Dear FOIAnet: 

 

FYI an important opinion from the EU Ombudsman about whether member states
can veto release of documents submitted to the European Commission. This is
an important issue with respect to principles of the transparency of
international organisations. 

 

This issue is also quite related to the whole WikiLeaks affair because
member states often invoke protection of international relations when
objecting to the release of information that they have submitted to the EU. 

 

Best, Helen 

 

 

From: GADESMANN Gundi [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: 15 December 2010 10:00
To: GADESMANN Gundi
Subject: Ombudsman: Member States have no veto over the release of documents
held by the Commission

 

European Ombudsman

Press release 24/2010

15 December 2010

 

Ombudsman: Member States have no veto over the release of documents held by
the Commission

 

The European Ombudsman, P. Nikiforos Diamandouros, has called on the
European Commission to release documents originating from Spain concerning
the construction of an industrial port in Granadilla, Tenerife. This follows
a complaint from the European Environmental Bureau (EEB), a federation of
environmental citizens' organisations. The Commission explained its refusal
by referring to objections to disclosure from the Spanish authorities. The
Ombudsman pointed out, however, that if Member States request the Commission
not to release documents it receives from them, they must give convincing
arguments based on EU transparency rules. He noted that Spain has yet to
provide such convincing arguments.

The Ombudsman had also called on the Commission to release internal
documents concerning the construction of the Granadilla port. The Commission
accepted this recommendation and released the documents, thus demonstrating
its willingness to improve the transparency of its procedures. 

Controversial construction of industrial port in Granadilla, Tenerife

In 2006, the European Commission approved the Spanish authorities' plans to
construct an industrial port in Granadilla, Tenerife. In July 2006, the EEB
asked the Commission for access to a number of documents related to the
Commission's decision to approve the project. The Commission refused to
disclose some of the requested documents because the Spanish authorities,
from whom the documents originated, did not agree to their disclosure. It
argued that their release would affect ongoing court proceedings. Access to
a number of internal Commission documents was also refused, on the grounds
that their disclosure would seriously undermine the institution's
decision-making process. 

After having inspected the documents, the Ombudsman concluded that the
Commission should release them, unless the Spanish authorities gave valid
arguments against disclosure. Furthermore, he did not agree that the
disclosure of all but one of the internal documents would undermine the
Commission's decision-making process.

Following the Ombudsman's recommendation, the Commission released the
internal documents to the EEB. It also apologized for the long delays in
this case. However, it maintained its refusal to release the documents
originating from Spain, because of the Spanish authorities' objections. 

While the Ombudsman strongly praised the Commission for releasing its
internal documents, he criticised it for not having verified whether the
reasoning of the Spanish authorities was convincing. He called on the
Commission to take this critical remark into account in its ongoing dialogue
with the Spanish authorities. Furthermore, the Ombudsman announced his plan
to launch an investigation concerning the Commission's, the Council's and
the European Parliament's handling of requests for public access to
documents originating from the Member States.

The Ombudsman's decision is available at:
<http://www.ombudsman.europa.eu/en/cases/decision.faces/en/5515/html.bookmar
k>
http://www.ombudsman.europa.eu/en/cases/decision.faces/en/5515/html.bookmark

 

The European Ombudsman investigates complaints about maladministration in
the EU institutions and bodies. Any EU citizen, resident, or an enterprise
or association in a Member State, can lodge a complaint with the Ombudsman.
The Ombudsman offers a fast, flexible and free means of solving problems
with the EU administration. For more information:

 <http://www.ombudsman.europa.eu/> http://www.ombudsman.europa.eu

 

 




European Ombudsman


Gundi Gadesmann


Media and External Relations Officer


T. +32 (0)2 284 26 09


M. +32 (0)475 34 89 93


 <mailto:gundi.gadesmann at ombudsman.europa.eu>
gundi.gadesmann at ombudsman.europa.eu


Rue Wiertz


Eastman Building


B-1047 Brussels


F. + 32 (0)2 284 49 14


 <http://www.ombudsman.europa.eu/> www.ombudsman.europa.eu


 

 


 

 


 

 

 

 

 

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