Category: Campaign Updates
Issued by R2K Western Cape R2K Western Cape rejects SANRAL’s refusal to allow even limited transparency in the matter of proposed e-tolls in the Western Cape. After the Right2Know Campaign, Section 16 and ODAC...
Issued by R2K Western Cape R2K will picket at the Cape High Court on Monday 4 August, 10am-12pm The Right2Know Campaign is one of the organisations challenging SANRAL’s attempt to hide information about its...
Issued by Section 16 and the Right2Know Campaign The Right2Know Campaign and Section 16 seek to intervene urgently in a secrecy application brought by SANRAL and Protea Parkways Consortium (PPC) to have certain court documents...
Analysis: A recurring line from those trying to dismiss allegations of corruption in the Arms Deal is: “Show us the evidence.” During his testimony at the Seriti Commission two weeks ago, former president Mbeki...
Issued by the Right2Know Campaign, 29 July 2014 To voice our outrage at the blatant attacks on freedom of expression and a free press in Swaziland, the Right2Know Campaign will hold a protest picket...
This article below was published online by Mail&Guardian: The arms deal commission’s phase two witness list is out. But is there any public interest left? By Sarah Evans NEWS ANALYSIS Even the most apathetic...
The Right2Know Campaign has commented on the Draft Protected Disclosures Amendment Bill following an invitation by the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development. The draft Bill has a number of positive changes that will help...
Cell phone companies are in a price war and many are promising users 79 cents per minute. But many users are reporting this is only a marketing trick: most of us are still charged...
Issued by the Right2Know Campaign, 21 July 2014 The Right2Know Campaign condemns the Swaziland High Court’s judgment handed down last Thursday which found journalists Bheki Makhubu and Thulani Maseko guilty of “scandalising the judiciary”....
The Seriti Commission’s approach is undermining the public’s right to know, explains Kholiswa Tyiki, a journalist and researcher with Right2Know. The Arms Deal, which saw South Africa spending up to R70-billion on military equipment...