Audio By Carbonatix
Private legal practitioner, Samson Lardy Anyenini, is dissatisfied with the unregulated fees charged for acquiring information from state departments and agencies.
According to him, the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) has again been charged an amount of ¢6,000 for a fresh request they made at the Minerals Commission demanding information regarding the fight against illegal mining.
"The Commission is demanding some ¢6000 - that is $1,000 - for information on each request about licenses it has issued, revoked and money made from annual monitoring fees for excavators," he said on Saturday.
This comes days after an Accra High Court directed the National Communication Authority (NCA) to accept ¢1,500 from the MFWA for the information it requested regarding the number of radio stations operating in the country as at the end of the third quarter of 2020.
Since the Right to Information Law passage in 2019, concerns have been prevalent over how state agencies have gone about its implementation.
Citizen’s quest to access information has sometimes been met with resistance by state officials charging monies to provide information, with the latest victims being the MFWA.
In this instance, the Foundation had prayed the High Court, among other reliefs, to declare that the amount of ¢2,000 demanded by the NCA to generate the information constitutes constructive denial, refusal, failure or neglect, and breach of Applicant’s right to information under Article 21(1) (f) of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana.
But the court was not convinced and slashed only ¢500 from the NCA’s proposed amount.
Though the RTI law allows for some fees to be charged, it requires that this is done in line with the Fees and Charges Act but Parliament is yet to set approved amounts.
Speaking on Joy News' Newsfile, Saturday, Samson Lardy Anyenini shared his thoughts regarding the development, citing some public officers for making “nonsense of the law”.
Meanwhile, the Media Foundation for West Africa says it is considering filing an appeal against an Accra High Court’s verdict backing the NCA’s decision to charge fees before it, releases among others, information on the shutdown and status of some radio stations in the country.
Executive Director, Sulemana Braimah explained his outfit will wait for the full ruling if the court arguing that "we will certainly take next appropriate steps which could include the possibility of appealing against the decision," Mr Braimah indicated.
However, Executive Secretary of RTI Commission, Yaw Sarpong Boateng says the passage of the fees and charges will lay to rest the existing disagreement.
Latest Stories
-
OSP director tells Manasseh Azure he can’t do the job better than Kissi Agyebeng
4 minutes -
Police rescue young woman, arrest partner in viral domestic abuse case
6 minutes -
Kissi Agyebeng has survived two assassination attempts – Sammy Darko reveals
10 minutes -
Ghana Scholarships Secretariat schedules Dec. 8 and 9 interviews for Commonwealth applicants
13 minutes -
Agric Minister applauds farmers, highlights new era of innovation at National Farmers Day
21 minutes -
Five districts in Upper East Region selected for gov’t Farmer Service Centres initiative
26 minutes -
Kpebu doubts claims that Akufo-Addo administration interfered with Special Prosecutor
2 hours -
It’s difficult to believe everything the OSP says – Manasseh Awuni
3 hours -
I would’ve blocked Ofori-Atta from leaving Ghana if I were Special Prosecutor – Martin Kpebu
3 hours -
I’m headed for public office, but not the OSP role – Martin Kpebu
3 hours -
I will only submit my allegations to a board, not the OSP’s subordinates – Martin Kpebu
4 hours -
‘I’m still a bit traumatised’ – Martin Kpebu recounts alleged abuse during OSP arrest
4 hours -
Martin Kpebu dismisses claims he seeks to become Special Prosecutor
4 hours -
Martin Kpebu denies verbally abusing OSP officers, says allegations are fabricated
4 hours -
Mahama arrives in Doha for 2025 Doha Forum engagements
4 hours
