The Philippine Star

Deadline set for FOI guidelines

- By GIOVANNI NILLES

The Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Office is given 120 days to produce the manual and guidelines for the implementa­tion of the executive order on Freedom of Informatio­n.

Sen. Juan Edgardo Angara is also confident that the Senate would be able to come up with an FOI bill to cover the executive, judicial and legislativ­e branches of government.

Civil society group the Right to Know Right Now Coalition also urged Congress to “prove itself equally responsive by finally overcoming their resistance to FOI and enact a progressiv­e FOI law.”

The FOI allows full public disclosure of government transactio­ns involving public interest, except those related to national security and those to be identified by the Department of Justice and the Office of the Solicitor General.

Under the executive order, the public is given access to informatio­n, official records and public records – documents and papers pertaining to research, official acts, transactio­ns or decisions – from all offices under the executive branch.

All public officials under the executive are also directed to make “available for scrutiny” their statements of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth.

“No request for informatio­n shall be denied unless it clearly falls under any of the exceptions listed in the inventory… the head of office shall exercise reasonable diligence to ensure that no exception shall be used to deny any request for informatio­n or access to public records if the denial is intended primarily and purposely to (conceal) corruption,” read the executive order.

Angara said the EO on the FOI should inspire lawmakers to come up with a law – something that has not been done for 30 years but which only took the Duterte administra­tion a few days.

“We could improve on the coverage by including private organizati­ons that have dealings or contracts with the government,” he said.

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