Freedom from Debt Coalition |
In
a press statement, Lucita D. Gonzales, Secretary General of FDC Western
Mindanao Region said that the FOI Law is a landmark measure that will ensure
our constitutional right to information and an effective tool to fight
corruption, and will ingrain the culture of transparency and accountability in
government.
An
FOI law favors the right of information deemed of public interest. These
include vital information on issues and concerns closes to FDC – the debt
issues, privatization of power, water and public services, climate finance and
gender justice, among others. While the law provides exceptions for disclosure,
it allows clear mechanism for the public to argue for a greater and overriding
interest in favor of access and disclosure. The FOI Law sanctions and penalizes
officials and agencies concerned who refuse access to information. Government
is also required to compulsory disclose information on transactions involving
public interest.
With
an FOI Law, the public will be enabled to access investments and loan contracts
and other economic deals entered into by government in the name of
tax-payers. Debts incurred by the
government and are passed on to taxpayers as debt burdens can be scrutinized,
whether they benefited the people or were illegitimate ones. Vital information
involving contracts and agreements that led to the privatization of public
utilities and vital services like those in power and water will be made
available to the consumers. Public
spending on the Gender and Development (GAD) and other development budgets can
also be effectively monitored.
We
therefore call on the Aquino government to take action on the FOI Bill now.
Time is running out, but we believe that all it takes is the Aquino
government’s sincerity and political will to let this landmark bill enacted –
just as it has demonstrated its decisive and swift actions to put former
Supreme Court Chief Justice Corona to trial, and to push for the passage of its
favored laws such as the unpopular Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012.
The
failure of the government to take action now is not only unacceptable; it will
expose its rhetoric of “Matuwid na Daan” as hollow and sham.