|
Back to Index
MISA
regional statement on Right to Know Day
Media
Institute of Southern Africa (MISA)
September 28, 2006
Today,
September 28, the Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA) joins
a global coalition of free expression advocates in commemorating
the International Right to Know Day. On this day our global efforts
are focussed on promoting the right of access to information for
all people and the benefits of open, transparent, and accountable
governments.
The right to information
can only be effectively exercised and implemented on the basis of
laws, regulating this right in accordance with international standards.
Whilst in southern Africa, South Africa is the only country which
has a law that enables its citizens to access public held information,
MISA does acknowledge the advances being made in other countries
of the region to formulate such laws.
From the onset
we wish to state that Zimbabwe’s ironically named Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) in fact
does not promote the right of citizens to access information. On
the contrary, the law introduces such extensive limitations to this
right that it makes it near impossible for citizens to access information.
Many governments, non-governmental organisations, media organisations
and the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Opinion
and Expression have condemned this law for the extreme restrictions
it places on freedom of expression.
Misa
celebrates this day reflecting on the past achievements and failures
of the right to information in Southern Africa:
It
is worth noting that the right to information has gained considerable
importance in recent years among governments and is on the agendas
of media law reform in many countries, and this, is worth celebrating.
There
is also a growing awareness and interest among civil society to
join alliances on the call for freedom of information legislation.
In many countries the public is increasingly getting aware and joining
discussions on the issue of freedom of information, a development
which was hardly the case five years ago. Therefore the biggest
achievement in southern Africa has been the acceptance and growing
awareness of the importance and indispensability of freedom of information
to democracy.
However
there is still much to be done in creating mass awareness which
will translate into social action.
The
biggest challenge to freedom of information in southern Africa is
governments’ leisurely pace towards media law reform. While all
SADC countries guarantee freedom of expression as a fundamental
right and acknowledge the need for the right to information they
seem to be in no particular hurry in passing access to information
laws. SADC heads of States have signed international and regional
treaties committing to freedom of information but have failed to
translate it into meaningful actions that make this right a reality
for the people of our region.
What
really is the right to information?
Perhaps we need to explain what exactly we mean by the right to
know, also referred to as the right to information or freedom of
information.
The
right to know is simply the call to make information held by public
institutions available and accessible to the public. The right to
information is not a mere call for government records, but a call
for a more transparent and accountable governance process, if democracy
has to be meaningful.
A
freedom of information law sets out guidelines, procedures and parameters
on how the public can access information from public institutions
and/or private institutions.
MISA
believes that the right to information must be guaranteed by a strong
legislation and the process of law making must be participatory
and consultative. For the effective participation of citizens in
the governance and development of their country, they should be
enabled to have easy and timely access to critical information.
The
right to information is a global issue of importance, with over
60 countries with laws on right to information, hailed as a basis
for effective participation in governance as well as a potentially
powerful tool for countering corruption.
In
southern Africa where more than 70% of underdevelopment and poverty
is directly linked to corruption, the right to know laws could have
taken more prominence and priority in law reform.
MISA
believes that corruption can never be truly fought without freedom
of information legislation. In fact there is a correlation between
highly corrupt countries with the absence of right to information
laws.
What are governments hiding?
The reluctance or perhaps the failure of governments to enact and
pass legislation leaves more questions than answers; what could
governments possibly be hiding from its citizens? Why are there
so many delays in as far as right to information laws are concerned?
Do our governments have something to hide which such a law will
bring to the light?
In the absence of answers there are two schools of thought on this
matter: either that our governments are highly corrupt or that they
are genuinely ignorant on the merits of such a law.
The former is not totally presumptuous given the many cases and
evidence of corruption and abuse of power in the higher and lower
places of government. Clearly if these abuses of power and mismanagement
of resources are to the benefit of policy makers then such a law
is not in their interest and they will do anything in their power
to block it.
The latter assumption is that perhaps there is a genuine ignorance
and luck of understanding of the merits and needs of such a law.
In a recent study by MISA, two SADC members of parliament where
interviewed on the need for the right to information law. They doubted
the relevance of a right to information law citing that it would
interfere with the privacy act. "Why would we pass such a law
if it will be in conflict with the privacy Act?"
Such
views are ill informed and an obstacle to the passing of right to
know laws which are designed for the greater good of society. Obviously
there are limitations to information that can be accessed under
such a law. Nonetheless, in an open, transparent and democratic
society we should avail ourselves to scrutiny.
The
right to know, the right to live
MISA
believes that the right to information is fundamental to the realisation
of social and economic rights.
MISA calls on the people of southern Africa to join the long overdue
call for freedom of information law, because the right to information
is not just about the media – it is about the right to live:
Without
the right to information you will never know what happened to the
money allocated in your community to build a clinic, to buy medicine,
to build a school, to dig a borehole. You will never know how many
government tenders where allocated to whom and why, without information
you will never why your children are unemployed.
Crucially,
the right to information is envisioned as the cornerstone of all
freedoms – in effect, one can not fully enjoy or exercise the right
to vote, self-determination or to a clean and healthy environment
or make informed choices without the information that would make
those rights or choices worthwhile. The enjoyment of the other
rights and the choices to be made as to the effective means and
ways of doing so will inherently depend on the availability of information.
Business can’t go on as usual
-
MISA calls on civil society: trade unions, the churches to join
in the campaign for the right to know, which ultimately is a fight
against corruption and social injustice.
-
MISA s ready and willing to work with SADC governments in providing
technical expertise in drafting the right to Information.
- MISA
strongly condemns unjustified delays from SADC governments and
calls for speeding-up processes of passing laws on freedom of
information to information.
Visit the MISA-Zimbabwe
fact
sheet
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
|