What’s New

  • 6 February 2014

    Malawi Cabinet Approves Access to Information Policy

    The Malawi Cabinet has approved an access to information policy, setting the stage for introduction of ATI legislation. The development was cheered by activists as removing the last major hurdle to the enactment of an ATI law. The Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA) Malawi chapter, one of the groups leading the campaign for a […]

  • 6 February 2014

    Philippines House Group Begins Work on FOI Bill

    A technical working group of a Philippines House committee has scheduled a meeting for Feb. 12 to discuss merging 22 freedom of information bills. The Public Information Committee meeting Feb. 5 agreed to adopt the noncontroversial provisions in the final draft, according to an Inquirer report.  The article says: Meanwhile, the group would debate on the […]

  • 6 February 2014

    FOI Notes: Grants, US Advisory Panel, Local Open Data Census, Delaware

    Grants: Open Society Initiative for West Africa is seeking proposals to “promote access to Information and Media Freedom” in Benin, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Liberia, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone. The announcement also includes a variety of other topics. Proposals should be sent directly to: proposals@osiwa.org and will be accepted until May 30, 2014. United States: The […]

  • 6 February 2014

    RTI Law Passes in Bhutan; 100th International Law?

    The National Assembly of Bhutan on Feb. 5 passed a right to information bill, putting Bhutan on the path to becoming the 100th nation in the world with an RTI law. The bill was debated for several days, according to a BBS report that also includes a video clip about the deliberations. The bill goes to […]

  • 5 February 2014

    Effort Continues to Pass RTI Legislation in Afghanistan

    Draft access to information legislation for Afghanistan has yet to make it from the Cabinet of Ministers to the Parliament, so campaigners are lobbying members of parliament. A draft law was presented to the Cabinet eight months ago, according to Habibullah Muqbel of Integrity Watch Afghanistan. “Despite our efforts it has not been sent to […]

  • 5 February 2014

    Top Chilean Court Denies Access to Attorney Names

    The Chilean Supreme Court has declared as proprietary information the names of the lawyers who represented Chile in Court of International Justice in The Hague in a case involving a maritime claim by Peru. The Supreme Court’s unanimous decision (in Spanish) also denied access to information about fees paid to the lawyers. In doing so, […]

  • 5 February 2014

    UN Development Goals Should Stress Governance

    The United Nations’ Open Working Group on Sustainable Development Goals should make “good governance and effective institutions” a specific goal, according to a statement signed by nearly 200 organizations from around the world. The working group now in the process of developing Post-2015 Sustainable Development was urged to: Establish a specific goal to “ensure good […]

  • 3 February 2014

    OGP Reviewers Report; Several Countries Missing

    The Open Government Partnership on Feb. 3 published on its website 19 reports by independent reviewers who evaluated countries’ progress toward fulfilling their national action plan objectives. Publication of the reports triggers a two-week public comment period, as described in a Jan. 28 blog post by OGP Deputy Director Joe Powell. A Feb. 3 blog […]

  • 3 February 2014

    EC Finds Fault With Spain’s New Information Access Law

    The European Commission Feb. 3 praised Spain for passing a law on access to public information, but said it needs improvement. In particular, independent oversight should be added, the report said, and its implementation hastened. The comments came in a wide-ranging report on Spain’s anti-corruption efforts. The law adopted in December “represents a significant step […]

  • 31 January 2014

    Disclosure of Request Letters Handled in Different Ways

    Request letters – the core instrument used to ask for government information – are themselves disclosable in many jurisdictions, but the names of the requesters are commonly kept confidential, according to a FreedomInfo.org sampling of practices in a dozen countries. Some countries make available public logs with short summaries of all requests. Such “FOI Logs” […]

  • 30 January 2014

    Access Law Approved in Côte d’ Ivoire; 98th in World

    The National Assembly of Côte d’ Ivoire (Ivory Coast) voted unanimously Dec. 11 to pass a freedom of information law. (Text in French). The new law will allow citizens to be better informed and to intervene knowingly in decision making, according to comments by Minister of Communication, Affoussiata Bamba-Lamine, quoted in a short news report […]

  • 29 January 2014

    Sufficient Number of States Support Mexican FOI Reforms

    Having achieved sufficient support from the Mexican states, amendments to the Mexican Constitution making changes to the freedom of information law are another step closer to implementation. Eighteen state Congresses have ratified the reforms. The next stage, which could take a year, is for the Senate to write the implementation rules which later much be […]

  • 27 January 2014

    Task Force Recommends Crime Victim Privacy

    A Connecticut state task force Jan. 24 issued a report supporting restrictions on public access to crime scene information. The 17-person panel was formed in the wake of the 2013 shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School. The legislature subsequently passed a law that blocked release of crime scene photos and videos to the public. It […]

  • 27 January 2014

    FOI Notes: AfDB, EU, UK, Kurdistan, Commentary

    African Development Bank: The African Development Bank has called for nominations of suitably qualified individuals to serve on the Appeals Panel created by its disclosure policy.  The call has been extended until Jan. 31.  “The candidates should have extensive experience dealing with issues of governance, transparency, access to information and related-matters. They should have a […]

  • 22 January 2014

    German Government Claims Copyright on Document

    The German Ministry of the Interior has ordered a freedom of information website to take down a document obtained under the freedom of information law. Frag den Staat, a German FOI portal run by the Open Knowledge Foundation Germany, published a  document on election law policy that the government now says is covered by copyright […]

  • 22 January 2014

    FOI Notes: Research, India, Environment, UK, Employment, Commentary

    Research: “When Does Transparency Generate Legitimacy? Experimenting on a Context-Bound Relationship,” by Jenny De Fine Licht, Daniel Naurin, Peter Esaiasson, Mikael Gilljam. A summary of the article: We analyze the main rationale for public administrations and political institutions for supplying transparency, namely, that it generates legitimacy for these institutions. First, we discuss different theories of decision making […]

  • 22 January 2014

    EU Ombudsman Supports Disclosure of Legal Document

    The European Ombudsman has ruled that the European Council should not have denied access to a document drawn up in the context of negotiations between EU member states with an eye to finding arrangements for ensuring compliance with the balanced budget rule contained in the Fiscal Compact Treaty. “By failing to justify why it cannot […]

  • 20 January 2014

    Philippine House Panel Not Moving on FOI Legislation

    Philippine House and Senate leaders continue to promise passage of freedom of information legislation, but a key House working group appointed in October to write a bill has yet to meet and the Aquino administration is continuing its hands off support. There’s a lack of desire and commitment from the House leadership and the Committee […]

  • 17 January 2014

    Honduran Congress Oks Strict Secrecy Law

    The Honduran Congress Jan. 13 approved broad government secrecy legislation that civil society groups have denounced. A key provision of the law, states: Any information, documentation or material relating to the internal strategic framework of state agencies and whose revelation, if made publicly available, could produce undesirable institutional effects on the effective development of state policies […]

  • 17 January 2014

    Maldives President Signs RTI Bill into Law; 99th in World

    Maldives President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom on Jan. 11 signed into the Right to Information Act Transparency Maldives hailed the ratification of the act as “major step forward for good governance and transparency.” The parliament approved the bill (in Dhivehi) in December. (See previous FreedomInfo.org report.) The Maldives is the 99th country in the world […]