Another Minister quits as British MPs' expenses published
BRITAIN: Details of British MPs' expenses were officially published
online for the first time Thursday, as the scandal which has already
forced a slew of resignations claimed a fresh victim.
The roughly 1.2 million pages of documents on parliament's website
seem unlikely to throw up many fresh surprises, partly because the Daily
Telegraph newspaper has already published swathes of leaked information
showing how MPs claimed lavishly for everything from a duck island to
moat cleaning. But there was fresh controversy as it emerged that large
sections of the information put online Thursday have been blacked out,
including lawmakers' addresses, prompting criticism from transparency
campaigners. Maurice Frankel of the Campaign for Freedom of Information
said the published, redacted details were a "very poor substitute" for
full disclosure.
And Heather Brooke, a campaigner whose legal battle led to
publication of the information, told the BBC: "People will get a lot out
of it, particularly when they look at their own individual MPs, but I
think they'll also become frustrated because they will want to see the
different detail".
Publication of the expense claims, which cover 2004/05 and 2007/08,
came over a year after the High Court ordered their disclosure following
a lengthy legal battle by journalists and campaigners including Brooke.
London, Thursday, AFP
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