THE public’s right to information is
expressly guaranteed by the 1987 Constitution and affirmed by
the judiciary. Yet access to data held by state agencies not
only remains limited; it has become nil in some cases,
apparently because of the current Senate scrutiny of particular
government projects.
Based on the recent experience of the PCIJ,
agencies that had previously been accommodating of requests for
information have suddenly shut their doors on such.
One stark example is the National Economic
and Development Authority (NEDA), which last year initially
granted PCIJ’s various requests for data regarding projects
using official development assistance (ODA). But after Executive
Secretary Eduardo Ermita issued a memorandum order last
September 28 restricting the release of specific national
broadband network (NBN) documents to the Senate Blue Ribbon
Committee, as well as to media agencies, NEDA stopped processing
requests for information connected to the project.
As of this writing, NEDA even plans to draft
new guidelines for the release of project documents, a move that
could further curb information access.
Which is sad, says veteran journalist and
occasional PCIJ fellow Roel R. Landingin. Before scandals
involving state projects began erupting late last year, he says,
the government seemed headed toward transparency.
At the very least, advances in technology had
been enabling agencies to increase transparency in their
dealings and make more data available online.
"One hundred percent access, NEDA used to be
like that," Landingin says.
"Perhaps, because of the intensity of attacks
(on the President), access to information has been restricted."
Nepomuceno Malaluan, lawyer and Access to
Information Network (ATIN) co-convenor, says that when an agency
withholds the information, it is probably to protect certain
public officers from embarrassment, or from criminal or
administrative liability. Landingin, the Manila senior
correspondent of The Financial Times of London, adds that "some
agencies are covering their backs."
Landingin wrote the latest PCIJ series on ODA
projects. Apart from interviews, his report was based largely on
a six-month review of official documents that covered 71 of
these projects. This meant gathering various ODA project
documents such as copies of contracts, memoranda of agreement,
feasibility studies, cost-benefit studies, presentation
materials, status reports, and other related materials.
This also meant submitting official requests
for data and documents from various government agencies.
The PCIJ research team kept a log of request
approvals and denials from July to December 2007, during the
data-gathering work for the story. The PCIJ also recorded the
number of phone calls made, letters sent by fax and e-mail, and
the number of employees the researchers had spoken with or and
were referred to.
Republic Act 6713 or the Code of Conduct and
Ethical Standards for Government Officials and Employees,
provides a general rule on access to information. Implemented on
March 25, 1989, Section 5 of the Code states: "All public
documents must be made accessible to, and readily made for
inspection by, the public within reasonable working hours."
Malaluan explains: "When you go there (a
government office) and make a request – based on that single
rule – they (government officials) should make it available as
long as it is of public concern."
The PCIJ made 23 official requests but only
15 were addressed and eventually granted. This makes for a 65
percent rate of approval of requests for information. Still,
most of the agencies that approved the requests also did not
provide all the information that PCIJ had asked for.
For sure, some turned out to have incomplete
data and had to refer PCIJ to other offices for the missing
materials. Others, however, chose to release some information
while withholding the rest of the data requested.
The Department of Transportation and
Communications (DOTC), for instance, gave PCIJ a copy of the NBN
contract, but excluded the annexes.
Contacted by phone, the DOTC’s Contract
Review and Documentation Division said the project supplier,
China’s Zhong Xing Telecommunication Equipment Company Limited (ZTE),
had claimed "proprietary rights" over the contract annexes and
feasibility study.
PCIJ then requested the DOTC for a formal
written explanation for the exclusion the annexes, but the
department has yet to do so. Landingin, meanwhile, says the DOTC
can still find a way to make important information like
component costs (to check for overpricing) available without
compromising the supplier’s rights.
PCIJ also asked for a formal written response
from the agencies that rejected its requests. Out of the eight
rejected requests, however, only three agencies issued a written
response that stated the reason why the request was turned down.
All the responses invoked either the so-called confidential
nature of the information requested, or simply, executive
privilege.
The Department of Finance (DOF) said the
request for the loan agreement between Export-Import Bank of
China and the Philippine Government for the Non-Intrusive
Container Inspection System Project would have to be referred to
the Office of the Chief Presidential Legal Counsel because the
requested document "may fall within the mantle of executive
privilege and information." This is even though government
deals, once signed, become public documents.
The Philippine Domestic Construction Board (PDCB),
for its part, said it was turning down the request for the Excel
file version of its Consolidated Constructors Performance
Summary Report because its policy is "to keep the source
documents or files in strict confidence."
It must be stressed that the same report was
already available in PDF format on the web site of the
Government Procurement Policy Board (GPPB). PCIJ requested for a
copy in Excel only because this would make it easier for
researchers to segregate foreign-funded projects from locally
funded ones, list contractors and projects by implementing
agency, and rank contractors by worth of projects awarded to
them. PCIJ later got the requested Excel version from the GPPB.
Then there was the Philippine National
Railways (PNR), which declined to release North Rail and South
Rail Linkage Project documents to PCIJ because, according to a
PNR representative, its Korean partners in the venture had
"reservations of some sort."
Landingin says that in the past, he was able
to secure North Rail documents. This time around, the PNR was
not the only state institution that decided to withhold the
requested papers. North Luzon Railways Corporation (NLRC) took
almost seven weeks – during which it waited for the appointment
of a new chief – to decide to turn down the request for North
Rail project data. The PCIJ also had to call NLRC the most
number of times (21) among the agencies it contacted for
Landingin’s report to follow up requests.
North Rail, another ODA project that has
encountered controversy and seems to be currently in limbo, was
the subject of a PCIJ investigative report in 2005. It was
therefore no surprise that procuring data on it turned out to be
among the most difficult to pull off, as was also the case with
those on the NBN.
Somehow, though, information on a
lesser-known project was even harder to get – at least from its
implementing agency. R.A. 6713 stipulates: "All public officials
and employees shall, within 15 working days from receipt
thereof, respond to letters, telegrams, or other means of
communications sent by the public." The Department of Public
Works and Highways (DPWH), however, took 59 days just to say
that the documents for the President Arroyo’s Bridges Program
were undergoing audit by the Commission on Audit (COA).
Fortunately, PCIJ had mailed a request for
copies of the same documents to the aid provider, Britain’s
Department for International Development (DfID), in Scotland.
PCIJ received the documents from DfID, by mail, 44 days later
(October 5). PCIJ also had no problem getting a different set of
requested information on the same project from NEDA.
(To be continued)