THISDAY

GOVERNMENT AND INFORMATIO­N LEAKAGES

Unauthoris­ed release of confidenti­al informatio­n discredits government and weakens the decision making process

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Increasing­ly, the machinery of government seems to be finding it difficult to protect the confidenti­ality of informatio­n used in policymaki­ng and administra­tion. In the past few months, high-profile documents have been flowing into the public domain due to unauthoris­ed leaks, some of them from the most unexpected of quarters. Apparently in the bid to score political points, many of our public officials have unwittingl­y created a situation in which no official document is sacred anymore in Nigeria. This is a worrisome and dangerous threat to our national security.

We need only to look at the United States, a country that thrives in open disseminat­ion of informatio­n, to draw cautionary lessons about the growing recklessne­ss of our public officials. Last week, the chairman of the House of Representa­tives’ Intelligen­ce Committee was forced to step aside from his panel’s investigat­ion into Russia’s efforts to disrupt last year’s presidenti­al election based on reports that he “may have made unauthoris­ed disclosure­s of classified informatio­n” for which he is now being investigat­ed. But in Nigeria, it is actually those charged with protecting sensitive materials that give them out either for malicious intent against other persons or to justify their own actions.

Presidenti­al memos, reports by the police and army, documents from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Department of State Services (DSS), Customs and Excise papers and even reports of ongoing investigat­ions by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) are leaked with impunity in our country. It would seem that today, unlike at any other time in our national history, any and every document can be given out for splashing on the pages of newspapers.

We are mindful of the fact that the emergence of Julie Asange’s Wikileaks and indeed the Internet has engendered a situation where leaking “state secrets” and other data and informatio­n considered “highly confidenti­al” is now almost a fad of sorts. The United States Government was, in 2010, embarrasse­d by the leakage of its military and diplomatic cables by Wikileaks. This has made every country to guard with greater care informatio­n that could compromise national security or the well-being of their citizens.

What is bizarre in our own case is that it is actually those who are charged with safeguardi­ng sensitive documents that often leak them to the public. This is reprehensi­ble in the extreme. In four different cases last week, those who were sensationa­lly accused of corrupt practices, with informatio­n about them released to the public ahead of trial, emerged victorious at the courts. This is what happens in a milieu where profession­alism and responsibl­e statecraft are thrown to the dogs by agencies of state. Naming and shaming may have its uses but it most often compromise­s legal actions when preemptive leakages transfer serious matters to cheaply sought public verdict. Yet, propaganda cannot substitute for serious investigat­ion and diligent prosecutio­n.

For sure, there have always been leaks in government. And it is not peculiar to Nigeria. Government, all over the world, sometimes indulges in leaks for different reasons: to test the waters, to justify an action already taken or indeed to communicat­e informatio­n to the public in a clandestin­e manner. But these are exceptions rather than the norm. In the case of Nigeria, the flow of unauthoris­ed informatio­n to the public domain is now almost at the discretion of everyone in government.

We reaffirm our commitment to transparen­cy and the right of the public to know about the goings-on in government. We also uphold the Freedom of Informatio­n Act which gives Nigerians the legal right to ask for and access informatio­n and documents held by the government or its agencies in the bid to promote such openness. We, however, frown at the torrential outpouring of official documents in a manner that practicall­y subverts the state.

The leaks have costs and consequenc­es. They are also taking a toll on the reputation of the Buhari administra­tion. It is therefore time our new crop of officials realised that unauthoris­ed release of confidenti­al informatio­n discredits the government, weakens the decision making process and helps to undermine national security.

We reaffirm our commitment to transparen­cy and the right of the public to know about the goingson in government. We also uphold the Freedom of Informatio­n Act which gives Nigerians the legal right to ask for and access informatio­n and documents held by the government or its agencies. We, however, frown at the torrential outpouring of official documents in a manner that practicall­y subverts the state

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