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Executive pushback goes global

Martin Rosenbaum | 13:15 UK time, Thursday, 15 March 2007

It's not only in Britain that freedom of information has been facing a backlash from governments.

Last night I attended a seminar given by Patrick Whelan, Director General of the His , given to the Constitution Unit at University College London, showed how the level of freedom of information requests in Ireland has zoomed downwards after the introduction of upfront fees for making a request.

In 2003 the Irish government introduced a fee of 15 Euros for making a request for non-personal information, along with some other changes that curtailed FOI. Requests to Irish public bodies for non-personal information have since fallen by over 50 per cent - from 7,936 in 2002 to 3,449 in 2006.

And earlier this week the Associated Press that over a million pages of US government documents have been removed from public access since September 2001.

It's all part of what , a leading international authority on FOI, calls .

So is it because FOI is working badly - or because it's working well?

UPDATE: But it's now a different picture in Scotland, as by the Scottish Executive.

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