Despite Constitution, Brazil Still Doesn’t Have Right to Information Law

Brazil's Veja Magazine At the opening session of the International Seminar on Access to Information, on April 1st, the Brazilian Minister of Internal Affairs, Dilma Rousseff, announced that a draft law on the right to information would be sent to Congress by the end of April.

Michel Temer, President of the Chamber of Deputies, and Gilmar Mendes, President of the Supreme Court, who participated in the opening debate, also supported the idea of adopting right to information legislation.

The International Seminar on Access to Information, held in Brazilian capital Brasí­lia earlier this month, was organized by the National Forum for the Right to Access Public Information.

The Seminar brought together representatives of all three branches of government, civil society groups, media representatives and international experts to discuss the right to information.

The right to access information held by public bodies is recognized as a fundamental human right in the Brazilian Constitution. Despite, this, more than twenty years after the Constitution was adopted, Brazil has still not passed national right to information legislation.

Toby Mendel, Senior Legal Counsel for the international freedom of press organization Article 19, participated in the Seminar along with other international experts, including representatives of the Mexican Federal Institute for Access to Information (IFAI) and the Chilean Council for Transparency.

Mendel's comments focused on global trends on the right to information and key principles for right to information legislation. The Seminar also included a panel of Congressman and leaders of political parties to start a debate on the content of the law.

Article 19 and ANDI (an Article 19 partner working on media and children's rights) used the seminar to launch an online publication on using access to information as a tool to monitor public policies. The publication builds on discussions at a seminar organized by the two organizations in 2007.

Article 19 released a note saying that it welcomes the Brazilian government's commitment to adopt right to information legislation, something that they say is long overdue.

"We urge the authorities to deliver on these promises by adopting progressive right to information legislation, after a broad consultative process involving the public and civil society," the note says.

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