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Calling it a "historic change" for his country,
President Vicente Fox signed his country's first FOI law. The
new law guarantees citizen access to nearly all federal government
information. It also establishes a Federal Institute for Access to
Public Information. The agency will aid information-seekers, train
citizens and public officials, and produce an annual report on
government responsiveness.
Mexican officials visited Virginia, met with access activists
and researched the state's FOI Advisory Council as part of
the study process that led to passage of the new law.
In the last decade, 26 countries have enacted open-government
laws, among them Japan, Great Britain, Bulgaria, Ireland, South
Africa and Thailand.
Tom Blanton, director of the National Security Archive at George
Washington University, wrote in the July/August issue of Foreign
Policy that, ironically, after 9/11 "secrecy has made the
most dramatic comeback in the country that purports to be the most
democratic." |