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Senate Passes Freedom
of Information Bill
ABUJA,
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2006: The
Senate today unanimously passed the Freedom of Information
Bill following a clause by clause consideration of the bill
and the conclusion of the third reading at its plenary
session.
Senate
President, Senator Ken Nnamani, said shortly after the
Senate voted to pass the Bill with only slight amendments
that he was pleased that the “bill which has been pending
for a very long time has now seen the light of day.” The
Bill has been pending before the National Assembly since the
beginning of this political dispensation in 1999.

At the
commencement of the proceedings, as is the tradition in the
Senate, Senator Dalhatu Talfida, the Senate Majority leader,
moved a motion for the Chairman of the Senate Ad Hoc
Committee on the Freedom of Information Bill, Senator Victor
Ndoma-Egba (SAN) to present of the report of the Committee.
The motion was carried, whereupon Senator Ndoma-Egba
presented the report.
In his
presentation, Senator Ndoma-Egba noted that the Bill
emanated from the House of Representatives, which has
previously passed it, and recalled that the bill was
referred to the Ad Hoc Committee during the Senate plenary
session on Tuesday, March 14, 2006. Prior to this, the
bill had been considered by the Senate Committee on
Information.
He stated
that the main purpose of the Bill was to guarantee members
of the public a right of access to information held by
government institutions and stressed the
benefits of the bill, one of which was to enable the active
participation of members of the public in public discourse
on issues of governance.
Senator
Ndoma-Egba also explained the Committee’s method of work.
He said on Wednesday, April 12, 2006, the Ad Hoc Committee
met to discuss the Bill and the work so far done on it by
the Committee on Information, which was previously handling
the Bill. He said during the meeting, members of the Ad Hoc
Committee agreed that not all the critical stakeholders
participated, either by making presentations or submissions,
during the public hearing held by the Information Committee
on April 26, 2005, especially government institutions. He
said the Ad Hoc Committee therefore decided to invite
memoranda and hold a public hearing for these critical
stakeholders as the Bill is about information held by public
institutions.
The Ad Hoc
Committee therefore invited comments from the following
agencies: the Secretary to the Government of the Federation;
the Head of Service of the Federation; the Nigerian Police
Force; the State Security Service (SSS); the Independent
Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC);
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC); and the
Nigerian Stock Exchange.
Other
agencies invited were: the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC);
the Nigerian Intelligence Agency (NIA); the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC); the Directorate of Military
Intelligence (DMI); the Immigrations Service; the National
Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA); the Nigerian Customs
Service; the Defence Intelligence Agency; and the National
Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC).

Senator
Ndoma-Egba said on April 28, 2006, some of the agencies met
with the Ad Hoc Committee to present their provisions on the
Bill. The agencies which met with the Committee were: the
Nigerian Police Force, the SSS, the NIA, the Immigration
Service, the EFCC, the NDLEA, the Nigerian Customs, the CAC,
and the Defence Intelligence Agency.
He stated
that some of the agencies supported the Bill wholeheartedly,
while some of them had some reservations on certain clauses
Sen. Victor Ndoma-Egba
in the bill
but nonetheless supported its passage. He added that it was
only the NDLEA which wanted the Bill rejected in its
entirety.
Senator
Ndoma-Egba said the Committee also made reference and
comparisons to similar laws in other parts of the world,
including the United States Freedom of Information Act; the
South African Promotion of Access to Information Act; and
the United Kingdom’s Freedom of Information Act in preparing
its report.
At the end
of his presentation, he said the Ad Hoc Committee was
recommending that the bill be passed by the Senate.
Senator
Tafida then moved a motion for the adoption of the
Committee’s report and was seconded by Senator Daniel Saror.
The motion was unanimously carried, following which the
Senate accepted the report for consideration. Senator Tafida
then moved another motion that the Senate dissolves into a
“Committee of the Whole” house to consider the bill clause
by clause. The motion was again unanimously carried.
Chairing
the “Committee of the Whole” house, Senator Nnamani noted
that the bill has 34 clauses and one long title and no
schedule. He then proceeded to call out the clauses one by
one.
On Section
2 of the bill, Senator Mohammed Aji, suggested that the
right of access to information granted by the bill should be
amended to apply only to “declassified public” record,
instead of to “any” record, as stated in the Bill. He said
this was necessary to protect national security information,
which would be endangered if access was allowed to all
records and documents of the Government. This, he said, was
particularly important because the Ad Hoc Committee had not
invited the Ministry of Defence to present a memorandum on
the Bill, even though it invited security and intelligence
agencies.
Besides, he
argued, it was also necessary to protect the personal
information of citizens as government institutions hold a
lot of private information and it would be undesirable for
citizens to be able access the personal information of
private citizens held by the government.
