From: wkeim@broadpark.no [walter.keim@gmail.com]
To: [intl_foia@mailman.epic.org]
Sent: 28. September 2004 ("Right to Know"
Day)
Subject: [Intl_FOIA] Who supports Access to Information for
Germany?
Hi all,
Is there somebody out there who has better
experiences?
I have based my petitions and
complaints:
- Petition to European Parliament: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/petition_eu.htm#ARTICLE19
(27 December 2001): Support in words, but no action.
- Complaint to German Constitutional Court: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/v-klage_en.htm#ARTICLE19.
Dismissed without giving a reason.
- Petition to German Parliament: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/petition_ifg.htm#ARTICLE19
on Freedom of Information: After 3 years a law, but
international standards not met.
- Petition the UN Petition Team: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/petition_un.htm#ARTICLE19:
No support.
- Complaint to UN Human Rights Committee: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/un-0509.htm:
No answer.
- Complaint to United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/un-complaint.htm,
http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/un-0509.htm:
No answer.
- Question to EU Commission: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/eu-complaint.htm:
No support.
- Complaint to the Council of Europe http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/coe-complaint.htm.
Monitors Germany.
- Petition to German Parliament: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/petition_me-en.htm
on human rights: No support.
- Complaint to Administrative court: Case VG 2 A 85.04:
Walter Keim vs. Federal Republic of Germany on
Freedom of information and Constitutional
Complaint Freedom of Information 1 BvR 1981/05:
No legal basis for such a application.
- Complaint to the OSCE (Organization for Security
and Co-operation in Europe): http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/osce-complaint.htm
(10.
December 2004): Monitors Germany.
- UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and
protection of the right to freedom of opinion
and expression: 10
December 2004, 1. July
2006, 1 March 2007:
No answer.
- Petition to 12 German Lander (local
states): http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/050731bl-en.htm:
4 laws passed in 2006.
- 07. Sep. 2005: Petition to German
Parliament to
add access to public information to constitution:
No support
- Complaint to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR):
http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/echr-complaint.htm
(11. November 2005): 02. September 2008: ECHR: "(T)the court found that they did
not disclose any appearance of a violation of the rights
and freedoms set out in the Convention".
- Petition to European Parliament on human rights: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/petition-hr.htm
(10.
December 2005): Not even admitted.
- Petition to the PACE
(Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe): http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/pace-complaint.htm
(1. January 2006). No decision on admission yet
- Submission to EU
Network of independent experts on fundamental rights:
http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/eu-network-basic-rights.htm
(1 June 2006): Funding stopped.
- 1. July 2006: Will the International
Helsinki Federation for Human Rights (IHF)
support human rights in Germany?: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/ihf-complaint.htm:
Focus on other states.
- 1 March 2007: Will the EU Fundamental Rights
Agency collect quality data on human
rights and fundamental rights in member states?: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/eu-hra-complaint.htm:
No mandat for individual complaints.
- Complaint to ECHR (European Court of
Human Rights): Keim (II) v.
Germany Appl. No. 31583/07 at the European
Court of Human Rights: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/egmr-klage-en.htm: No admission yet.
- 6. February 2008: Petition to German federal
Parliament: Germany
should Sign and Ratify the Council of Europe Convention
on the Access to Official Documents.
on the information provided by ARTICLE
19, showing the
recognition of "Freedom of Information as an
Internationally Protected Human Right" according to Article 19 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). In fact I would not have had the courage to write
these petitions and complaints without your publications.
Although the
human
right of freedom of Information is found overall in Europe and developed countries all over the world both Germany authorities and international
institutions seem not actively to support it:
- The petition to the EU
Parliament is admissible and concludes:
Improving the protection of the rights and interests of
citizens of the Member States of the Union is listed in
Article 2 as an objective of the Union. (see page 7/173
doc. A5-0318/2000):
http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/petition_eu_admission.pdf.
However this objective is not actively supported, a
consultation of the German Parliament is not started, i.
e. Germany can proceed violating
Freedom of Information.
- The German
Constitutional Court does not admit the
complaint and gives no reason
for this decision: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/030310bvg-en.htm
.
- It took 3 years for the German
Parliament to answer the petition
dated 21. December 2001. The
Committee of Petitions supported the petition 1.
December 2004 and suggested to send it to the government
"to be taken into account". The parliament was debating it's
own draft law, with too many
exceptions and expiring after a trial period (see section 15). The
president of the German parliament send the Petition of 22. December 2004 to
chancellor Schröder. An answer should be given within 6
weeks. At last the
parliament (Bundestag and Bundesrat) adopted a Freedom of
Information law.
- Obviously the UN Special
Rapporteur is committed. But this commitment of is
not followed up by the UN
Petitions Unit: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/030425un.htm.
