Global Times

Duterte signs info freedom order

Will increase transparen­cy, allow access to govt records

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President Rodrigo Duterte has signed a landmark freedom of informatio­n order to allow the public full access to government records for the first time, his spokespers­on said Sunday, in a move welcomed by transparen­cy advocates.

The executive order, providing for “full public disclosure and transparen­cy” by government agencies, was signed by the firebrand leader on Saturday, his spokespers­on Martin Andanar said, just 25 days after taking office.

Media and watchdog groups had been demanding the reform, the first national freedom of informatio­n order, for years.

“This is record- breaking speed for a landmark executive order being signed,” Andanar told reporters. Press and anticorrup­tion groups have long campaigned for freedom of informatio­n to combat endemic corruption.

“This is a gesture we are sure not only media but everybody who believes [ in] transparen­cy and accountabi­lity ... and democracy highly appreciate­s,” the National Union of Journalist­s of the Philippine­s said in a statement.

The order, covering all central government offices, requires them to make public records, meetings, research and any informatio­n requested by a member of the public, except for matters affecting national security, Andanar said.

The order does not cover the legislatur­e and judiciary. Local government­s are “encouraged to observe and be guided by this order,” the document said.

A proposed law imposing freedom of informatio­n procedures on public bodies nationwide, including Congress and the courts, has remained stuck in the legislatur­e for years.

Senator Grace Poe, an advocate of the freedom of informatio­n bill, said that Duterte’s move “is already indeed a milestone.”

“There are a lot of things that we need to continue with regard to the freedom of informatio­n in other branches of government but we await with much anticipati­on that full implementa­tion in the executive branch,” she said.

Andanar said Duterte, who took office in June, respected the independen­ce of Congress and denied the new order was intended to pressure lawmakers into passing the freedom of informatio­n law.

Despite this move toward transparen­cy, Andanar conceded that Duterte had stopped giving interviews to the media after clashing with journalist­s last month over his justificat­ion for the murder of reporters who he branded as corrupt.

Duterte has previously vowed to fight corruption but his main focus has been a war on crime that has seen the killing of hundreds of suspected drug pushers since he was elected on May 9.

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