The Minister of State in the President's Office (Special Duties), Prof. Mark Mwandosya.
The official announcement was made in Parliament yesterday by the
Minister of State in the President's Office (Special Duties), Prof. Mark
Mwandosya.
Prof Mwandosya told the National Assembly that the Parliamentary
Committee on Constitutional Affairs had advised the Parliament that the
bill needed more time in order to give opportunities to media
stakeholders to read, review and provide their opinions before it was
tabled in the National Assembly.
“The government has considered concerns of media stakeholders and
we accepted their suggestions, thus I officially declare that the Access
to Information Bill, 2015 will not be tabled in this Parliament,” Prof
Mwandosya declared.
The Minister of State added that the bill would be tabled for
second time in the next parliament so as to provide an opportunity for
stakeholders to improve the bill by providing their professional
contributions.
He added that, the government goal was to make sure “we come up with better laws for all”.
The bill was tabled for the first time in March this year and was
scheduled to be tabled for second time on June 27 (today). On Monday
last week media stakeholders wanted the planned second reading of the
Access to Information Bill, 2015 to be postponed.
Meadia stakeholders from Tanzania Editors Forum (TEF), Media
Council of Tanzania (MCT), Tanzania Constitutional Forum and Tanzanian
Human Rights Defenders Coalition (THRDC) met with members of the
Parliamentary Committee on Community Development on Monday last week in
Dodoma and advised the committee to ask the parliamentary to postpone
its plan to read the bill for second time.
Stakeholders said that the bill needed to be reviewed to suit the demands of stakeholders and Tanzanians in general.
Executive Secretary of the Media Council of Tanzania (MCT) Kajubi
Mukajanga (pictured) said media stakeholder supported the Committee’s
stand that the bill passes through the Parliamentary Standing Committee
on Constitutional Affairs before it is tabled in the National Assembly.
Representative from the Tanzania Constitutional Forum, Deusi
Kibamba said that almost all the sections in the Access to Information
Bill have a number of discrepancies.
He said while on one hand the bill offers freedom of expression and
information to a given group it restricts the same in other sections.
Mariagoreth Charles from the Coalition on the Right to Information
in Tanzania (CORI) cited section 6 (6) of the bill saying it threatens
journalists from collecting information and distributing it to the
public.
Media Owners Association of Tanzania (MOAT) and Media Institute of
Southern Africa, Tanzania Chapter (MISA-Tan) cautioned against tabling
of the Bill, 2015 and warned that should it be endorsed, it would hold
back the nation’s efforts to promote good governance and transparency.
Eerier in March this year the government had scheduled to table the
two Bills (the Media Services Bill and the Access to Information Bill)
under certificate of urgency.
According to the parliament timetable the government had planned to
debate seven Bills including the Access to Information Bill, 2015 for
ten days soon after the ongoing budget meeting that ends today.
The other Bills are The Tanzania Postal Bank (Repeal and
Transitional Provisions), Bill 2015, The Oil and Gas Bill, 2015, The
Tanzania Extractive Industry (Transparency and Accountability) Bill,
2015 and The Teachers Service Commission Bill, 2015, The bill for Oil
and Gas Revenues Management Act, 2015.
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