Dear all,
the Baltic Sea NGO Forum and UNESCO supported ATI (Access to Information)
in Germany.
The good news is that the UN Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of the Human
Rights Council (HRC) gives an opportunity to promote ATI:
There are 269
hits (Accessed January 2013) on "Access to Information" in the UPR-Info.org
database e. g. freedom
of information laws are mentioned for Canada,
Azerbaijan,
Bahrain,
Botswana,
Burkina
Faso, Cameroon,
Cape
Verde, Colombia,
Cuba,
Equatorial
Guinea, France,
Kenya,
Tuvalu,
Uzbekistan,
and the REPUBLIC
OF DJIBOUTI (submitted by ARTICLE 19). UNESCO
has recommended Freedom of Information laws to all states reviewed
during the 16. UPR session . Austria recommended to Bahrain (A/HRC/WG.6/13/L.4):
"Enact a progressive, substantive Freedom of Information law". Djibouti
and Ghana
got same suggestion.
However UNESCO did not mention that ATI laws are missing in 5 federal
states in Germany and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights
ignored
and censored the
contributon
of the Baltic Sea NGO Forum. 96 HRC states made approx. 200 suggestions.
Every state had 74 seconds time to present recomendations.
6
of 8 suggestions of the Baltic Sea NGO Forum were supported. Some
transparency aspects are covered, however ATI laws are not included
directly.
What's next?
Meanwhile citizens in 5 German federal states are still denied the human
right of ATI, found in more than 125 states with 5.9 billion people, i. e.
84 % of the worlds population.
Regards,
Netizen: http://walter.keim.googlepages.com
UN Universal Periodic Review (UPR):
http://wkeim.bplaced.net/files/foi-upr-de.htm#result
Will CoE Support the Human Right of Access to Information
in Germany? http://t.co/AavLgnOnz2
Is it possible to enforce access to information in Bavaria?
http://wkeim.bplaced.net/files/enforce_access_to_information.html
04/11/2012 14:51, walter.keim wrote:
Dear all,
two of the achievments of the Freedom of Information Advocates Network
(FOIAnet) after 10 years are:
1) International Recognition as a Human Right
· RTI is now firmly recognised as an internationally guaranteed human
right, with decisions at the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and
European Court of Human Rights, and global recognition by the UN Human
Rights Committee
2) Rapid Increase in National Legal Recognition
· The number of national RTI laws has more than doubled since 2002, from
42 to 93 countries, comprising over three-quarters of the world’s
population, with a concomitant growth in constitutional recognition for
RTI
However Germany does not follow this trend:
- 84 states with approx. 5.5
billion inhabitants
i. e. 78% of the world population give better access to information
then the federal Freedom of Information Law in Germany (http://www.rti-rating.org/country-data/).
- more than 115 states (http://right2info.org/laws) with more then 5.9 billion inhabitants i.
e. 84 % of the worlds population adopted FOI laws or provisions in
constitutions. 5 German states with half of the population lack FOI
laws.
- The UN Convention against Corruption is ratified by 159 states
with more then 6,5 billion inhabitants, but not by Germany
For 10 years I tried to make
parliaments,
politicians,
the
press,
NGOs
and c
ourts
aware of the human right of access to information. However only the
Pirate Party
took note of this.
Both
GRECO
(States against Corroption) and
HRC
(Human Rights Committee) did not promote the human right of access to
information.
Is it time to demand that these experts do the jobb they are paid for?
Regards
--
Walter Keim
Netizen: http://walter.keim.googlepages.com
UN-Menschenrechtsausschuss: Deutsche Informationsfreiheits-
gesetze in der Kritik: http://t.co/vxdoGCuf
Is it possible to enforce access to information in Bavaria?
http://wkeim.bplaced.net/files/enforce_access_to_information.html
Germany has to improve the federal FOI law, adopt FOI laws in 5
local states (Bundesländer), ratify COE and UN conventions against
corruption and improve transparency of funding of political parties to
catch up with Europe, America, OSCE, OECD and BRIC states (see
weakness no. 2, 3, 4, 8, 34, 35 and 52 of National Integrity Report
Transparency Germany).
--
Walter Keim
Netizen: http://sites.google.com/site/walterkeim/
Who will support transparency in Germany:
http://wkeim.bplaced.net/foi-ngo.htm
http://wkeim.bplaced.net/files/if-dimr-pbt-en.htm
Colours on picture: dark green: FOIA enacted. Yellow: pending
law. FOIA= Freedom of Information Act