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Islamabad, January 5: In the country’s
first ever consolidated assessment and scoring of Right to Information/Freedom
of Information (RTI/FOI) laws and their implementation at Federal and Provincial
levels, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s (KP’s) Right to Information Act, 2013
and the KP Right to Information Commission (RTIC) secured 1st place in the overall
rankings with a score of 73%.
Punjab’s Transparency and Right to Information
Act, 2013 and the Punjab Information Commission (PIC) formed under it ranked
at 2nd position with an overall score of 65%. Balochistan’s Freedom of
Information Act, 2005 and the Provincial Government of Balochistan stood at
3rd place in the overall rankings with a score of 29%, whereas the Freedom of
Information Ordinance, 2002 and the Federal Government of Pakistan ranked 4th,
with an overall score of 26%. Sindh’s Freedom of Information Act, 2006
and the Provincial Government of Sindh earned the lowest position in the overall
rankings with a score of only 24%.
Speaking at the RTI Scorecard launch, Ms. Saman
Sultana Jafri said younger parliamentarians are doing what they can to push
for better RTI legislation, however it is the senior political leadership and
parliamentarians who do not give Right to Information its due importance. Mr.
Sheheryar Afridi lamented the lack of transparency within the legislature, which
he hoped would be strengthened by passage of a new Federal RTI law. Senator
Hasil Khan Bizenjo reiterated the need for Members of Parliament to give greater
priority to transparency and public accountability, in addition to highlighting
the need for a more robust RTI law at the Federal level. Hafiz Tahir Khalil
suggested that parliamentarians present at the Launch should meet with the Chairman
Senate and push for the passage of the Federal RTI Bill.
Honourable Senators Mir Hasil Khan Bizenjo (NP,
Balochistan), Usman Khan Kakar, (PKMAP, KP), Dr. Ashok Kumar (NP, Sindh), Saeed
Ul Hasan Mandokhail, (PML, Balochistan) and Nawabzada Saifullah Magsi, (PPPP,
Balochistan) were present at the Launch along with Honourable Members of National
Assembly Ms. Asma Mamdot, (Women, Punjab, PML-N), Ms. Amra Khan (Women, Punjab,
PML-N), Ms. Naeema Kishwer (Women, KP, JUI-F), Syed Ali Raza Abidi (NA-251,
Karachi IIV, MQM), Mr. Shehryar Khan Afridi, (NA -14, Kohat, KP, PTI,), Syed
Rehan Hashmi (Na-245, Karachi-VII, MQM), Ms. Saman Sultana Jafri (Women, Sindh,
MQM), Ms. Nafeesa Inayatullah Khattak (Women, KP, PTI).
Seniors media persons including Mr. Ghazi Salahuddin,
The News/Jang, Mr. Muhammad Ziauddin, Mr. Sohail Chaudhry, Daily Pakistan, Mr.
Wasif Chaudhry, Associated Press of Pakistan, Mr. Waseem Abbasi, The News, Mr.
Ikram Junaidi, Dawn, Ms. Batool Rajput and Mr. Ameer Abbas, Dawn TV, and Mr.
Azaz Syed, Geo/The News, were also present at the Launch.
On strength of Legal Framework,
Punjab ranked 1st ahead of KP. KP law ranked behind Punjab in this area because,
unlike Punjab, it provides blanket immunity to the Peshawar High Court and does
not extend the right to information to all citizens of Pakistan or legally incorporated
entities. KP’s law, unlike Punjab, also fails to specify that Information
Commissioners may only be removed by a multi-party committee of legislators.
It does not specify which official or body has final authority in overruling
the application of exemptions in public interest. FOI laws in effect within
Federal, Sindh and Balochistan Governments received similar scores in
terms of strength of Legal Framework, primarily because they do not ensure comprehensive
access to different categories of information; they provide blanket immunity
to defense institutions and do not derogate against secrecy-promoting laws like
the Official Secrets Act, 1923.
On Implementation, KP RTIC
secured 1st position ahead of its counterpart in Punjab, the PIC. The PIC stood
2nd as it was unable to effectively monitor the implementation of RTI within
public bodies under its purview. PIC’s performance in terms of monitoring
implementation especially fell short of the RTIC in terms of number of inspections
of public bodies conducted, proportion of Annual Reports received from public
bodies and the regularity with which it was able to update its website with
details on implementation of RTI. The PIC was also unable to train as high a
proportion of Public Information Officers (PIOs) as the RTIC, primarily due
to understaffing and delays in release of its first Budget. In terms of processing
of complaints, the PIC had a longer processing time than the RTIC, and lower
disclosure rate and higher pendency rate.
The Balochistan Government was ranked 3rd in
terms of strength of RTI/FOI Implementation, ahead of the Federal Government
in 4th position and the Sindh Government in 5th position. Balochistan was ranked
ahead of the Federal and Sindh Governments, as it was able to provide a greater
proportion of information on implementation requested by PILDAT, including information
on the designation of PIOs. Implementation of FIO at Federal level and within
Sindh and Balochistan was marred because their Governments, unlike KP and Punjab,
have yet to establish dedicated agencies which have been allocated resources
exclusively for coordinating implementation and addressing complaints against
non-provision of implementation.
The Comparative RTI Scorecard has been prepared
by PILDAT under the Enhanced Democratic Accountability and Civic Engagement
(EDACE) Project, which received support from the Development Alternatives
Inc. (DAI).
The Complete text of PILDAT’s Comparative
Scorecard on Right to Information (RTI) Legislation and Implementation in Pakistan
at Federal and Provincial levels can be accessed at:
http://www.pildat.org/Publications/Publication/FOI/PILDAT
_RTI_Scorecard_January2016.pdf
For Further Information:
Phone: 051 111 123 345 Ext: 107, +92 334 672 5475
Twitter @KnowMyGovPK @Pildat
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PILDAT
Website: http://www.pildat.org/ |
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