After a five-year legal battle, Access Info Europe, an NGO with whom the author of this article collaborates, has been sentenced to pay 3,000 euros [es] after the Supreme Court ruled that it did not have the right to know what Spain does to fight against corruption.
The European organization, based in Madrid, fights to institute and ensure compliance of the European transparency laws while simultaneously promoting the right to accessing information worldwide with the goal of having this be recognized as a fundamental right.
On June 14, 2007, a member of the Access Info board requested information from the Spanish Ministry of Justice, asking for the measures the government was taking in accordance with the U.N. Convention against corruption. The information was denied and the case ended up in the courts until it exhausted the legal channels in May of 2012. As such, the Spanish Supreme Court alleged that following the demand for information on anti-corruption measures, the NGO expected to the government to provide explanations for its actions, a right that only the Parliament has, and for that it was fined 3,000 euros.
The last option for the organization is to present the case to the European Court of Human Rights, which could delay the case for years. To meet the costs imposed by the Supreme Court, the NGO has launched a campaign to raise enough money to pay the fine. The members of the organization say that any type of collaboration is welcome — whether monetary or spreading the word — considering that the cause justifies it: supporting the fight for transparency in Spain.
The campaign has received support on Twitter, a network on which so many politicians, civil society organizations, journalists and citizens related to the transparency cause have contributed to spreading the petition of support. In its first day, Access Info raised more than 800 euros. If donations exceed the needed amount, the money will go towards other legal cases.
The case is alarming for various reasons: it does not grant the right to know the measures taken to fight corruption, especially when Spain is living in an unprecedented time of crisis that triggers citizen discontent. The context does not allow for an understanding of the sentence when new cases of political corruption are disclosed in the media day after day, corruption that now affects even the country's monarchy. It is also problematic to deny such requests for information when Spain is processing the Law of Transparency, Access to Information and Good Governance [es] in the Parliament. International experts have analyzed and harshly criticized this law for not meeting international standards and excluding many areas of information that the citizens will not have access to.
3 comments
This article is seriously misleading and the Editor of Global Voices should correct it.
The headline states ‘NGO penalized for requesting information on corruption in Spain’
The article states that the NGO “has been sentenced to pay 3,000 euros”
The article also states that the NGO “was fined 3,000 euros” and that it “has launched a campaign to raise enough money to pay the fine”.
All four of these statements are misleading, inaccurate and wrong. Access-Info Europe has not been sentenced, or fined, at all. It brought a legal action against the Spanish government in the courts, and lost. The Constitutional Court then ordered the NGO to pay the legal costs incurred by the government, 3,000 euros.
The source for this correction can be found on Access-Info Europe’s own website, where it states:
“The Supreme Court ruled that Access Info Europe could be required to pay costs. The Ministry of Justice asked for the full €3000.”
and
“Access Info Europe challenged the €3000 costs imposed by the Spanish Supreme Court on the grounds that they were excessive. In a first decision, the judicial secretary ruled against this appeal, so we turned to the Judge responsible for the case with a further appeal. This judge ruled against our appeal on 26 December 2012, and hence we have no further options to challenge the costs and must pay the €3000 to the Court.”
(Sections 7 and 9 on this web page: http://www.access-info.org/en/litigation/297-ministry-of-justice-corruption-case )
So, to be clear, a group initiated a legal challenge of the government. It must know that when you litigate, sometimes you win, and sometimes you lose. Whether you win or lose, sometimes the judge orders that each side pays its own costs, and sometimes the judge orders that the losing party pay the costs of the winning party. That is all that has happened here. Access-Info Europe decided to pursue a civil action against the government. It lost, and the judge ordered that it should pay the government’s (which is to say, the Spanish taxpayer’s) costs. Whether that is unreasonable or outrageous is a matter of opinion, but it is a matter of fact that the group has only been asked to pay costs. It has not been ‘sentenced’ and it has not been ‘fined’. Whether it has been ‘penalized’ is debatable, but it could be considered that this is a misleading description of what has occurred.
Why is it important that Global Voices correct this report? Because a significant number of people will have read an inaccurate report, and as at the time this comment is made, 40 people have tweeted a link to this article stating incorrectly that the group was ‘fined’ or ‘penalized’, 14 have recommended it on Google+ and 10 have recommended it on Facebook. Many others may have circulated the link to the versions of this article in other languages. Global Voices does its readers a disservice, and civil society more generally, if it does not report news accurately and honestly.