Kenya Data Protection Bill, 2013
A highlight of key provisions by Michael Murungi
Full text of the draft bill available from: The Commission for the Implementation of the Constitution
Sponsor: ICT Cabinet Secretary
Status: At the Attorney General's office, awaiting publication and debate in the National Assembly
Objectives:
to give effect to Article 31(c) of the Constitution - the right of a person not to have ‘information relating to their family or private affairs unnecessarily required or revealed”
to give effect to Article 31(d) of the Constitution - the right “not to have the privacy of their communications infringed”
to regulate the collection, retrieval, processing, storage, use and disclosure of personal data
Definition of personal data - section 2 pg 5
Quite broad, and includes:
information on race, gender, sex, pregnancy, marital status, nationality, ethnicity, colour, age, health, disability, religion, belief, culture, language, birth, education, criminal or employment history, financial transactions, any identifying number or symbol linked to the person, fingerprints, blood type, contact details including telephone number
a person’s private communications
a person’s private views or opinions about another person
information given in relation to a grant, award or prize to be made to a person
Principles of data protection - that will guide the application of the Act - section 4, pg 6
necessity of collecting information
collection not to violate privacy
informed consent of the data subject
disclosure of purpose of collection of info - if the purpose changes, inform the data subject
no unwarranted retention of information (info not to be kept for longer than necessary after its purpose has been achieved)
distribution of info to be consistent with purpose of collection
duty to ensure the info is accurate, updated and complete
duty to take measures to safeguard data from loss, damage, destruction and unauthorised access
data subjects have right to access the info and to demand correction
Person collecting personal data must ensure that the data subject is aware of the following: (section 7)
that the info is being collected
the purpose for collecting
name and addresses of the collector, the custodian and any other agency that will receive the info
the intended recipients of the info
any law under which the info is collected (and whether it is mandatory)
consequences of not providing the info fully or partly
the right to access and correct the info
* For those who have already collected personal data through a procedure that meets this criteria, no need to go over the procedure again - section 7(4)
* If it is not practicable to comply with the above before collecting the info, then compliance can be reasonably soon after collecting the info - section 7(3)(a)
Exceptions to the procedure above, where: (section 9)
The info is publicly available
the collection of the info is required by law
the collection of the data from a 3rd party is authorised by the subject
the interests of the data-subject are not prejudiced
the purpose for which the info is collected necessitates non-compliance with this procedure
compliance is not reasonably practicable
the info was not to be used to identify the data subject, including for statistical and research purposes
the collection of the information is necessitated by:
need to avoid a threat to law and order by a public entity, including criminal investigation, prosecution and punishment
enforcing a financial penalty imposed by law
protection of public revenue and property
filing court proceedings
exemptions provided in the law on access to information
Availing information in good faith - section 27
where an agency ‘avails personal data in good faith’, no court proceedings may be brought against it for any consequences of availing the data
Right of access to data - section 13
Where an agency keeps personal data or where a person believes that an agency is keeping his personal data in a readily retrievable form
the person shall have access to the data
the agency shall have a procedure for receiving, acting upon and responding to inquiries by the data subject about the nature of the information and requests to correct false or misleading data.
Commercial use of data - section 17
Personal data not to be used commercially except if it is authorised by law or the consent of the data subject has been obtained.
Issuing unique identifier - section 18
An agency that assigns ‘unique identifiers’ to people to take all reasonable steps to establish persons assigned
Punishment for interfering with personal data - section 19
It’s an offence to ‘interfere’ with personal data or to ‘infringe’ on a person’s right to privacy. offence punishable by a fine of up to Kshs. 500,000 (USD 5,800) or 2 years jail or both
Oversight, enforcement and complaints procedure - sections 20- 23
To be the responsibility of the Commission on Administrative Justice - (established under the Commission on Administrative Justice Act, 2011)
The functions and powers of the commission
receive and investigate complaints/violations of the Act
provide a dispute resolution mechanism
ensure that public entities have adequate safeguards for data protection
where there is a violation:
make an order stopping further acts of violation
order a remedying action by the perpetrator of the violation
make an order for such remedy/relief as it considers appropriate
where there is financial loss, benefit loss or humiliation, loss of dignity and injury, it may advise the complainant to seek damages in court against the respondent.
The ICT Cabinet Secretary has power to make regulations under the Act
EphraimYou can download and review the Access to Info and Data Protection Bills on this link - please let us know what you find. Will also try and do a summary and shareKindest regards,Michael M. MurungiOn 10 May 2014 00:39, Ephraim Percy Kenyanito via kictanet <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
Interesting read especially with the ongoing ideas on fresh registration people:
http://www.itwebafrica.com/ict-and-governance/256-kenya/232836-kenyas-data-protection-bill-ready-for-adoption
Best Regards,
Ephraim Percy Kenyanito
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