160 likes | 326 Views
Using the ‘ Aarhus option ’ Bluefin tuna case study. Background to case. Background to case (2). March 2010: suspicious transfer of live BFT to Malta by Italian trawlers Inconsistencies in catch documentation Commission failed to confirm legality. EU disclosure request 14 April 2010.
E N D
Background to case (2) • March 2010: suspicious transfer of live BFT to Malta by Italian trawlers • Inconsistencies in catch documentation • Commission failed to confirm legality
EU disclosure request14 April 2010 • All paperwork for the suspicious transfer (catch and transfer declarations, observer report, video) • Any & all communication on transfer with Malta, Italy or ICCAT • Request made under Regulation 1367/2006 (‘Aarhus’)
Refusal8 October 2010 • Access toalldocumentsrefusedbased on 3 grounds: • Commercialinterests • Privacy of individuals • Ongoinginvestigation
Confirmatory Application29 October 2010 • Failure to state proper reasons: • No commercial secrets – fishing quotas are public • What private data? • What harm to the investigation?
Refusal No. 24 March 2011 • Commissionstillrefusing, but withintriguingreason:
Our main arguments: • Withholding info on infringements is not compatible with Aarhus. • Aarhus exception only for ‘ability of a public authority to conduct an enquiry of a criminal or disciplinary nature’ • Convention assumes that public scrutiny, rather than a ‘climate of confidence’, promotes compliance • Petrie ruling doesn’t apply to environmental info Ombudsman complaint19 April 2012
Ombudsman complaint19 April 2012 • And the Commission ignored the overriding public interest: • BFT is key ecological / cultural / economic resource • Management of the fishery a ‘travesty’ / ‘disgrace’ • EU taxpayers fund the fishing vessels • EU taxpayers fund the enforcement • Right to know whether fishermen / MS respect the rules • And whether Commission is upholding them
Request no. 219 April 2012 (same day) • The Commission decision informing Malta of BFT irregularities and asking for an inquiry, plus any annexes; • The inquiry report drawn up by Malta; • The Commission’s assessment of Malta’s report; • The Commission’s follow-up measures, if any; • Any correspondence with Malta on further BFT irregularities since refusal of previous request (ie. since March 2011).
Confirmatory application & reply25 September 2012 • As always, Commission missed its deadline due to ‘complexity’ of the request: • But:
Further process • 18 February 2013: Second complaint to EU Ombudsman • 26 June 2012: the same information requested from Malta under ‘Freedom of Access to the Environment Regulations’ (no reply) • 1 September 2012: First-ever appeal to Malta FOI Commissioner (no reply yet)
Conclusions • EU access to info regime is pretty dysfunctional • The Commission doesn’t necessarily give more info under Aarhus • Will the Ombudsman or Court force them? We’ll see. • If you’re a ‘nutty’ NGO or journalist and persist, you may uncover some things – even from refusals.