GAB is pleased to welcome this guest post by the Centre for Law and Democracy:
Today marks the first of what will be an annual recognition and celebration of citizens’ right to access information held by their governments. Making September 28 International Day for Universal Access to Information will, as the UNESCO resolution establishing it explains, help make governments and citizens alike aware that an “open and transparent government is a fundamental component of a democratic and developed state,” that all natural and legal persons have a “right to seek, access and receive information from public bodies and private bodies performing a public function,” and that it is “the duty of the state to prove such information.”
For the past five years the Centre for Law and Democracy and Access Info Europe have been tracking nations’ efforts in fulfilling this duty, and we are pleased to note that substantial progress has been made. There are now 112 countries with some form of right to information or freedom of information legislation on the books with six nations enacting a new law this year alone. Not all RTI laws meet the minimum criteria for granting citizens the right to information, and even those laws that do are not always enforced effectively. To keep watch over developments, our two organizations annually produce an RTI Rating reporting legal changes and assessing their compliance with international norms. This year’s report has a number of surprising findings. Continue reading