
The idea to amend the present Law on the Access to Information belongs to the guild of journalists, George Mocanu said. In principle, the amendments consist in the reduction of the term for information provision from 15 business days to 10 calendar days; the acceptance of electronic requests, in addition to the requests in written and verbal format; harsher penalties for offenders, the member of Parliament George Mocanu stated during the broadcast. In his opinion, one of the reasons for which the law does not work is that sanctions for failure to provide information or for provision of erroneous information are insignificant.
In her turn, the journalist Anastasia Nani mentioned that the Centre for Journalistic Investigations (CJI) sued the State institutions which refused to comply with the provisions of the Law on the Access to Information. “CJI has a broad experience in terms of lawsuits, as it has won all the cases so far. We have lost just one case in the ultimate jurisdiction, the Supreme Court of Justice, the case against the Presidency … We intend to go to the ECHR to see if we are right or wrong in the opinion of the magistrates of Strasbourg”, the broadcast’s guest said.
In this broadcast, you can also find out what reasons the public servants invoke the oftenest when they refuse to answer the requests for information submitted by journalists and to what extent it is possible that the draft law on the amendment of the Law on the Access to Information and of the Code of Administrative Offences is voted during the current session.