DA welcomes improvements to Secrecy Bill but constitutional problems remain
The reconstituted Ad Hoc Committee on the Protection of State Information Bill, under Rule 270, must recommend the adoption or rejection of the National Council of Province's (NCOP) amendments to the National Assembly, and may not itself propose amendments not strictly relevant to the NCOP's amendments.
It is clear that the NCOP was determined to achieve constitutionality. The DA endorses in particular the NCOP amendments to the offences of possession and disclosure of classified material. We note that the NCOP amendment is strongly reminiscent of the DA's own proposal to the NA Ad Hoc Committee in August 2011 that possession and disclosure of classified material that reveals unlawful acts should escape criminal sanction.
The NCOP has also taken the advice of Adv George Bizos, who in a submission for the Legal Resources Centre (at point 49) recommended that "a public interest defence does not have to be broad or general, but...may require strict conditions and list specific instances where disclosure will be in the public interest". He offered inter alia the example (now included almost verbatim) "where the disclosure reveals criminal activity, including for the ulterior purposes listed in section 47". Section 47 creates the offence of improper classification. Adv Bizos argued (point 90) for a defence of improper classification.
Under the NCOP amendments, a whistleblower or journalist who reveals criminal activity is now not committing an offence. Should any prosecution nevertheless be instituted, a defence of improper classification is now explicitly available where information was classified in order to conceal breaches of the Corruption Act or any other unlawful act or omission, incompetence, inefficiency or administrative error, inter alia.
We also applaud the fact that the NCOP amendments not only stop all attempts to trump or go behind Promotion of Access to Information Act (PAIA), but have actually expanded the PAIA override for the mandatory release of information. Where the constitutionally mandated PAIA only requires the release of information revealing a substantial transgression of the law, information showing "any" contravention must now be released.