PICK N PAY CHAIRMAN SLAMS HASTE OF PROTECTION OF INFORMATION BILL
Cape Town, 07 June 2011
It is a progressive truism that business -- the engine of prosperity, job-creation and economic growth -- can only flourish in a society where the flow of information is free and unfettered by undue state control. Without the assurance that financial data is not manipulated, that vital information is not being suppressed and that government malfeasance is not being concealed, it is virtually impossible for the private sector to make the long-term, strategic investment decisions that are essential to its survival.
It is therefore in business' interest to express itself very much more vociferously in opposition to the Protection of Information Bill which is presently being pushed through Parliament with a haste and zeal that suggest the government is determined to retreat into a self-protective environment of secrecy and concealment. This is terribly concerning and given the wide range of concerns from a very broad range of South Africans, very difficult to understand.
It is the innate tendency of all governments at all times and in all places to lapse, whenever possible, into the suppression of information that may be deemed sensitive or simply inconvenient or embarrassing. Often it is only an inquiring and free media, along with a vigilant civil society, that stands between the closed society and the right of access to State information that is so properly protected in South Africa's Bill of Rights.
Apart from their inherent iniquity, the broad provisions of the Bill fly in the face of our modern technological ability to spread information rapidly across the world, beyond the reach of any government's attempts to censor or conceal. Thus, Twitter is making a nonsense of British courts' attempts to suppress the names of celebrities who have taken out super-injunctions, while WikiLeaks has demonstrated the impunity with which confidential state documents can be released to a curious public.