- The Human Rights
Committee of the UN does not
observe that Germany reports false: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/031029EFIL.htm
about Freedom of Information.
- The United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights did not
answer up to now: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/un-040816.htm.
Will UN take their
responsibility according to ICCPR seriously? The
last attempt is dated 19. October 2005. The
concluding observations do not mention Freedom of
Information.
- The EU Commission
does not promote Freedom of Information in Germany and tolerates member states not respecting
human right and fundamental rights of the Charter
of the EU. It is suggested
to contact the CoE. The EU
Ombudsman http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/eu-complaint_614_2004_TES.htm suggests
to contact the Council of Europe: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/eu-040607.pdf.
However Freedom of Information is only a fundamental
right in EU but has been forgotten in the European
Convention of Human Rights: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/020106coe.htm.
Recommendations are not followed and are not even
translated by Germany: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/020106coe.htm.
- Will the Commissioner
for Human Rights of the CoE promote Freedom of
Information: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/coe-031128.htm?
Here is a contribution to a survey on FOI
in Europe about Germany.
- There was no progress on the petition on human rights of
21. December 2003 to the German parliament.
Therefore the administrative court was asked for support:
http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/vg-entwurf-en.htm.
The administrative court in did
not support the idea of a fair answer in case VG 2 A 85.04:
Walter Keim vs. Federal Republic of Germany. There is
no right to get a fair
justified answer according to the decision 1 BvR 1553/90 of the
constitutional court.
- The Administrative
Court in Berlin ruled 9. May 2005 not to admit the denial
of access to be taken to court: There is no legal
basis for such a application, i. e. international
treaties are violated. This was appealed in a Constitutional
Complaint 18. August 2005, but not admitted.
- The OSCE
Representative on Freedom of the Media is
monitoring the situation of media in all 55 OSCE
participating States, including Germany.: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/osce-050106.htm.
Country
report 2007 (Walter Keim mentioned).
- No answer at all from the UN Special Rapporteur
on the promotion and protection of the right
to freedom of opinion and expression.
- 8 German lander
(local states) have adopted FOI laws, 2 are
working on draft laws and 8 lander have voted against FOI
and do not have FOI laws at all. 8
local states (lander) continue to violate the human right
of access to public documents.
- German Parliament considered it not necessary to secure
access to information in the constitution.
- The European Court
of Human Rights accepted a complaint dated 23. November 2005, which got
Registration No. 41126/05 was given by ECHR. How many
years will it take to decide on this case?
- On 16 January 2006 the Committee
of Petitions of the European Parliament wrote
that EU/OSCE human rights principles are not yet covered
by EU legislation and did not consider the petition. The Committee is useless to promote
human rights.
- PACE (Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe) accepted
a Petition which was
transmitted to competent PACE committee 13. January 2006.
- The EU Network of
independent experts on fundamental rights
answered 16.June
2006: The contract of the EU Network of Independent
Experts on Fundamental Rights finishes in September 2006
and will not be renewed.
- Will the International
Helsinki Federation for Human Rights (IHF)
support human rights in Germany? Information is gathered and
problematic issues raised in our publications and
meetings with authorities. However funding has been
stopped.
- What will the Fundamental
Rights Agency (FRA) of the EU do? Answer:
FRA seems not to be allowed to monitor member states.
- A decision of the ECHR on admissiblility took 3
years: 02. September 2008: ECHR: "(T)the court found that they did
not disclose any appearance of a violation of the rights
and freedoms set out in the Convention" .
The Commissioner for Human Rights of
the Council of Europe planned to consider the material in the
context of a visit to Germany which was planned in 2005. The
visit took place in 2006. The Commissioner made many suggestions
e. g. that the German
Human Rights Institute should monitor, development of national
action plan on human rights.
Will UN take their responsibility
according to ICCPR
seriously: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/un-0509.htm?
Up to now they are not answering and not doing the job they
are paid for.
So up to now little progress is visible, the only result
achieved is an investigation on who is responsible for the
lack of Freedom of Information in 8 of 16 states in Germany: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/I_accuse.htm.
Up to 2003 civil society in Germany
did not support FOI sufficiently. However in April 2004 German NGOs worked out their own
draft FOIA and started a campaign: http://www.pro-information.de/
which was necessary for progress to work out a law. A bill was
passed 2005 in the federation. However international standards
with respect to maximum disclosure and low fees were not met.
2006 a Society
for Freedom of Information was founded.
Will the EU Commission, EU Parliament, EU
Council, Council of Europe, OSCE, OECD, PACE, IHF, Fundamental
Rights Agency and UN comment that FOI is still missing in 8 of 16
local states?
Regards,
Walter Keim
Support freedom of information: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/foi.htm#e-mail,
http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/files/osce-complaint.htm
Support patients rights: http://home.broadpark.no/~wkeim/patients.htm#e-mail
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