(February 02, 2012) The Supreme Court of Nepal on Wednesday upheld a ruling that
blocked the government from expanding its ability to declare information classified.
The government directive, which was only made public on January 29, would have increased
the number of categories of classified information from five to 140. The court’s
ruling was based on a petition that argued the directive violated provisions of the
Right to Information Act of 2007. Journalists and rights activists protested earlier
this week and warned the government to expect more demonstrations if the directive
was implemented. Shiva Gaunle, president of the Federation of Nepalese Journalists,
urged a group of protesters in front of government offices in Kathmandu to keep up
pressure on the government. “The protests will get more and more intense until this
unprecedented decision is revoked,” he said. In response to growing public criticism,
the government agreed on Tuesday to delay the directive. Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai
met with members of the Federation of Nepalese Journalists and said the directive
would be revised. Wednesday’s Supreme Court ruling also called for Bhattarai, the
minister of communications and the Council of Ministers to attend a hearing on February
5. In a press release dated January 31, the Nepal Press Council said the government
directive violates the interim constitution and called on officials to hold wider
and more detailed discussions to formulate a new directive that upheld the rights
of citizens to information.