Before the Director and the Deputy Director
officially took up their posts an organisational structure of the
Bureau was prepared. The Management Services Division of the
Department of Human Resource Management and Development worked
hand-in-hand with the Director to produce a start-up Organisational
and Management Structure of the Bureau. It will be reviewed as time
goes on depending on the needs of the Bureau, the intention being that
the establishment and overall strength of the Bureau will be dictated
by the internal work demands in its growth.
On the 1 st of October, 1997, the Department of
Human Resource Management and Development conveyed Government approval
for the initial establishment of the Bureau. Full details appear as an
Appendix to this Report.
LEGAL DOCUMENTS
The Anti-Corruption Bureau is an office that
requires the use of a variety of Legal Forms and Documents for
effective operational activities. Accordingly the following Legal
forms and Documents were devised:
Form ACB 1 COMPLAINT
Form ACB 2 STATEMENT (Page One)
Form ACB 3 STATEMENT (Continuation)
Form ACB 4 INVESTIGATION RECORD
Form ACB 5 CONTINUATION SHEET
Form ACB 6 SEARCH—NO COMPLAINT/COMPLAINT
Form ACB 7 EXHIBIT RECEIVED/RETURNED
Form ACB 8 COMPANY SEARCH
Form ACB 9 MONTHLY ACTIVITY RETURN
Form ACB 10 INVESTIGATION REPORT
Form.ACB l1 CORRUPTION PREVENTION REPOli~
Form ACB 12 INVESTIGATION DOCKET (Folder)
Form ACB 13 CORRUPTION PREVENTION DOCKET (Folder)
Form ACB 14 PROSECUTION DOCKET (Folder)
Form ACB 15 WARRANT OF ARREST
Form ACB 16 INFORMATION TO GROUND ISSUANCE OF A WARRANT OF ARREST
Form ACB 17 WARRANT OF ACCESS AND SEARCH
Form ACB 18 INFORMATION TO GROUND ISSUANCE OF WARRANT OF ACCESS AND
SEARCH
Form ACB 19 ORDER TO INSPECT BANKERS BOOKS
Form ACB 20 WARRANT
Form ACB 21 INFORMATION TO GROUND ISSUANCE OF A WARRANT
Form ACB 22 RESTRICTION ON DISPOSAL OF PROPERTY
Form ACB 23 COMPLAINT REGISTER
Form ACB 24 NOTICE TO ALL PUBLIC OFFICERS
Form ACB 25 PROSECUTIONS REGISTER
Form ACB 26 VISITORS BOOK
Form ACB 27 EXHIBITS REGISTER
Form ACB 28 FINGERPRINT FORM
The Solicitor General and Secretary for Justice and
the Director of Public Prosecutions were consulted about the legal
forms and gave their approval before the Government Printer was
commissioned by the Bureau to undertake the printing of the documents.
All of the above are now in use in the Bureau.
BUREAU STANDING ORDERS
Bureau Standing Orders aimed at regulating
operations of the Anti-Corruption Bureau have been approved by the
Minister of Justice in accordance with the Act
CODE OF CONDUCT AND ETHICAL BEHAVIOUR
A Code of Conduct and Ethical Behaviour (which
appears as an Appendix to this Report) has been finalised after
consultations and it is part of the Bureau Standing Orders. The Code
sets ethical standards for all persons employed in the Bureau and will
form part of the employees' Conditions of Service. The Code
demonstrates the Bureau's commitment to high standards and
professional conduct within its ranks. The Bureau intends to fight
corruption in the most practicable way, by being in the forefront of
all efforts in this regard. The Code has been made bearing in mind
that it would not be right nor proper for the Bureau to expect high
standards from others without setting for itself demanding standards
of behaviour. The Code of Conduct covers areas such as personal and
professional conduct, use of information, bribes, financial and
private interests, discipline, complaints against the Bureau staff and
outside employment.
OFFICE ACCOMMODATION AND EQUIPMENT
Offices have been secured in B & C House, Old
Town, Lilongwe and C D L House in Blantyre. Contracts were awarded by
Ministry of Works and Supplies to local private companies to carry out
rehabilitation and modification in both Blantyre and Lilongwe offices.
Telefax lines, as well as telefax lines, are installed in Lilongwe and
in Blantyre. Telefaxes are part of the Japanese commodity aid made
available to the Bureau through the Treasury. Most of the office
equipment has been provided under the Japanese Grant. The equipment
has included six computers together with printers, two high speed
photocopiers, four electronic typewriters, two manual typewriters, one
television set, one video recorder, one video camera, four telefax
machines, and eight filing cabinets. Two notebook computers were
bought from local resources using the authority of the Government
Central Computer Committee and the sanction of the Department of
Office Equipment. Furniture and furnishings have been acquired under
local resources.
