|
FOI Bill
Receives Massive Support at Senate Public Hearing
ABUJA, TUESDAY, APRIL 26,
2005: “To unleash the potential for good governance, we
need to unlock the storehouse of public information to
enable the people of Nigeria hold their representatives
accountable,” Senate President Ken Nnamani said today in
Abuja.
The three-week old Senate
President said without information, Nigeria cannot translate
the aspirations for prosperity and good governance into
reality, adding: “We cannot keep information trapped in
officialdom if we intend to be competitive in the
globalizing economy.”
Senator Nnamani spoke while
declaring open the public hearing on the Bill, where
Nigerians representing various sectors, including the
business sector, trade unions, the academia, religious
bodies, the media, the legal profession, the civil service,
and human rights groups expressed unanimous support for the
Bill and urged the Senate to pass it as soon as possible.
Describing himself as a
“believer in freedom of information”, he noted that
information is now a huge income earner for developed and
developing countries alike.
Senator Nnamani said: “I
also believe that information is important for democratic
governance. We now know that economic development depends
largely on the quality of institutions that coordinate
political and economic interventions by the state and
private actors. The quality of institutions is measured by
their degree of transparency and accountability. As a
matter of democracy and service delivery, people need
information to engage with state institutions in a manner
that provides incentives for good governance.”
Reaffirming that “the right
to know is a fundamental right”, he observed that the right
to know also has “instrumental value” because people can
only hold their leaders and institutions accountable when
they have the information about how government works.
According to him,
“Constructive criticism is impossible if facts and figures
are under locks and keys. To unleash the potential for good
governance we need to unlock the storehouse of public
information to enable the people of Nigeria hold their
representatives accountable.”
But Senator Nnamani
remarked that in unlocking the storehouse of information,
Nigeria should pay particular attention to its historical
and social contexts.
He said: “We need a freedom
of information bill that addresses the peculiar problems we
face as a developing country. We are not exceptional in the
comity of nations. Nevertheless, we have our uniqueness.
Both our commonalities with other countries of the world and
our uniqueness should guide today’s deliberations on the
Freedom of Information Bill.”
In his welcome remarks, the
Chairman of the Senate Committee on Information, Senator
Tawar Wada, assured those present that the Senate was
favourably disposed towards the Bill as evidenced by the
positive contributions made many senators during the debates
at the plenary session of the Senate when it went through
the second reading.
He said: “We in the Senate
do understand the importance of this Bill if we are to
achieve our aim of making Nigeria a just and egalitarian
society.” He added that the benefits of the Bill, when it
is passed into law, will speak for themselves.
Senator Wada described the
public hearing as a historic occasion in Nigeria.
Members of the public who
spoke at the public hearing included a former
Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice of Kano State,
Alhaji A. Balarabe Mahmoud (SAN); the Executive Secretary of
the Nigerian Press Council, Mr. Godwin Omole; the President
of the Newspapers Proprietors Association of Nigeria (NPAN)
and Chief Executive Officer of Newswatch magazine, Mr. Ray
Ekpu; the President of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ),
Mr. Smart Adeyemi; the Publisher of Punch Newspaper, Chief
Ajibola Ogunshola; Professor Pat Utomi, Director of the
Lagos Business School, whose submission was presented by Mr.
A. Owolabi, a lecturer at the Lagos Business School, who
also made a separate presentation on the potential impact of
a Freedom of Information law on the accountancy profession;
the Head of Information at the Nigeria Labour Congress
(NLC), Mr. Owei Lakemfa; and Chief Nkem Nath Nwanzor, the
President of the Civil Service Technical Union of Nigeria.
Others were the Secretary
of the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) and editor of the
Saturday edition of the National Interest newspaper, Ms
Angela Agoawike; Dr. Mustapha Hussain Ismail, an Islamic
scholar at the Bayero University, Kano and Director of the
Centre for Human Rights in Islam (CHRI) in Kano; Dr. Tunji
Olaopa, the Deputy Director of the Bureau for Civil Service
Reforms in the Office of the Head of Service of the
Federation; the President of the National Association of
Nigerian Traders (NANTS), Mr. Ken Ukoha, whose presentation
was made by the Deputy National Public Relations Officer of
the Association, Mr. Ambrose Enebe; the National Coordinator
of the Zero Corruption Coalition (ZCC), Ms Lilian
Ekeanyanwu; the Executive Director of Media Rights Agenda
(MRA), Mr. Edetaen Ojo; an Abuja based lawyer, Mr. Ime
Akpan; and Dr. Sam Amadi, the Chief Coordinator of the Think
Tank Catholic Bishop Conference of Nigeria at the Catholic
Secretariat in Lagos.
