/ 10 November 2010

Info Bill to protect whistle-blowers, not the media

Ruling party MPs on Tuesday accepted changes to the Protection of Information Bill to protect whistle-blowers who disclose state secrets, but baulked at doing the same for the media.

Opposition lawmakers on Parliament’s ad hoc committee redrafting the controversial bill reiterated a call for a so-called public-interest defence to be introduced.

Such a clause would allow journalists who published classified information to argue that they had done so for the public good, and has been advocated by rights groups, lawyers and media houses.

The idea was slapped down by ANC committee chairperson Cecil Burgess, who said the topic was not up for discussion at this stage.

“The issue we need to consider is in which way is the Bill interfering in the rights of whistle-blowers. The Bill says you have the right to run to the police. It in no way allows you to rush off the media,” he said in response to proposal from the Democratic Alliance and Inkatha Freedom Party.

State law advisors had inserted safeguards for whistle-blowers by amending section 38 of the Bill by making it subject to the provisions of the Protected Disclosures Act and the new Companies Act.

The Bill is being redrafted following an outcry over the far-reaching powers it gave the state to classify information.

Ambit still too wide
The government conceded that a provision for the classification of commercial information should be removed, along with the vague notion of national interest as a reason for keeping information secret. However, opposition parties still argue the draft law’s ambit is far too wide.

On Tuesday, they objected to section 33 of the Bill, which makes it an offence to make public classified information while you know or should reasonably suspect that it would “directly or indirectly prejudice the state”.

IFP MP Mario Oriani-Ambrosini said the notion of prejudicing the state was firstly superfluous because otherwise the information would not have been classified in the first place. Secondly, the phrase “prejudice to the state” was suspiciously similar to the now deleted notion of “national interest”, he said.

The DA’s Dene Smuts said the concept needed to be defined by state law advisors before lawmakers could decide whether it remained or was removed from the Bill.

Deliberations on the Bill, described by opponents as a bid to silence criticism of the state, is likely to continue next year.

Latest draft
The latest changes to the Bill are being made available by the Parliamentary Monitoring Group.

Download the PDFs:

Visit the PMG website for more documents from the committee, including submissions and minutes. – Sapa and M&G reporter