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Ghana’s RTI law to take effect in 2020 after passage

The anticipated Right to Information Bill, RTI, is scheduled to take effect only in the 2020 financial year should it be passed.

This follows an amendment proposed by the majority leader and Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Osei Kyei Mensah Bonsu on Wednesday.

Financial provision for the implementation of an RTI law had not been made in the 2019 budget. That, according to Mensah Bonsu, makes the implementation of the RTI bill when passed into law improbable.

“So I guess what we could do is to say that the act shall come into effect in the 2020 financial year,” he stated on the floor of Parliament.

“We need to train information officers. We need to have information officers allocated or in some cases constructed.

“So we’ll urge government then that if there will be any supplementary estimates some allocations should be made to start this in earnest so that into the next financial year which is 2020, we shall have a full-scale implementation of the right to information bill,” he added.

Mensah Bonsu’s position was unanimously accepted by the House. The Speaker of Parliament, Prof. Aaron Mike Ocquaye, December last year asked civil society groups to “leave” parliament alone to finish work on the RTI Bill.

According to Prof. Ocquaye, Parliament has completed 80% of work on the bill and will pass it by February 2019. The RTI bill was laid before Parliament by the Deputy Attorney General Joseph Kpemka Dindiok in March this year.

It has been 22 years since the first RTI bill was drafted under the auspices of the Institute of Economic Affairs, IEA and 16 years since the Executive arm of government in 2002 drafted the first RTI bill.

The draft Executive Bill was subsequently reviewed in 2003, 2005 and 2007 but was never laid in Parliament until February 5, 2010.

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