allghananews.com

English Afrikaans Arabic Chinese (Simplified) Croatian Danish Dutch Filipino Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Irish Italian Japanese Korean Malay Norwegian Persian Polish Portuguese Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swahili Turkish Ukrainian Welsh Yiddish
LATEST NEWS

Ghana Aid Effectiveness Forum questions delay in passing RTI Bill

 

Accra, May 22, GNA – Ghana Aid Effectiveness Forum (GAEF) a civil society advocacy group on Tuesday expressed reservation about delay in passing the Right to Information Bill by Parliament.

    In a statement to the Ghana News Agency in Accra, GAEF reminded the law makers that RTI is essential for enhancing the ability of citizens to engage with government on policy issues.

    GAEF therefore questioned why the Bill is still languishing in Parliament after two long years?

     “The RTI Bill is about making basic information on government activities available to citizens. Holding government accountable is impossible without access to information, and the capacity to ask relevant questions.”

     “Currently, inadequate access to information on government activities prohibits effective citizen-government dialogue on policies and programmes,” GAEF stated.

    The statement said Ghanaians have to turn to international agency reports to find out what the Ghana government is using the country’s resources for....”this is unacceptable”.

     According to GAEF, the latest UN Africa Human Development Report (2012) shows that in the years 2000 – 2008 Ghana spent more on defense than on research for agricultural development.

     This raises questions as to how development priorities are set and to what extent citizens are involved.

    The public needs information not only to facilitate monitoring and oversight, but also to engage effectively with government, share ideas and knowledge about ground realities, promote civic participation in governance.

     The passage of the Right to Information Bill is therefore critical in achieving participatory development.

    The GAEF therefore joined other civil society groups including the Coalition on Right to Information to remind parliament of: “Their commitment to uphold Articles 1 and 21 of the 1992 constitution which together put the RTI law within the ambit of a right”.

    GAEF appealed to parliament to approve a RTI law that conforms with international best practices immediately.

Inter-Bank Forex Rates

Currencies Buying Selling
USD/ GHS 1.8891 1.9216
GBP/ GHS 3.0456 3.0985
AUD/ GHS 1.9720 2.0078
CAD/ GHS 1.9335 1.9664
JPY/ GHS 0.0243 0.0247
ZAD/ GHS 0.2247 0.2285
EUR/ GHS 2.4418 2.4834

 Click here to see more  Last Update: 13th Sep.

World Sports

Social and General

In Nigeria

In Education

World Sports

In Government

Entertainment

Law and Order

In Religion

Local Sports

Tragic

Editorials and Opinions

Copyright © 2012 allghananews.com | All rights reserved | A product of Isis Interactive (visit www.isisghana.com)