Three advocacy groups bent on seeing to it that the Right to Information Bill (RTI) is passed into law want the Bill to be amended to align with the 1992 constitution.
The Right to Information (RTI) Ghana, the Media Coalition on RTI, and OccupyGhana although commended Parliament for the work done so far on the Bill, but explained that the technical committee of the coalition reviewed the amendments effected so far by Parliament and recommends to Parliament two main issues that deserve further review.
For the amendments effected to Clause 13, a joint statement from the advocacy groups noted that Clause 13 exempts information that reveals an opinion, advice, recommendation, consultation or deliberation made to any public institution because it is likely to undermine that institution’s deliberative processes.
It said while the coalition acknowledged the need to facilitate the effective functioning of the government and the State, any limits to the constitutional right to information must be narrowly constructed.
It said, unfortunately, the current draft of Clause 13 could be easily misconstrued to severely, if not completely, dilute the right to information.
“Our proposal, respectfully, is for the House to introduce a Clause 13 (1) (c), to state that ‘such information ceases to be exempt after the deliberative process is over’.
“Without that explicit provision, such information would continue to be exempt perpetually,” the coalition argued.
The statement said if the bill is passed in its current form, even evaluation reports under the Public Procurement Act would be exempt information in perpetuity.
According to the coalition, Article 21(1) (f) of the Constitution was very clear that the right to information shall be subject to “such qualifications and laws as are necessary in a democratic society.”
The statement said: “In our opinion, the current draft of Clause 13 does not pass or even meet that test”.
The coalition explained that the technical committee of the coalition has considered the proposal by Mr Frederick Opare Ansah, the Member of Parliament for Suhum, for a 12-month transition and implementation period.
The coalition expressed the belief that that proposal should be considered with caution.
It noted that there had been several negative experiences from African countries where a transition clause had led to non-implementation of the law.
For example, in Ghana, the 1962 Insolvency Act (Act 153) was never brought into effect, on account of its section 78 that had provided that the Act was to “come into operation on the date that the Minister responsible for Justice may, by legislative instrument, appoint.”
It said that never happened until the law was repealed and replaced in 2006 by the Insolvency Act (Act 708).
The statement explained that if it was necessary to include a transitional provision, then it should be a reasonable transition period that clearly spells out what should be done and the timeframe for putting in place the necessary structures for the full and effective implementation of the law.
It said notwithstanding this consideration, the RTI Bill 2018 should still be passed and become law while provision was made for specific time-bound actions.
It said this approach was recently applied in the Office of the Special Prosecutor Act 2017.
“We have also taken notice of the Speaker’s ruling to have the Attorney-General present the position of the Executive on this proposed amendment by Tuesday, February 5; we will be observing this with keen interest, especially when this date falls on the ninth anniversary date of the presentation of the first RTI Bill to Parliament in 2010.”
It said the coalition would be requesting a meeting with the Majority and Minority leaders, as well as the leadership of the Joint Committee to provide more details on some of the clauses following the technical review.
It would also ask leadership to impress on the House to exercise its power of a Second Consideration Stage in respect of the specific clauses as allowed under Order 130 of the Standing Orders of Parliament.
“We wish to assure Ghanaians of our full commitment to the passage of a credible law,” the statement said.
The coalition took note of Parliament’s consideration of all 92 clauses in the Right to Information Bill 2018, describing it as a very good progress.
The coalition commended the effort by Parliament to act with urgency in ensuring the speedy passage of the RTI Bill, following its re-convening just last week.
The recent delay of the passage of the Bill is due to the contention over whether to operationalise it after twelve months or as soon as it is approved by Parliament and assented to by the President.
Speaker of Parliament, Prof. Mike Oquaye last week gave the Executive up to Tuesday, February 5, 2019, to decide whether or not to operationalise the bill immediately.
Parliament to finalize RTI bill discussions this week – Majority Leader
Majority Leader, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu is hopeful Parliament will conclude discussions on the Right to Information (RTI) Bill within this week.
This follows assurances by the Speaker of Parliament who set the end of February 2019 as a new deadline for the passage of Bill which is currently at its consideration stage.
But, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu justified the delay in the passage of the bill saying, Parliament has the powers to postpone the approval of any Bill if there is a good reason to do so.
“Parliament has the power to postpone the implementation of any legislation that is looking at the circumstances. This RTI is going to have new financial handling; the 2019 budget did not make any provision for it. The government needs to put its house together. We need to have information offices in all the Ministries, Departments, Agencies and public offices. It comes with huge financial implications. The plenary powers of parliament to postpone the operations of any law for good course is recognized by the constitution.”
The Minister of Parliamentary Affairs is however optimistic that the challenges will be addressed soon.
–
By: Nii Larte Lartey | citinewsroom.com |Ghana | nlartelartey@gmail.com