultations on a “National Action Plan” in conjunction with the multinational Open Government Partnership (OGP) have begun in the United States, but are being slighted for falling below the OGP’s consultation standards. The OGP is a U.S.-initiated multilateral effort to promote transparency internationally. Countries that join (eight so far) commit to prepare “concrete” national action […]

  • 16 August 2011

    Kazakhstan Looking to 2012 for Consideration of FOI Bill

    Freedom of information legislation in Kazakhstan will not be considered until 2012, according to a key member of Parliament, Zh. Asanov. Asanov, who has been a leader in the drafting of a proposed law, said in July that further drafting work is necessary.  The draft law itself still needs elaboration, he said, and it is […]

  • 15 August 2011

    RTI for India Sports Federations Proposed

    India’s Sports Minister Ajay Maken has proposed  that sports federations be subject to the right to information law, according to media reports such as one in ndtv.com He has proposed a variety of procedural reforms, including the creation of a 23-member advisory council. Among these proposals is a proposal that all sports federations, including the […]

  • 15 August 2011

    New Zealand Pledges to Release Public Data

    The New Zealand government has committed to release “high value public data,” according to a government announcement. The Declaration on Open and Transparent Government was approved by the Cabinet on Aug. 8. Also released wer the New Zealand Data and Information Management Principles, stating that “data and information must be open, trusted and authoritative, well managed, […]

  • 12 August 2011

    Ghana RTI Bill Criticized as Consultations Continue

    The Right to Information Coalition in Ghana and others have criticized a draft RTI bill during ongoing regional consultations, and government officials have indicated some receptivity to alterations. During an Aug. 5 session in Takorado, Paul Evans Aidoo, Western Regional Minister, said the government is determined to pass the bill and that there is a […]