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MISA stresses need for access to information in Africa
MISA-Zimbabwe
April 19, 2012
The Media Institute
of Southern Africa (MISA) on 15 April 2012 bemoaned the current
state of access to information in Africa, citing the negative impact
the glaring lack of information is having on the citizenry. This
observation was made during the ongoing NGO Forum of the 51st Session
of the African Commission on Human and Peoples? Rights (ACHPR) in
the Gambian capital of Banjul
Referring to
the African Platform on Access to Information campaign initiated
in 2011, MISA Regional Specialist on Media Policy and Law, Karen
Mohan, said access to information is a right that many African citizens
were still struggling to realise.
She said this
was despite the fact that the right to freedom of information is
one that is enshrined in a host of regional and international instruments
such as Article 19 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, Article 9 of the African
Charter on Human and People's Rights, and article 4 of
the Declaration of Principles on Freedom of Expression in Africa.
Mohan noted
that access to information is a fundamental part of freedom of expression
and argued that when citizens are ill-informed and unable to access
basic public information, it is consequently impossible for them
to exercise their right to freedom of expression.
This in turn
adversely affects citizens' basic rights to health, employment,
education, participation in public discourse, as well as the ability
to fight corruption, among other aspects.
Mohan also explained
that the African Platform on Access to information was initiated
in 2011 as a way of promoting access to information and impressing
that it is a right that many African citizens still continue to
be deprived of.
She urged members
of the NGO Forum to register their support towards the cause by
calling for a resolution which will request:
1. Endorsement
of the APAI Declaration by signing it.
2. Endorsement of a recommendation for the African Commission on
Human and Peoples Rights (ACHPR) to pass a resolution authorising
the ACHPR Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression and Access
to Information in Africa to expand Part IV of the Declaration of
Freedom
of Expression in Africa to include principles of the APAI Declaration
3. Endorsement of a recommendation to the ACHPR requesting the African
Union Summit to:
a. Adopt September 28 as International Right to Information Day.
b. Initiate an experts meeting to develop a continent wide instrument
on the right of access to information.
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