The Committee also received
other written submissions from the Commonwealth Human Rights
Initiative (CHRI) based in New Delhi, India; the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC); the Open Society
Justice Initiative (OSJI); the Freedom of Information
Coalition; the International Credit Information Bureau
(ICIB); and the General Secretary of the Nigeria Labour
Congress, Mr. John Odah.
All the presentations and
submissions were unanimous that the Bill should be passed
into law as soon as possible, although many of those who
spoke suggested amendments to the current Bill to strengthen
it and make it more effective.
Chief Nwazor, who spoke on
behalf of workers in the public sector, expressed the
support of public sector workers for the passage of the
Bill. He noted that although civil servants will bear the
burden for the implementation of the Act, when it becomes
law, they were nonetheless urging the National Assembly to
pass it because “access to information is a vote for living
well.”
He regretted that “our
secretive tendency in the civil service has ruined the
service”, adding that although a lot was happening in the
public service “people are afraid to talk.”
In his closing remarks, the
Deputy Chairman of the Senate Committee on Information,
Senator Etanimo Spiff, agreed with Senator Wada that the
public hearing was a historic occasion and expressed the
gratitude of the Committee to all those who had come to make
presentations to it. He observed that people had come from
different parts of the country to attend the public hearing
to make their views on the Bill known, which was indicative
of the importance of the Bill to Nigerians.
He said the members of the
Committee were impressed by the quality of the presentations
and the caliber of people who had come to express support
for the Bill. He described the presentations as
enlightening particularly because it had succeeded in
demonstrating to members of the Committee how the proposed
law will affect virtually all sectors of the Nigerian
society. He added that he was particularly struck by the
presentation by the National Association of Nigerian
Traders, saying that before he heard from them, he could not
understand how they could possibly be affected by a Freedom
of Information Act or why they were interested in the
matter, but that their presentation had brought the issue
down to the grassroots.
Senator Spiff remarked: “We
have heard from the public. We know where the public
stands. Our goal is to ensure that whatever law we come up
with will be in the best interest of Nigeria.”
He noted that one of the
main concerns which the members of the Committee had before
the public hearing was why the Bill was restricted to public
institutions alone. He said the Committee members were
pleased by the suggestion from a number of presenters that
the provisions of the Bill should be extended to apply to
private bodies and corporations in certain circumstances
because the activities of such bodies sometimes have as
great an impact on the lives of the people as the activities
of public institutions.
Senator Spiff admitted that
the Bill would be equally useful to members of the National
Assembly. According to him, “The Bill will be of and
assistance and help to the National Assembly. What we have
found out when we carry out our oversight functions is that
we cannot have access to information from the government
agencies.”
He stressed that “Nigeria
will be better for it” with the passage of the Bill.
Click here for text of
Remarks by Senator Ken Nnamani
Click here for presentation
by A.B. Mahmoud (SAN)
Click here for presentation
by Ray Ekpu
Click here for presentation
by Ajibola Ogunshola
Click here for presentation
by Professor Pat Utomi
Click here for presentation
by Owei Lakemfa.
Click here for presentation
by Angela Agoawike
Click here for presentation
by Dr. Mustapha Hussain Ismail
Click here for presentation
by Dr. Sam Amadi
Click here for presentation
by National Association of Nigerian Traders
Click here for presentation
by Zero Corruption Coalition
Click here for presentation
by Media Rights Agenda
Click here for presentation
by Bureau for Civil Service Reforms
Click here for submission
by Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI)
Click here for submission
by Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)
Click here for submission
by Juliet Ume-Ezeoke, Member, Int'l Media Lawyers Assoc.
Click here for submission
by Freedom of Information Coalition
Click here for submission
by International Credit Information Bureau (ICIB)
Click here for submission
by Nigeria Labour Congress
Click here for submission
by Engr. F. A. O. Oseni
Click here for submission
by Women Aid Collective (WACOL)
Click here for submission
by Hadina Consulting Limited for MTN Nigeria Limited
Click here for submission
by Bureau For Public Opinion
Click here for submission
by Owolabi Akintola
|