Dear Member of Parliament,
The South African National Editors' Forum (SANEF) has noted that the Protection of Information Bill is now scheduled to be finalised by the relevant ad hoc committee of Parliament early in August. SANEF appreciates the important proposed amendments including the removal of "national interest" and "commercial interests" as grounds for secrecy classification, the refinement of the categories of secrecy and the introduction of "balance" between the imperatives of openness and of secrecy.
But we remain gravely concerned about many remaining aspects of the bill and their potential effects on our democratic state. We draw your attention to just five provisions of the bill that could seriously restrict the free flow of information from South Africa's government at all levels to citizens.
We believe:
1) The scope of the proposed authority to classify state information - every organ of state, which are believed to number more than 1 000, but which the office of the State Law Adviser was unable to list - is on its own a telling indication of the carelessness with which that power is handed out. It is a recipe for extensive and unnecessary classification that would be almost impossible to oversee because there is as yet no provision for a credible, independent body to review or hear appeals against decisions to classify information. Nor is there currently any effective mechanism for citizens or civil society to hold officials to account for their interpretation and use of the powers to classify.
2) The power to classify should be strictly limited to those organs of state that guard the national security of the Republic as a whole and not given to parochial bodies that might use the authority to prevent public access to information which might merely be inconvenient to have in the public domain.