Ombudsman calls on Commission to release Dalli documents
14 Apr 2014 04:00 PM
The European Ombudsman, Emily O'Reilly, has
asked the European Commission to publish letters and internal notes concerning
the resignation of former Commissioner John Dalli in October 2012. The
Ombudsman inspected the documents as part of her inquiry into a complaint from
an NGO whose request to get access to them was refused by the
Commission.
Emily O'Reilly commented: "The Commission's
arguments for refusing to give access are not convincing. Releasing the
documents would reassure the public that the Commission dealt very seriously
with this case and set an example of transparency for future cases of great
public interest."
Commission's arguments for non-disclosure
"not convincing"
In
January 2013, Corporate Europe Observatory lodged a
complaint with the Ombudsman about the Commission's refusal to release two
letters from former Commissioner Dalli to Commission President Barroso and two
internal notes concerning meetings between Barroso and Dalli.
The
Commission explained its refusal with the need to protect an investigation by
the Maltese authorities and its own follow-up actions.
The
Ombudsman inspected the documents and concluded that the Commission's
arguments were not convincing. The documents had not been sent to the Maltese
authorities as evidence for their investigation, nor did they contain any
information that was not already in the public domain. The Ombudsman concluded
that the Commission has failed to explain how the disclosure of the documents
would have undermined the investigation by the Maltese authorities and its own
follow-up actions. The Commission has to respond by 31 July
2014.
The
Ombudsman's full recommendation is available at:
http://www.ombudsman.europa.eu/en/cases/draftrecommendation.faces/en/5402
1/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
For
press inquiries: Ms Gundi Gadesmann, Deputy Head of the Communication
Unit, tel.: +32 2 284 26 09, Twitter @EUombudsman