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Friday April 26, 2024

‘Popularise right to information laws’

LAHOREJournalists attending a one-day briefing session on the State of Right to Information in Pakistan held on Tuesday were urged by the Information Commissioners from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and Punjab to popularise the Right to Information (RTI) laws in Pakistan and educate the public on how to use these laws

By our correspondents
October 14, 2015
LAHORE
Journalists attending a one-day briefing session on the State of Right to Information in Pakistan held on Tuesday were urged by the Information Commissioners from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and Punjab to popularise the Right to Information (RTI) laws in Pakistan and educate the public on how to use these laws for getting better services.
The truth of government performance can now be accessed by the media as well as the public as a fundamental right to information in KP and Punjab, observed the provincial information commissioners.
Organised by the Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency (PILDAT), the briefing session was attended by more than 30 journalists from print and television media.
The session’s panel speakers included Mukhtar Ahmad Ali, Punjab Information Commissioner, and Abdul Matin Khan, KP Information Commissioner. Other participants included Mujeeb-ur-Rahman Shami, Rana Azeem, Atta-ur-Rehman, Javed Farooqui, and Javed Jabbar. KP Information Commissioner Abdul Matin Khan informed the audience that the provincial RTI law has received great support from the media and the recent repeal of controversial amendments to the RTI law by the KP Assembly would not have been possible without the pressure generated by the media.
Already, the law has been used by citizens in KP to inquire about government expenses, recruitments and transfers in addition to accessing information health by organizations and improving the standards of medical facilities within prisons, he noted. Punjab Information Commissioner Mukhtar Ahmad Ali urged the media persons in attendance to begin reporting on Pakistan’s fledgling RTI movement more regularly as this will help expedite the passage of the country’s internationally acclaimed RTI Bill, which was finalised almost two years ago but has been pending enactment by the Parliament.
The RTI law empowers reporters and journalists to pursue and investigate the stories that interest them personally, and provides them with a reliable and effective means of verifying this information,” he said. He was of the view that information obtained through RTI requests is more accurate and verifiable than information obtained through the media’s traditional interaction with sources. Addressing the session, Javed Jabbar observed the irony that the Freedom of Information Ordinance 2002 had been passed by a military-backed government, while previous such efforts had failed during the civilian governments of both Ms Benazir Bhutto and Mian Nawaz Sharif. “Despite more than seven years of continuous civilian rule since the overthrow of the military government which passed the FOIO 2002, no significant improvements have been made to the law,” he remarked, while calling on citizens and the media to pressure the government in passing more effective RTI laws and ensuring their effective implementation. While opening the briefing session, Ahmed Bilal Mehboob, president PILDAT, called on media persons to press the government to update the outdated FOI laws in effect at the Centre and within Sindh and Balochistan provinces, which fail to meet even the most basic international standards on RTI. During the event PILDAT provided the audience with various publications on RTI, including briefing paper on Right to Information and the news media.
KP journalists visit PITB: A delegation of journalists from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa visited Punjab IT Board (PITB) on Tuesday where it was briefed on major initiatives of the board.
Warmly welcoming the delegation to Punjab, PITB Chief Dr Umar Saif said that it was a good sign that the provinces of Pakistan had started to compete on performance rather than on petty non-issues.
He said that such healthy competitions ultimately resulted in improving the public service delivery.