LETTER | The Malaysian Bar welcomes the robust discussions at the recently concluded Forum on Freedom of Information (FOI), held on June 29 at the Asian Institute of Chartered Bankers, Kuala Lumpur.
Jointly organised by the Bar Council Constitutional Law and Human Rights Committee and the Centre for Independent Journalism, the hybrid forum served as a vital platform to address the urgent need to establish a pragmatic, effective, and federal-level FOI framework in Malaysia.
Transparency in governance is the foundational hallmark of a civilised, functioning democracy; secrecy remains anathema to the rule of law.
The Malaysian Bar recalls page 38 of the Pakatan Harapan GE15 Action Plan, which explicitly promised that the coalition would enact an FOI Act to limit the application of the archaic Official Secrets Act 1972, with exemptions (if any) to be determined by a parliamentary committee rather than left to the discretion of an individual minister.
The constitutional right to freedom of opinion and expression, which includes the right to seek, receive, and impart information, is recognised globally as a basic human right and is explicitly encapsulated in international human rights instruments and frameworks.
The Federal Court in Sivarasa Rasiah v Badan Peguam Malaysia & Anor held that the freedom of speech and expression inherently encompasses the right to receive information.
An FOI Act cannot operate in a legal vacuum. To truly institutionalise open governance, comprehensive legislative overhaul is required.
The new FOI Act must explicitly override, amend, or repeal competing and restrictive legacy statutes, some of which date back to colonial times and are incompatible with modern civilised democracies.
The Malaysian Bar fully endorses and insists upon the embedding of international standards, such as the Right to Information Rating Methodology, as adopted by the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization to form the bedrock of our hoped-for FOI Act:
Explicitly state that freedom of information is a fundamental liberty under Article 10(1)(a) of the Federal Constitution, thereby codifying and entrenching the landmark principle established in the Sivarasa case.
Ensure every citizen has easy access to government information without exorbitant fees. Crucially, applicants must not be required to provide justifications for their requests or be frustrated by obtuse or obscure procedures or requirements.
Application mechanisms must be simple and fully accessible to all, including persons with disabilities. Information releases or refusal decisions must be rendered swiftly within a maximum one-month time frame or less.
Exemptions must be narrow and strictly limited to the restrictions permissible under Article 10(2)(a) of the Federal Constitution. Any refusal to disclose information must undergo a rigorous “harms test”, a weighing mechanism evaluating whether disclosure causes greater harm than the competing and non-exhaustive public interest benefit.
Establish an autonomous oversight body or an ombudsman structured in line with the Venice Principles, reporting directly to Parliament annually on public authority compliance.
Refusals must be appealable to an independent appeals tribunal governed by the rules of natural justice, with final recourse subject to appeal or judicial review before the High Court and subject to further appeals. All decisions must be published to contribute to the development of FOI jurisprudence.
Public authorities must be legally mandated to proactively and progressively publish extensive information updates every three to six months on their websites. This must include, among others, non-exhaustive lists of past, ongoing, and pending public projects.
Ensure comprehensive protection for whistleblowers to foster an institutional culture of accountability. Concurrently, statutory sanctions must be imposed on public officers who deliberately destroy documents or serially obstruct information access, while any penalties for errant applicants remain preventive rather than punitively harsh.
The oversight body must conduct annual compliance audits across all public authorities, submitting reports to be scrutinised by a parliamentary committee and debated in both Houses of Parliament.
A robust FOI Act is long overdue in Malaysia. Greater transparency could have fundamentally altered the trajectories of past accountability crises, tragedies, and disasters. It will undoubtedly stand as our strongest systemic infrastructural improvement in governance and the prevention of corruption.
Having an FOI Act is also a core requirement under Goal 16 of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, to which Malaysia is a signatory.
The Malaysian Bar urges the Government to walk the talk, entrench the right to FOI, adopt the highest watermark of compliance and governance, and avoid a mere perfunctory political exercise that misses its mark.
The author is the president of the Malaysian Bar.
The views expressed here are those of the author/contributor and do not necessarily represent the views of Malaysiakini.
