In the aftermath of the revolution that forced Yemen’s long standing President, Ali Abdullah Saleh, from power, one of the main demands of the Yemeni people has been for greater government accountability. On 24 April 2012, Yemen’s legislature passed the Law on the Right of Access to Information, which is currently awaiting presidential assent before becoming law.
The Centre for Law and Democracy has conducted an analysis of this new law using our RTI Rating and found that it scored 102 out of a possible 150 points, which would put Yemen in twenty-first place globally.
“We are pleased that the Yemeni House of Representatives has passed such a strong right to information law,” said Toby Mendel, Executive Director of the Centre for Law and Democracy. “However, passing this law is just the beginning; the government will have to commit to implementing the law properly, and civil society will need to be active in using it, for real transparency to emerge in Yemen.”
The law’s strongest features include its broad scope and applicability and its strong promotional regime. At the same time, the law has important weaknesses, including the lack of proper recognition of the human right to information and the absence of a public interest override.
The Comments, the rating score and an unofficial translation of the Law are available at: http://www.law-democracy.org/?p=1991.
For further information, please contact:
Michael Karanicolas
Legal Officer
Centre for Law and Democracy
email: michael@law-democracy.org
tel: +1 902 448-5290
www.law-democracy.org