Chief Justice Asoka de Silva said that the public should have the right to information and be able to question ministers on what they do. The CJ made the statements at the launch of the ‘Justice’ magazine by the Ministry of Justice, which was held at the Supreme Court complex at Hulftsdorp today.
He pointed out that the legislature would have to provide transparency with regard to the transactions of the government and keep the Ministers under obligation to be answerable to what they do.
“It is pertinent to note that the public should have the right to information which is called access to information. When the public can have the right to information it can avoid lot of criticism because when there is access to information there is transparency of the transactions that are taking place,” CJ Asoka de Silva said.
Referring to the previous attempts to introduce legislature with regard to the right to free information CJ stated that the attempts to introduce legislature for this were failed and the draft lies inactive since 2005.
“The Law Reform Commission in 2001 proposed that free access to information. This was approved by the Cabinet in 2003 but was not passed in the parliament. However in 2005 again a draft legislature was considered by the Law Reform Commission and it is still at that stage,” CJ said.
























































