The President approved Action Plan
on promotion of open government for 2016-2018. The preparation of this document
was given a start in fall last year. Officials organized several discussions
with participation of civil society and collected proposals during last 6
months of preparation period. I personally participated in 3 such meetings
representing Support to Economic Initiatives and had some conclusions; just did
not want to share with them before approve of Action Plan.
First it should be
mentioned that in period of hard pressure towards independent CSO in country
that started in 2014, and created obstacles the importance of Open Government
global platform that became enough popular globally was very high. This
initiative was made by number of leading countries including US in September
2011. The mission of platform is making governments more transparent,
accountable and responsible towards citizens. The Open Government Declaration
signed by 69 states in 2011 says “that people all around the world are
demanding more openness in government. They are calling for greater civic
participation in public affairs, and seeking ways to make their governments
more transparent, responsive, accountable, and effective”.
Political leaders that signed
Document declared about commitments in 4 directions that will help to achieve
those goals: 1) increasing accessing to information on government actions 2)
Increasing civic participation in governance issues 3) Application of high
ethics in public management 4) application of new technologies for more
accountable and open government.
Countries that want to become
members of OGP international platform should meet minimum requirements of 4
criteria: a) fiscal transparency b) access to information c) income declaration
of state officials d) public participation in management
The main opportunity the Platform
opens for civil society is obligatory involvement of civil society to the
process of national action plan development and implementation. In fact
countries where civil society does not exist or is not accepted as equal party
cannot be OGP member. It should be admitted that in 2011 when Azerbaijan joined
OGP the environment around CSO was much better; there were not any obstacles
for registering grants, bank operations within projects without Ministry of
Justice registration were possible, NGOs did not face any problems to organize
discussions on various topics and rent any business center. Starting from June
2014 these opportunities were taken from CSO organizations. Most probably if
current situation existed in 2011 Azerbaijan would not become OGP member.
In 2 days In OGP International
Platform meeting in South Africa Azerbaijan’s status will be discussed. There
are serious concerns of OGP Steering Committee regarding Azerbaijan and various
discussions have been held.
One of main concerns is related to
new OGP Action Plan. With 4 months delay President finally approved 2016-2018
Action Plan last week. But concerns are not related to just approval of this
document; involvement of independent CSO t this process and consideration of
their proposals were among expectations. I will talk about fulfilment of this
condition separately.
Another concern of OGP International
Platform was related to legal obstacles for operating of CSO and political
imprisoners. These problems (especially creating enabling environment for CSO)
were sounded during March visit of foreign experts to Azerbaijan.
Unfortunately developments in these
directions were not satisfactory. It is true that most of political imprisoners
were freed, but the list did not include several well-known conscience
imprisoners. There were also positive improvements related to civil society
especially those who represent EITI Coalition; bank account were unblocked and
customs checking were cancelled. However no actions were made on most important
issues – easy registration of grant agreements and unlimited collaboration of
foreign donor organizations with local organizations.
In such situation two options are
possible; Either Government declares interest to keep its OGP status and
presents “roadmap” for solution of above mentioned problems or Steering
Committee makes country’s status inactive for some period (maximum for one
year). According to experts, in case concerns are not solved during inactivity
period, the country can be fully delisted.
Finally several points on just
approved National Action Plan; One of the main points is involvement of
independent to this process. But involvement does not just mean participation,
but it also considers hearing voice of CSO. Participation can indeed be
passive; NGOs can come, participate in discussions and even make suggestions,
but their ideas won’t be considered later. Active participation means
invitation, listening and being heard – at least some of suggestions should be
taken into account. In other words, participation is not passive but active
involvement process.
Azerbaijan government’s draft OGP
Action Plan was discussed in February and then in March. Both meetings were
open and many NGOs took part there. Final discussion was a “focus group” type
and held with participation of limited number of experts in April. During those
discussions our organization made number of suggestions and presented them in
written way to authorized agencies. So, what’s outcome? Are there differences
between draft and final OGP NAPs?
Let me first touch technical side.
The approach of CSO from the very beginning was that Anti-Corruption and OGP
Action plans should be combined under Single Action Plan. Most OGP countries do
like that, since it is important for later comparisons. This suggestion was
taken into account – draft version included 2 separate documents, and in final
version anti-corruption activities have become part of OGP national Action
Plan.
We also had suggestion on
structure of the document – we considered commitments having impact on
government-individual relationships (such as improvement of electronic
services) should not be included as separate commitment. We suggested they
should be classified as technical means for achieving transparency,
accountability and participation, and not as separate commitments. However the
government has included separate section on electronic services to OGP Action
Plan.
3 fundamental suggestions were taken
into account in final version; i)creating environment for establishment of OGP
CSO Platform where independent NGOs will participate, ii) ensuring fiscal
transparency iii) practical application of system for property declaration of
officials.
However many suggestions on
increasing accountability and transparency of state agencies were not included
to final NAP. We think those suggestions were extremely important for legal
reforms of public management according to international principles related to
Open Government Partnership. So what those suggestions were?
· Information about founders of private companies that receive state budget
funds through procurement process should not be considered commercial secret;
Publication
of monthly reports on implementation of total budget (state budget, SWF budget
and Social Defense Fund budget);
·
Preparation of extended report on state budget implementation (not just 5-10
page summary, but 800-1000 page budget pack) and presenting it to Parliament;
·
Disclosing information on
forecasted and implemented state budget at region and town level;
·
Obligatory publication of budgets of all state education and heath
institutions;
·
Online publication of full text
of all reports of Chamber of Accounts on use of public funds;
·
Establishing “procurement”
section at web site of all state agencies. Publication information on all
purchased goods (services), their types, amount, value and contractors;
·
Establishing “budget” section at
web sites of all regional and executive power institutions. Publishing
information on structure of public revenues and spending and investment
projects funded by public means;
· Publication of investment projects of State Oil Company;
Publication of individual
financial reports of joint ventures and subsidiaries of State Oil Company;
· Publication
of beneficiary ownership information on all extractive companies;
· improving reporting on foreign borrowing of
state companies. Publication separate information on government guaranteed
debts and unguaranteed debts, debt amount by lending organizations and
allocated projects.;
·
Publication separate report on investment projects of State
companies;
·
Publication of separate report on procurement operations of state
companies;
·
Publication of financial information on authorized people at state
companies;
·
Preparation and application of single standards and methodology on
reporting of government and its separate structures. Working out minimum
standards for reports of central and local execute power institutions on their
annual activities;
· Preparation and
application of result oriented reporting methodology
These suggestions target establishment of open government system
from down to upper level. Citizens will not believe in establishment of open
and transparent management principles in central government once they do not
witness same at their village, region or city or in their children’s school.
Our suggestions aimed at transparency and accountability in all management
cycles, from down to upper levels and commitments on institutional and legal
reforms within National Action Plan.
Despite
all shortcomings and wrong steps we think distance of Azerbaijan from OGP will
be a damage for both country and independent CSO in country.
Most satisfied from such situation will be those forces
trying to keep Azerbaijan apart from developed world. EITI, OGP and Eastern
Partnership remain the only bridges connecting Azerbaijan to civil world. If
these bridges are destroyed there won’t remain any independent and objective
civic activists in nearest future.
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