"In this publication, we focus on the people who make right to information laws come to life, and who use them as tools to fight corruption. In the following pages, you will find the stories of citizens from 10 countries across the Asia Pacific region who have used their right to information to demand accountability from their governments. From uncovering wrongdoing in Bangladesh and Mongolia, to ensuring that citizens get the services they need in Cambodia and Sri Lanka, and from holding politicians to account in the Maldives to ensuring that governments share key guidance and statistics in Indonesia and Papua New Guinea, these stories show the difference access to information can make. Information requests should be seen as a routine way for citizens to understand their government’s work and to hold it accountable. However, in many places around the world, this is not the case. In many countries, making these requests requires great courage from citizens who may face challenges and danger in doing so." (Introduction, page 3)
Bangladesh: Using the right to information for investigative journalism, 4
Cambodia: Making services accessible and easy to use, 6
Indonesia: Improving public information sharing, 8
Maldives: Holding public officials accountable, 10
Mongolia: Using open data to expose corruption, 12
Nepal: Fighting unfair parking fees, 14
Pakistan: Holding local government accountable, 16
Papua New Guinea: Needing public information for public trust, 18
Sri Lanka: Using information to ensure access to health care, 20
Vietnam: Ensuring the right to information, one step of many, 22