I've had to deal with some of those situations, and what I share with interested parties from other countries is that we have a very sound statute in its principles, and they should look to it as a model.
In terms of its current status, there are a lot of lessons to be learned on how not to do it. In every experience where you learn from your mistakes or you learn from your inactions or your neglect, then other people can learn from that.
We are not compliant with the United Nations declaration. We are not compliant with article 19. We're not compliant with the Atlanta declaration. We're not compliant with the Commonwealth Secretariat's model. We're not compliant with the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association's recommendation, and some of you are members of that association.
Zimbabwe adopted our model and then tacked on a press control dimension to it. It's the only one I can point to right now that I know of where they took our law and said it was a great law and then added on all this control on the media.
So I disagree with any witness, including the minister, who says that we are compliant with any of those recent declarations on what a citizen is entitled to in access to information.