The essence of the freedom of information legislation is that it applies vertically, the citizen's rights to demand from the state and not viz a vie other citizens, the citizen can exercise their rights or not,,,its up to them,the law does not confer any responsibility on them.
The issue of a mother denying her child access to polio vaccine is an issue of children's rights.
Many thanks Kurubo/Grace,I suppose then, in light of the foregoing, State must at all costs avail "information" under it's possession.Citing the "Freedom of information" clause within this context however, makes it imperative for State todo so within universally adopted benchmarks. But within the same context, what is the citizen'sresponsibility?I could check this out. But does the clause in the same vein confer a mandatory responsibility upon thecitizen to ensure their exercise of this "Right to access" does not go to waste, or does he/she have thefreedom to exercise this right/liberty liberally.One can argue that for instance, a mother who fails to vaccinate her child against polio, because of "failure"to access information as opposed to "lack" of access to information should be held responsible. Is thisenforceable in law..? How?Lastly but not least, State has only a tiny custody of information consumable by the public. I dare say thata lot of information/knowledge sought after by information consumers fall well outside the State domain.How do we police those outside, who hoard information desperately needed by consumers...? And whatof those who deliberately avail misleading information/knowledge, including state..?Harry
From: Kerubo Ombati [mailto:kaykerubo@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2011 12:35 PM
To: harry@comtelsys.co.ke
Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions
Subject: Re: [kictanet] Freedom of Information laws/ e- discussion continuedHi Listers,Harry, the 'Freedom of Information' clause in the constitution is designed to give citizens free access to public information held by the state,it generally does not impose a positive obligation on the state to impart such information on the individual.However,in certain instances, failure to provide the information to an individual can be considered to constitute an interference with their private rights and a breach of the state's human rights obligations.Although, freedom of information legislation is reluctant to impose a positive obligation on the state,the considered view as adopted is that the freedom of information legislation should impose a duty on the state to impart information to the public.
Regards,
KeruboOn Tue, Oct 18, 2011 at 10:10 AM, Harry Delano <harry@comtelsys.co.ke> wrote:
Hey Grace & Kerubo,Thanks for your summary overview. I wonder aloud whether it should only be the state that maintains this monopoly overaccessibility to basic information in as far as "Freedom of information" is concerned.Whereas state has the instruments it can use to either promote or curtail such freedoms, I suppose it would also be safeto say that in quite a number of instances, state might be deemed a "lame duck".How about a remote Island sequestered somewhere, about 200 miles off the shores of Lake Victoria with no basic accessto communication?Would the populace there's lack thereof, of basic information access be considered an infringement on this fundamentalright/liberty by the state...?Harry
From: kictanet-bounces+harry=comtelsys.co.ke@lists.kictanet.or.ke [mailto:kictanet-bounces+harry=comtelsys.co.ke@lists.kictanet.or.ke] On Behalf Of Grace Githaiga
Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2011 12:57 AM
To: harry@comtelsys.co.ke
Cc: kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke
Subject: [kictanet] Freedom of Information laws/ e- discussion continuedThanks Harry Delano, Washington, Cleophas and Kerubo.
Harry you raise a good question on what these terms mean and whether they are interchangeable.
Washington, you make an important point about freedom of expression/speech not being absolute, and Cleophas affirms your point.
Thanks Kerubo for the definitions. Yes, freedom of information simply means the freedom to get certain basic information held by the state, which can enable one to for example bring a case of human rights violation or any other cause.
Freedom of expression can mean many things, say freedom to air your ideas, take a stand, artistic creativity--simply freedom to express how you feel. And of course as Washington and Cleophas rightly point out, all these freedoms are subject to limitations and therefore not carte blanche.
In this case then:
- Is there conflict between laws on freedom of information and what citizens demand/require?
Lets hear it from you.
Rgds
Grace
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