Sowetan

Parties must reveal identity of their funders

It’s empowering informatio­n – court

- By Nomahlubi Jordaan – TimesLIVE

The Constituti­onal Court confirmed in a ruling yesterday that informatio­n about the private funding of political parties and independen­t candidates should be made public.

Nonprofit organisati­on My Vote Counts had earlier challenged the constituti­onal validity of parts of the Promotion of Access to Informatio­n Act (PAIA)‚ arguing that it did not provide for the disclosure of this informatio­n. The high court ruled in 2017 that certain parts of PAIA were unconstitu­tional.

In a majority judgment read by Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng‚ the Constituti­onal Court confirmed that the state was obliged to do everything reasonably possible to give practical and meaningful expression to the right of access to informatio­n and the right to vote.

The apex court found that the obligation to record‚ preserve and make private funding informatio­n accessible to voters was so important that it should be easily accessible to the media‚ NGOs‚ academia and other political players.

It also held that the disclosure of private funding would help the public to detect whose favours political players were likely to return‚ once elected into public office.

“For every citizen to be truly free to make a political choice‚ including which party to join and which not to vote for or which political cause to campaign for or support‚ access to relevant or empowering informatio­n must be facilitate­d‚” the judgment read.

 ?? /ALON SKUY ?? Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng hands down a ruling compelling political parties to reveal funding sources.
/ALON SKUY Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng hands down a ruling compelling political parties to reveal funding sources.

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