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Since the Sichuan earthquake hit on May 12, the Chinese public has been deluged with
rumors and misinformation. Chinese authorities have on several occasions stepped
forward to discredit the latter and appeal for the public to access information from
authoritative (a.k.a. official) sources. The phenomenon underscores how only when
information in China is more transparent will the public have the confidence to turn away
from rumors.
The Chinese version of an information disclosure law has been in effect since May 1, but
questions remain as to its efficacy. Legal scholar Xu Zhiyong, a representative of the
People’s Congress of Haidian district of Beijing, provided a comparative study between
China and India on the subject:
Both China and India have laws concerning the public’s right to information in order to
boost transparency in governance.
India published The Right to Information Act (hereafter as the Act) on June 21, 2005,
which came into effect the same year. China subsequently promulgated Regulation on
Information Publishing of People’s Republic of China (hereafter as the Regulation) in
January 2007, effective from May 1, 2008.
The two governments share the common motives in enacting the laws, which are aimed
to keep the public informed and create checks against corruption. The two laws share
much common ground but differ in terms of legal status, scope, exclusion areas, and
information openness guarantee mechanism.
From the legal status perspective, India’s Act has a higher standing than China’s because
it is a law enacted by the country’s National Congress. China’s, on the other hand, is a
regulation put forth by the Chinese State Council, who’s regulations are less powerful
than those framed by the Chinese government’s legislative organs – the National People’s
Congress and its Standing Committee.
Under the Chinese legislative system, the State Council has certain legislative power to
draft regulations, especially when it is premature for a new law to be introduced yet there
is a need for it.
The scope of application under the Chinese Regulation is more limited than the one in
India.
The second article of the Chinese Regulation defines government information as those
produced, acquired and recorded by administrative organs in the process of carrying out
their duties.
As such, the term government has been narrowly defined here as administrative arms of
the state organs, thus excluding information disclosure from higher power such as all
levels of the people’s congresses, judiciary organs, the ruling party and other public
management institutions.
India’s Act covers all public institutions, including administrative, legislative and
judiciary organs as well as political parties and associations linked to the government.
Another major difference between China and India is that the latter has detailed criterions
on information unfit for publication; whereas China relies on vague concepts.
India, for example, has spelt out clearly what information could be deemed as unfit for
disclosure:
ii. information which has been expressly forbidden to be published by any court of law or
tribunal or the disclosure of which may constitute contempt of court;
iii. information, the disclosure of which would cause a breach of privilege of Parliament
or the State Legislature;
vii. information, the disclosure of which would endanger the life or physical safety of any
person or identify the source of information or assistance given in confidence for law
enforcement or security purposes;
In addition, the Regulation prescribes that before publishing the information, the
administrative organ concerned should review the draft in accordance with the Guarding
State’s Secret Law and other relevant acts and regulations.
As to what is the scope of secrets, the 10th article of the Secret Law prescribes that the
State Secret-Guarding Department coordinates with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Public Security, National Security and other central government organs to make the
decisions. In other words, the scope of non-public information is finally determined by
these institutions.
China and India also diverge greatly on the mechanism to guarantee information
disclosure.
The 33rd article of the Chinese Regulation prescribes that citizens, legal persons and
organizations may lodge a report against failure in information disclosure to higher
monitoring authorities. Upon receiving the complaint, higher authorities should
investigate immediately.
If the citizens, legal persons and organizations feel that the conduct of administrative
organs with regard to information disclosure has infringed upon their legal rights, they
may apply for review or file a law suit.
On paper, the public has the right to bring administrative organs to the court. However,
China’s Administrative Procedural Law only stipulates misconduct of administrative
organs against individuals, but silent on the misconduct arising from regulatory
frameworks and against non-specific public interest. As a result, judicial redress is not
always applicable.
In India, the Act requires all public administrative organs, be it central or local
governments level, to appoint public information officers to handle public requests within
100 days after the Act took effect.
These articles guarantee the commissions enjoy similar independence to that of the
special court. The Commission has the power like the civil court to hear complaints and
appeals from the public, and dish out punishment for administrative organs that failed in
meeting their obligations.
Overall, the Indian Act appears to have a higher status, wider applicable scope and
feasibility in enforcement than the Chinese Regulation, especially in monitoring and
guaranteeing the public’s access to information due to the independent Information
Commission.
In the two years that the Indian Act has been in practice, it has received positive reviews
and enhanced transparency in public institutions. As to the impact of the Chinese
Regulation, it will need the test of time.
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