State agencies do not comply with transparency law
Some were frozen in time and have data only through 2013.
State agencies do not comply with transparency law
Although the president Juan Carlos Varela promised "transparency" during his presidency, several government entities fail to comply with the transparency law because their websites are not updated with the public acts of shopping, payment of travel expenses for home journeys and outside the country, as well as budget execution.According to the law 6 of January 22, 2002, it is an obligation that all this information is reflected in the web pages, unless it comes to details that put national or in other words a safety hazard, whether information " classified. "However, there are sites like the National Institute of Culture (INAC) that are still in 2013, the Ministry of Health (Minsa) in section trips abroad does not explain the amount of the cost of paying airline tickets as required by the standard and just say "paid by the MoH."While the Ministry of Social Development (Mides) also explain the payment of airfare and some servers only he explains that it was covered by "framework agreement".Also it applies to the Agricultural Insurance Institute (ISA), an entity whose budget implementation in August 2015 when we just need a week to February 2016.Meanwhile, the website of the Ministry of Agricultural Development (MIDA) the report of international missions (cost of international travel and per diem) was frozen in 2013 because it has updated data after that year.