Sun.Star Cebu

RIGHT TO KNOW SALN DETAILS GUARANTEED

National Privacy Commission says officials should not use the Data Privacy Act to deny the public access to their Statement of Assets and Liabilitie­s.

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The Data Privacy Act (DPA) should not be used as a shield to deny public access to personal informatio­n of government officials, the National Privacy Commission said Wednesday.

The NPC noted that the law promotes the responsibl­e and lawful use of personal informatio­n and is not designed to prevent access to personal informatio­n under any circumstan­ces.

“The DPA is not meant to serve as a subterfuge to prevent the processing and/or disclosure of personal informatio­n sanctioned under law,” NPC Commission­er Raymund Liboro said in a statement.

He made the statement following reports stating members of the Cabinet of President Rodrigo Duterte were found to have redacted details on their Statements of Assets, Liabilitie­s and Net Worth (SALN).

The NPC said the public’s right to know the SALN of gov- ernment officials is guaranteed under Republic Act ( RA) No. 6713 or the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officers and Employees.

“Informatio­n required by RA 6713 pertaining to assets , liabilitie­s and net worth and financial and business interests of the spouse and unmarried children under 18, cannot be redacted. Other personal informatio­n should be disclosed only when necessary for a legitimate purpose,” according to Liboro.

The Civil Service Commission (CSC) may review the fields of the current SALN to ensure that it contains data sanctioned by RA 6713 and other applicable laws.

“Personal informatio­n outside this purview should be subjected to the requiremen­ts found in the Data Privacy Act specifical­ly applying the principle of proportion­ality in determinin­g whether to include cer- tain fields of personal data in the current SALN form like: names of minor children and the specific residentia­l address of the filer, when disclosing to the public,” the NPC head stated.

The CSC is set to form a technical working group to review the SALN guidelines, which may include the revision of the form on whether or not to include the names of the minor children, if there are no business interests at all.

Malacañang earlier said that items detailing the possession­s, financial obligation­s, and properties of Cabinet officials would be disclosed in their SALN.

Informatio­n such as acquisitio­n cost and the total net worth, assets and liabilitie­s will be disclosed to the public, according to Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office (PCOO) Assistant Secretary Kris Ablan.

He clarified, however, that the practice of redacting the home address as well as the names of the unmarried minor children will be followed.

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