|
Back to Index
Freedom
of Information Around the World 2006
David Banisar, Freedominfo.org
July,
2006
http://www.freedominfo.org/documents/global_survey2006.pdf
Download this document
- Acrobat
PDF version (1.01MB)
If you do not have the free Acrobat reader
on your computer, download it from the Adobe website by clicking
here.
Zimbabwe
The situation in Zimbabwe offers an example of when a FOI law can
be a negative force in society. The Access
to Information and Privacy Protection Act (AIPPA) was signed
by President Mugabe in February 2002. While the title refers to
FOI and privacy and does provide for those rights in the text, the
rights appear to be dormant. The main provisions of the law give
the government extensive powers to control the media and suppress
free speech by requiring the registration of journalists and prohibiting
the "abuse of free expression." These powers have been widely abused.
On paper, AIPPA
sets out rights and procedures for access that are similar to other
FOI laws around the world. The Zimbabwe Government told the African
Commission on Human Rights that the procedures were "moulded along
the lines of Canada's laws on the same subject." There has only
been one reported instance of the access to information provision
being used by the opposition party.
The right of access
may be exercised by any citizen or resident (but not an unregistered
media agency or foreign government) to records held by a public
body. Under the rules, the body must respond to a request in thirty
days. There are exemptions for Cabinet documents and deliberations
of local government bodies, advice given to public bodies, client-attorney
privilege, law-enforcement proceedings, national security, intergovernmental
relations, public safety, commercial information, and privacy. There
is an unusual public-interest disclosure provision that allows the
government to release information even if there is no request for
a variety of reasons, including matters that threaten public order;
the prevention, detection or suppression of crime; and national
security. The law also includes provisions on access and use of
personal information.
The Act created
a Media and Information Commission which has mostly been functioning
to restrict freedom of expression. Individuals can ask the Commission
to review the decisions or actions of an agency. The Commission
can conduct inquiries into the Act and order release of documents.
Appeals can be made to an administrative court.
The controversial
law was opposed by many governments, NGOs, media organizations and
the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Opinion and Expression because
of the extreme restrictions it places on freedom of expression.
Nearly all independent papers have been shut down and many journalists
have also been arrested and jailed under the Act. It was amended
again in January 2005 to allow for the imprisonment for two years
of journalists who had not registered with the Commission.
The Media
Institute of Southern Africa (MISA) has reported that the passage
of the Criminal
(Codification and Reform) Act in June 2005 further narrowed
the space within which journalists could operate. Under the law,
Zimbabwean journalists now risk spending 20 years in jail for reporting
on certain stories, as the new Act introduced harsher penalties
than those provided for under the Public
Order and Security Act (POSA) and the Access Act.
In December
2005, the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights (ACHPR)
issued a damning report on the suppression of fundamental rights
through misuse of the Act, as well as the Public Order and Security
Act and the Broadcasting
Services Act (BSA). The ACHPR based many of its findings on
a report provided by the Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA),
which argued that the Act "is a repressive piece of legislation
enacted primarily to undermine the right to freedom of expression
and stifle the exchange of ideas and information". Subsequently,
the Zimbabwean Attorney General advised that the Minster for Information
would be reviewing the Act to remove offending sections.
The Official Secrets
Act also sets strict limits on the disclosure of government information
without permission. Like the AIPPA, it also is used abusively. In
January 2005, five officials were arrested under the OSA for breaching
the Act by revealing the internal disputes of the ruling Zanu PF
party to foreign governments in a case widely seen as an internal
power struggle.
Download full document
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|