Official Secrets Act 1972
Official Secrets Act 1972 | |
---|---|
An Act to revise and consolidate the law relating to the protection of official secrets. | |
Citation | Act 88 |
Territorial extent | Malaysia |
Enacted by | Parliament of Malaysia |
Date of Royal Assent | 26 September 1972 |
Date commenced | 1 October 1972 |
Keywords | |
Classified information, confidential, official secret, restricted, secret, top secret | |
Status: In force |
The Official Secrets Act 1972 (Malay: Akta Rahsia Rasmi, abbreviated OSA), is a statute in Malaysia prohibiting the dissemination of information classified as an official secret. The legislation is based on the Official Secrets Act of the United Kingdom. After criticism of the act for lacking clarity, it was amended in 1986.[1]
Provisions
The act defines an "official secret" as:
...any document specified in the Schedule and any information and material relating thereto and includes any other official document, information and material as may be classified as 'Top Secret', 'Secret', 'Confidential' or 'Restricted', as the case may be, by a Minister, the Menteri Besar or Chief Minister of a State or such public officer
The Schedule to the Act covers "Cabinet documents, records of decisions and deliberations including those of Cabinet committees", as well as similar documents for state executive councils. It also includes "documents concerning national security, defence and international relations".
Criticism
The act has been criticised for ostensibly stifling dissent and reducing transparency in government workings. One statesman has suggested that the act has turned the press into "an alternative Government Gazette". In addition, the usage of the act to classify documents which "cannot by any stretch of the imagination be reasonably confidential or secret" has been criticised.[1]