Government and POPIA - applicable or not?
“With all the talk of POPIA coming into effect and businesses having
to get ready to comply, I was wondering whether government and
municipalities also need to comply with POPIA. Surely, government
entities have a lot of personal information in their possession that
they must protect.”
The Protection of Personal Information
Act 4 of 2013 (“POPIA”) has been enacted to give effect to the
constitutional right to privacy as enshrined in section 14 of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996. POPIA does this by
putting measures in place to safeguard personal information when such is
processed by a public or private body or any other person which alone
or in conjunction with others determines the purpose of and means for
processing personal information. Any such body processing personal
information is referred to as a ‘responsible party’.
To answer
your question. Yes, government must comply with POPIA. POPIA determines
that a public body is also deemed to be a responsible party for purposes
of POPIA. A public body is any department of state or administration in
the national, or provincial sphere of government or any municipality in
the local sphere of government, or any functionary or institution when
exercising a power of performing a duty in terms of the Constitution or
provincial constitution, or exercising a public power or performing a
public function in terms of any legislation.
POPIA therefore
applies equally to a public or private entity when it comes to the
processing of personal information. That said, POPIA does create certain
exceptions, and excludes public bodies from the application of POPIA
where these bodies process personal information that involves national
security, including activities that are aimed at assisting in the
identification of the financing of terrorist and related activities,
defence or public safety, or the purpose of the information is the
prevention, detection, including assistance in the identification of the
proceeds of unlawful activities and the combating of money laundering
activities, investigation or proof of offences, the prosecution of
offenders or the execution of sentences or security measures to the
extent that adequate safeguards have been established in legislation for
the protection of such personal information.
However, unless exempted, government will need to comply with POPIA in the same way as any other responsible party
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