Parliament should be investigating the anti-democratic provisions of the Secrecy Bill - not five people in masks
The Parliamentary Communication Services has issued a statement condemning the Right2Know's behaviour as "particularly unseemly" and threatening to apply the "full might of the law" against our supporters.
This is in response to an incident on Tuesday, when five Right2Know supporters silently donned masks depicting Minister of State Security Siyabonga Cwele during a sitting of the parliamentary committee dealing with the Protection of Information Bill (the Secrecy Bill).
Our five members did not utter a word during this minute-long episode. Indeed, they didn't even leave their seats. Yet Parliament insists that their actions were illegal and "extremely disrespectful to the institution of Parliament". Parliament's statement continues:
The demonstration yesterday by members of Right2Know was particularly unseemly. All members of the public and civil society organisations had been afforded the opportunity to make their views heard about the Protection of Information Bill. Through this process, submissions to the Ad-hoc Committee and, generally, public input on the bill has been encouraged and received.
It was the grossly flawed "public input" process that prompted the formation of the Right2Know campaign in the first place, as a collective response to the committee members' apparent disinterest in our concerns about the Secrecy Bill.