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Council of Europe Urged to Recognise Broad Right of Access to Information
16.11.2006
On 15 November 2006 Access
The briefing calls on the Group of Specialists to:
o Guarantee a right of “access to information” held by public authorities rather than the narrower right of access to “official documents” currently envisaged by the treaty. In 22 of the 26 countries surveyed, individuals enjoy the broader right of access to information.
o Extend the scope of the treaty beyond the executive branch of government to legislative bodies and judicial authorities. Currently, these bodies are covered only insofar as they perform administrative functions. The study found that in all 26 countries legislative information is already to some degree publicly available, either under the access law or other legislation. Judicial information is available upon request in at least 18 of these countries.
o Extend the scope of the treaty to cover private bodies which are substantially financed by public funds, in line with the laws of at least 13 of the countries surveyed.
For more information and press enquiries, please contact:
Helen Darbishire, Executive Director, Access
Darian Pavli, Legal Officer, Open Society Justice Initiative, +1