Democracy and Governance

Where communication and media are central to Democracy and Governance


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Burkina Faso: The Right to Access Information - an Essential Human Right


Publication Date

April 1, 2002

Summary

The report explores the right to freedom of information, and specifically the right to access information held by public authorities in Burkina Faso. It looks at existing legal and other obstacles to free access to information. It looks into recent human rights violations where "official reluctance to provide information has prevented those responsible from being held accountable, and has denied the victims' relatives the right to truth."

Topics discussed:
  • Obstacles to the right to access information
  • The right to access information
  • Allegations of trafficking arms and diamonds
This report states that there is a "culture of secrecy" that remains prevalent within the government, therefore members of the public, including the media, are routinely denied access to official information that they are entitled to receive in a democracy. Recommendations by ARTICLE 19 are included in the report stating goals of good governance are effective.

Publisher

Number of Pages

38

Contact

ARTICLE 19

Free Word Centre
60 Farringdon Road

London
EC1R 3GA
United Kingdom (UK)
Tel: +44 20 7324 2500

Source


Placed on the Communication Initiative site January 14 2004
Last Updated October 08 2009



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Newspapers and Democracy

How central to democracy are newspapers - some of which are being lost to budget cuts and other changes - as opposed to blogs, YouTube, emails, text messaging, twittering, and the like?