He was
immediately opposed by Senator Abubakar Danso Sodangi, who
argued that although he agreed that all government records
should not be opened to the public, Senator Aji’s concerns
had already been taken care of by other provisions in the
Bill which exempt defence and national security information
from public access.
Senator
Sodangi was supported by Senator Olusola Ogunbanjo who
pointed out that Sections 13 and 17 of the Bill had already
taken care of those issues.
Also
opposing Senator Aji’s suggestion, the Chairman of the
Senate Committee on Information, Senator Tawar Wada, argued
that the amended sought by Senator Aji was unnecessary. He
stressed that public institutions hold information as
custodians for the public and that the purpose of the Bill
was to declassify government information and make them
available to members of the public, adding that if the right
of access was limited to declassified information,
government institutions would just keep classifying their
records and documents and the purpose of the Bill would be
defeated.
When the
Senate President put the section to vote, the Senators
unanimously voted that the original provision in the bill
should be retained.
There were
also extensive debates on the issue of fees payable by
members of the public for access to records and documents.
Senator Sodangi, who flagged off the issue, argued that
section 9 of the Bill, which deals with fees, should set a
maximum amount payable as fees so that the issue would not
be left to the discretion of the government organization
involved. Such an approach, he said, would make it possible
for an average Nigerian and journalists who use the
information in the public interest to obtain records and
documents without paying.
Senator
Wada also supported the view, arguing that if the issue was
left to the “whims and caprices” of the public institutions
concerned, they could make the fees payable for access so
high that it would be impossible for a lot of people to
access records and information and in this way, they would
be denying members of the public access.
He said the
Committee on Information, in its earlier report, had
suggested that there should be an agency to regulate the
issue of fees and urged the Senate not to leave the issue to
the discretion of the government institutions.
But Senator
Ndoma-Egba noted that it would be difficult to specify fees
for all types of records across board for all government
institutions and that the Senate was not the appropriate
institution to undertake such an exercise. He noted that
under the Bill, records and documents could be given in
various forms, which would affect the fees payable, while
search and duplication of records and documents would also
vary from one organization to another. Owing to these
institutional differences, he suggested that the setting of
fees should be left to the government institutions.
He also
noted all government institutions were required under the
bill to make regulations to prescribed the fees to be
payable for access to various types of records and documents
and that once this was done at the onset, it would forestall
any arbitrary imposition of fees. He urged his colleagues
to trust public institutions to do the right thing.
The Senate
President agreed that public institutions should be trusted
to do the right thing and suggested that the provision
should be left as it was.
Senator
Daniel Saror sparked off another controversy over the
provisions of Section 10 of the bill which prescribes a
3-year jail-term for the destruction or falsification of
public record, arguing that the proposed law should make
provision for the option of a fine.
But Senator
Ndoma-Egba disagreed saying that the Committee was of the
view that and that destruction or falsification of public
records was such as serious offence that there should be no
option of a fine. He insisted that such “criminal breach of
trust” should be visited with the highest sanction possible.
Senator
Tafida agreed the punishment for destruction or
falsification of public records should be imprisonment but
suggested that the court should be given discretion on the
term of imprisonment to imposed. He therefore recommended
that the provision should be amended to prescribe a maximum
term of three years imprisonment so that a judge would have
the discretion to impose a lesser term. His suggestion was
supported by Senator Ogunbanjo, Senator Wada and Senator
Ndoma-Egba.
When the
Senate President put the issue to vote, the Senators
unanimously voted that the provision be amended to prescribe
a maximum term of 3 years imprisonment. He then put the
question to the Senators whether they agreed that all the
clauses of the bill, including Section 10 as amended, be
allowed to remain part of the bill and they all chorused
“aye”.
At the end
of the debates, Senator Tafida thanked the Senate for
considering the bill and moved for the adoption of the
recommendations in the report of the Ad Hoc Committee. The
motion was seconded by Senator Saror and carried by the
entire House.
At this
point, Senator Ken Nnamani observed that the bill which has
been pending for a long time has finally seen the light of
day.
Reconvening
in plenary, the Senate President recounted the agreements on
the Bill during the proceedings of the “Committee of the
Whole” house and asked his colleagues if his account
reflected what happened. The entire Senate chorused “aye”.
After this,
Senator Tafida moved another motion for the bill to be
formally read the third time, which was again seconded by
Senator Saror and carried. The clerk of the Senate then
read the long title of the Bill. The Senate President
thereafter ruled that the bill has been read a third time
and passed.
As soon as
the Bill was passed, Senator Ogunbanjo and Senator Felix
Ibru got up from their seats to shake Senator Ndoma-Egba’s
hands and congratulate him.
The bill
still has to go through a harmonization process for the
versions passed by the House of Representatives and the
Senate to be harmonized before it is sent to the President
for assent. The President will thereafter have 30 days to
assent to the bill, failing which it will come back to the
National Assembly where it be passed into law by two-thirds
majority of the members, regardless of any presidential
veto.
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