IDUAI 2020: IPC IMPLORES GOVT OTHERS TO PRIORITISE THE RIGHT TO INFORMATION
Oru Leonard
The Intertional Press Centre (IPC), in Lagos- Nigeria has called on Government and Institutional stakeholders to prioritise the right to information in times of crisis and guarantee public Access to information to save lives, build trust and bring hope.
The call is on the hills of the occasion of the International Day for Universal Access to Information (IDUAI) of which the International Press Centre has prompted the Nigerian government to recognise the importance of respecting legal and institutional frameworks that guarantee the right to information in the country in line with continental and international standards.
In a statement to mark the IDUAI day, IPC expressed concern about the state of Access to information in Nigeria despite adopting the national right to information law along with 17 African Union member states. In 2011, the Nigerian Government signed the FOI Bill into law, thereby making Nigeria the ninth country in Africa and among the 127 countries in the world to have passed such a legislation.
IPC’s Executive Director, Mr. Lanre Arogundade in the statement, regretted that the FOI Act has not had the desired impact due to the refusal of a number of Ministries, Departments and Agencies to proactively disclose information about their activities while also failing to respond whenever journalists, civil society activists and other Nigerians make FOI Act requests to that effect.
Mr. Arogundade said such conducts clearly undermine the provisions of sections (4) and (5) of the FOI Act that public Institutions shall make public records and information more freely available and provide for public access to public records and information. He added that they also constitute a sabotage of the constitution apart from negating the principles of the Open Government Partnership of which Nigeria is a member.
Against the background of the provision of section 22 of the Nigerian Constitution that the press shall monitor governance and hold government accountable, Mr. Arogundade said the occasion of the World Access to Information Day should also be used to reiterate the fact that free access to information is a catalyst of press freedom without which god governance would be a mirage.
He said further that Universal ATI is vital to the watchdog role of the media in keeping the public
In relation to violence against journalists and other media professionals. Mr. Arogundade noted that such acts constitute threats to freedom of expression in Nigeria.
“This year alone, the IPC has documented at least 40 media attacks and more recently the Nasarawa State Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), lost one its members, former treasurer, Benjamin Ekom to an attack and brutal killing by unknown gunmen at his residence in Washo village, Nassarawa-Eggon Local Government Area (LGA), of the state”, he lamented.
He therefore called on the government to ensure protection for journalists and whistleblowers who are dedicated to promoting democracy and social justice.
As for journalists, he said they should keep engaging in investigative journalism, so as to prevent abuse of office.
The International Day for Universal Access to Information (IDUAI) is celebrated yearly on 28 September as declared by The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and adopted by the UN General Assembly.