What’s New

  • 14 May 2012

    Folk Songs Explain the RTI Law in Bangladesh

    Sung to the tunes of traditional folk songs, new lyrics are being used to explain the right to information law in Bangladesh. Days of secrecy are long gone, Public officials are now under obligation, To ensure people’s right to information, Says the law of the nation The  “Tathya Adhikarer Gaan” or “Songs on the Right […]

  • 14 May 2012

    Access to Public Information in Brazil: What Will Change With Law No. 12.527/2011?

    By Marcelo Sarkis Sarkis is a lawyer, Institutional and Governmental Affairs at ALCÂNTARA&HOLSTAD International Consultancy, Brasília – Brazil. www.alcantaraholstad.com Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers. (Art. […]

  • 11 May 2012

    EU Ministers Threaten Access to Information

    By Helen Darbishire Darbishire is Executive Director of Access Info Europe. The threat that the right of access to information from European Union bodies will be reduced moved a step closer to reality May 10 when the 27 Member States approved a document from the Danish EU Presidency which would add broad exceptions to the […]

  • 11 May 2012

    Tunisia Publishes Road Map To Implement FOI Directive

    Tunisia’s Office of the Prime Ministry has published an implementation guide for Decree Law 41 – a directive passed last May on access to governmental documents, according to media reports (Tunisia Live). FreedomInfo.org has confirmed the development, but contacts did not have a copy. Pro-transparency activists have been calling for a law, arguing that the […]

  • 11 May 2012

    Ghana Coalition Protests Low Priority Given FOI Legislation

    The Coalition on Right to Information in Ghana May 11 issued a statement “to express its disappointment” that the majority leader of Parliament, Cletus Avoka, said May 7 that “the Right to Information Bill is not a priority for Parliament.” “This is particularly worrying when democracy depends on open, accountable government and the opportunity for […]

  • 11 May 2012

    UK Protection of Freedoms Act Makes Changes in FOI

    By Paul Gibbons This article first appeared in FOIManUK on May 10, Gibbon’s blog, and is reprinted with permission. The Protection of Freedoms Act came into force on 1 May 2012. Amongst its many implications are those for the Freedom of Information Act (though we still await a commencement order in respect of these provisions, […]

  • 11 May 2012

    Taking Stock of OGP

    By Abhinav Bahl Bahl works for Global Integrity, which published this article May 9. The Open Government Partnership is officially afoot with the Articles of Governance formally approved and adopted at the first annual meeting in Brasilia last month. With distance gained from the meeting, this is a good moment to take stock of where […]

  • 10 May 2012

    Retired Officials Dominate Indian State Commissions

    Most Indian state information commissioners are retired civil servants and many posts are vacant, according to fact-filled critical report by the Access to Information Programme of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, based in New Delhi. Also, less than half of the commissions have put some or all of their decisions online and their websites are […]

  • 10 May 2012

    Liberia Announces Intention to Appoint FOI Commissioner

    Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf announced in a May 3 statement that she will “very soon” appoint the country’s first information commissioner. The position was created by the FOI passed in October of 2010, but has not been filled. The announcement was praised by Peter Quagua, president of the Press Union of Liberia, in a […]

  • 10 May 2012

    FOI Notes: Commentary, Reports, Book, Handbook

    FOI/Private Sector: Applying FOI to the private sector, a proposal by British author George Monbiot in The Guardian. Open Data: A call for session and talk proposals for the International Open Government Data Conference 2012 to be held on July 10-12th in Washington D.C., co-hosted by the World Bank and the US Government’s Data.gov team. […]

  • 9 May 2012

    Malta to Institute FOA Law in September, Minister Says

    Malta’s freedom of information law will come into full force Sept. 1, the government has announced. The law was enacted more than three years ago, but the ability to make requests has been stymied. Justice Minister Chris Said on May 8 indicated that 400 FOI officers have been undergoing training since February 2010. The news […]

  • 7 May 2012

    Cambodians Want Right to Information Study Says

    More than 80 percent of Cambodians want the right to access government information and believe that government, including elected bodies, should publish national budget and spending information, according to a new survey by the Cambodian Center for Independent Media. Cambodia does not have a FOI law. The research was commissioned by the Cambodia Centre for […]

  • 7 May 2012

    More Fees, Discretion to Refuse FOI Requests Recommended In Australia

    By Avinesh Chand and Barry Dunphy This article appeared April 26 on the blog of the Australian Clayton Utz law firm and is reprinted with permission. Key Points: Agencies could have greater discretion to refuse freedom of information requests, and charge more fees – but applicants would get a cheaper alternative to FOI If recent […]

  • 4 May 2012

    Yemeni Parliament Passes Right to Information Law

    Yemen’s parliament April 24 approved a right to information bill.  The legislation was first presented in 2008 by MP Ali Hussein Ashaal, of the Islah party, according to a Yemen Times article. “This was followed by another draft presented by the Ministry of Information, and since deliberations on both drafts have been proceeding off and […]

  • 4 May 2012

    Angry Parliamentarian Vows to Block Sierra Leone FOI Bill

    Only days after a top Sierra Leone government official said the freedom of information bill would pass during the week of May 7, a key legislator, angered by journalists, said it won’t. The strong statement by Majority Leader of Parliament, S.B.B. Dumbuya was dramatic, according to a report in Ariogbo by Femi Coker, who described […]

  • 4 May 2012

    Trip to London Next Step for Ghana FOI Bill?

    The perplexing pace of inaction on freedom of information legislation in Ghana is continuing. Positive signs include a top government official pledging action and reports from activists who say members of Parliament told them the bill will come up this month. On the other hand, Parliament has yet to produce a promised report on regional […]

  • 4 May 2012

    U.S. Boosts FOI as Criteria for Receiving Foreign Aid

    The United States has revised an indicator used to decide which countries qualify for foreign aid, somewhat elevating the importance of freedom of information and unfettered internet access. The changes were made last year by the Millenium Challenge Corporation, which uses a multi-faceted scorecard system to determine which under-developed countries qualify for development assistance. Not […]

  • 4 May 2012

    Access to Information Clause In Draft Zambian Constitution

    The first draft Constitution for Zambia was released April 30 and includes a provision on access to information. The 253-page document was hailed by media groups as progressive for its clauses on media freedom. Separately, a task force is preparing a freedom of information law. The access to information provision states: 37. (1) A citizen […]

  • 4 May 2012

    Problems Found in Handling of RTI Requests in Indonesia

    A requesting exercise in Indonesia had only a 46 percent success rate, and generated some recommendations for administrators of the right to information law to address “significant problems.” The project was conducted by the Alliance of Independent Journalists and the Centre for Law and Democracy, who also conducted a workshop evaluating the experience. CLD and AJI held […]

  • 3 May 2012

    Sierra Leone Parliament to Consider FOI Next Week

    The Sierra Leone Parliament will consider long-delayed freedom of information legislation during the week of May 7, a top government official has said. The statement of  the Minister of Information and Communication, Ibrahim Ben Kargbo, was reported in The Patriotic Vanguard by Ishmael Koroma.  [Ed. note: FreedomInfo.org learned later that the article was essentially a press […]