BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
The Freedom of Information Act1 (or
the “FoI Act”) is Nigeria’s major legislative response to redress the balance
of official secrecy, elitism and non-accountable government. It guarantees a
“Right to Know” or a right of access to records and information in the custody
of public institutions in Nigeria; set standards for what the government could
protect from access, and fastened a system of judicial review of denial of
access to information.
In line with the requirements of the
FoI Act, the Attorney-General of the Federation, who is vested with the
statutory mandate to coordinate compliance with the FoI Act by public
institutions, 2has issued an advisory and a guidance note to help public
institutions understand their obligations and promote good practice of the FoI
Act regime. The advisory is titled the “Attorney General’s Memorandum on the
Reporting Requirements under S.29 of the FoI Act”3 (the “FoI Memorandum”) and
requires public institutions to organize their records in a manner that makes
them accessible to the public and to publish information using multimedia
formats (i.e. print, electronic and online). The “Guidelines on the
Implementation of the Freedom of Information Act, 2011”4 (the “FoI Guidelines”)
seeks to aid clearer understanding, application and implementation of the FoI
Act by public institutions.
The FoI Act was achieved at the end of
nearly two decades of public advocacy and exactly one hundred years after the
Official Secrets Act5 was first introduced into Nigeria as a colonial
Order-in-Council. The idea of a freedom of information law for Nigeria was
conceived in 1993 by three different organisations working independently of
each other. The organisations, Media Rights Agenda (MRA), Civil Liberties
Organisation (CLO) and the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), subsequently
agreed to work together on a campaign for the enactment of a freedom of
information Act.6 The objective of the campaign was to lay down, as a legal
principle, the right of access to documents and information in the custody of
the government or its officials and agencies as a necessary corollary to the
guarantee of freedom of expression.
A bill7 for a freedom of information
act was first submitted to the 4th National Assembly in 1999.8 The 1st and 2nd
reading of the bill at the House of Representatives took place on 22 February
and 13 March 2000 respectively. The House of Representatives Committee on
Information recommended the passage of the bill and the House directed that a
public hearing on the bill be held on the 3 and 4 October 2001. However, the
bill could not be passed before the 4th National Assembly was dissolved in
2003.
The bill was represented to the 5th
National Assembly, in June 2003 and a 9 member joint committee of the National
Assembly was set up to review the bill9. The joint committee came up with
strong recommendations and submitted its report to the National Assembly.10 By
August 2004, the House of Representatives passed the bill and subsequently
forwarded same to the Senate.11 The bill, having been stalled in the Senate for
two years, was eventually passed in November, 2006 with a consensus vote.12 The
two Legislative Chambers then raised a harmonisation committee13 to address
differences in the two bills, before it was sent to the President for assent.
Part of the raison d’etire offered by
the Senate as to why the bill was delayed, were issues relating to national
security. This was notwithstanding the fact that the bill in the main provided
safeguards “against unrestricted and unauthorised access to documents of
institutions as it relates to national security or ongoing investigations by
the Police or other law enforcement agencies”.14 Thus, information that would
be injurious to national defence and conduct of foreign policy were excluded
from the bill.
The bill was sent to former President
Olusegun Obasanjo on 23 March 2007, for assent. However, the President refused
his assent and vetoed the bill. His refusal was based on two reasons. Firstly,
he was opposed to the title of the bill i.e. „Freedom of Information‟ and
stated that it should have been titled „Right to Information‟.
TOPIC: ANALYSIS OF THE RIGHT OF ACCESS TO INFORMATION UNDER NIGERIAN LAW
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 80
Price: 3000 NGN
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