Author (Person) | Taylor, Simon |
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Series Title | European Voice |
Series Details | 26.07.07 |
Publication Date | 26/07/2007 |
Content Type | News |
The European ombudsman has called for the public to have better access to official EU documents. In a response published on Tuesday (24 July) to the European Commission’s green paper on access to documents Nikiforos Diamandouros says that citizens’ access to documents should be improved in a number of ways. He notes that while there is a legal right to access to documents held by the EU institutions, the public should have greater rights to information about EU-related activities of member states, as they are responsible for implementation of EU law. The ombudsman notes that the Court of First Instance has ruled that national governments have a veto over whether the EU institutions release documents originating from a member state. He cited a case in 2004 when the International Fund for Animal Welfare lost a case concerning a request to see correspondence between the Commission and Germany over a natural habitat near Hamburg which was reclassified in order to extend an Airbus factory. But last Wednesday (18 July) the advocate-general of the European Court of Justice said that member states did not have a veto over releasing such documents unless withholding them was justified for reasons of national security or commercial confidentiality. The ombudsman says that member states should have to provide a reason why they wanted documents withheld.
The European ombudsman has called for the public to have better access to official EU documents. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://www.europeanvoice.com |