IAPA Midyear Meeting
Casa de Campo
Dominican Republic
March 18, 2002


Country-by-Country Reports

Argentina Aruba Bolivia Brazil Canada Caribbean
Chile Colombia Costa Rica Cuba Dominican Rep Ecuador
El Salvador USA Guatemala Haiti Honduras Mexico
Nicaragua Panama Paraguay Peru Porto Rico Uruguay
Venezuela          

UNITED STATES

WHEREAS

the Freedom of Information Act in the United States has been a model for countries everywhere of government transparency

WHEREAS

a memorandum issued by the U.S. Justice Department in October directed that before a federal agency can release information under a FOIA request, it must consider "our national security, enhancing the effectiveness of our law enforcement agencies, protecting sensitive business information and, not least, preserving personal privacy"

WHEREAS

that memorandum and other statements by Justice Department officials raise concerns that the government will be more restrictive in allowing the fundamental flow of information

WHEREAS

FOIA practices until now have successfully maintained the balance between transparency, on the one hand, and understandable considerations of security, especially following the September 11 terror attacks

WHEREAS

Principle 3 of the Declaration of Chapultepec says," the authorities must be compelled by law to make available in a timely and reasonable manner the information generated by the public sector. No journalist may be forced to reveal his or her sources of information"

THE MIDYEAR MEETING OF THE IAPA RESOLVES

to urge the U.S. government not to restrict application of the FOIA and to maintain the openness and access to government documents that have been a model for the rest of the hemisphere.




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Reports & Resolutions


58th IAPA General Assembly
JW Marriott Hotel & Stellaris Casino

Lima, Peru
October 26-29, 2002