TRANSPORT
Six vehicles have been delivered under the Japanese
aid; several more are to be delivered in due course to facilitate
operations of the Anti-Corruption Bureau. These include a Public
Address vehicle which is also being provided under the Japanese Grant
and is expected to enable civic education campaigns to be conducted
anywhere within the country, throughout the year.
FINANCES
Parliament approved a budget of seven million
Kwacha (K7,000,000) in the 1996/97 financial year. The amount for
1997/98 is ten million, seven hundred and ninety-five thousand, six
hundred Kwacha (K10,795,600). There have not been any complications
during the year regarding payments which are being made by the
Ministry of Justice under an administrative arrangement with the
Bureau; this will continue until the staffing position within the
Bureau is normalised. Bureau activities began in March, 1997 following
the opening and funding of the Bureau's Bank Account. However, only a
small portion of the 1996/97 allocation was actually spent. Treasury
examined the situation of the Bureau and formally agreed to allow the
unspent balance to be utilised under a Deposit Account so that the
1997/98 budget would cover projected operations for that year as
approved by Parliament. This has been most invaluable, and has greatly
assisted the commencement processes.
DONOR SUPPORT
Assistance to the Bureau has been extended by a
number of donors, most of them already referred to in this Report.
The British Government sponsored a visit to Malawi
in July 1996 by Mr. Paul Russell, OBE. Following the visit, a
Strategic Plan for Bureau operations was outlined and agreed. In
September 1996 the British Government funded the participation by the
Director at an international symposium which was held in Cambridge,
England, on Economic Crime and whose main theme was corruption. In
February 1997 Her Majesty's Government, on request, made available the
services of Mr. Paul Russell, OBE, as Technical Advisor to the
Director, initially for two years, on fully funded terms. Mr. Russell
has had a distinguished public service in Zambia, spanning more than
thirty years, the last eight years of which he was the Director of
Operations in that country's Anti-Corruption Commission. Until the
Japanese commodity aid items started to arrive, the Bureau relied
heavily on the equipment and materials which have been made available
by the British Government for use by the Technical Advisor.
The Government of Japan has provided to the Bureau
under the commodity aid programme most of the office equipment and all
the motor vehicles. The office equipment includes two heavy duty
photocopiers, two medium and two small photocopiers, eight filing
cabinets, six computers with printers, six typewriters, and four
air-conditioners. A public address vehicle for the Bureau's
planned country-wide civic education campaign is
being appropriately fitted outside the country and will be delivered
soon.
The Government of Denmark, through the Royal Danish
Embassy in Lilongwe, provided funding for the Bureau's attendance at
the Global Coalition for Africa Policy Forum in Maputo in 1997. The
Bureau has held discussions with the Royal Danish Embassy for support
for a massive Civic education campaign, covering the entire country,
involving use of both electronic and print media, as well as community
outreach programmes. The Embassy has further indicated that Danish aid
will not be confined to civic education but might be extended to other
operational areas that can be identified as being worthy of support.
The World Bank reimbursed in full travel costs and
partially subsistence expenses for the Bureau's participation at the
8th International Anti-Corruption Conference in Peru. The Bank also
provided funding for attendance by the Deputy Director at a Workshop
on Curbing Corruption, in Cotonou, BENIN, from 12th to 15th January,
1998. However, owing to logistical problems during the time, the
Deputy Director was not able to proceed to the Workshop. The Bank,
through its Institutional Development Fund grant, has shown interest
in supporting the Bureau's Corruption Prevention programme, with
special attention given to public procurement.
The fight against corruption is being waged on a
world-wide basis, at regional, national and local levels. No single
country can succeed on its own. The role of donors is crucial not only
to ensure success of national anti-corruption strategies, but more
importantly, to reassure taxpayers and funding agencies in their
countries that proper systems of checks and balances are in place to
safeguard development funds and promote transparency and
accountability which are essential components of good governance in a
country. The support of donors to the anti-corruption effort is
therefore crucial to developing nations such as Malawi. The resources
that donors provide do act as a vital complement to Government's own
investments in this area and do have a major impact on the operational
effectiveness of institutions. In the case of the Bureau, rapid
progress has been registered in operational activities due to the
active, moral and concrete support of the donor community in Malawi.
COLLABORATION WITH OTHER AGENCIES
The Bureau has made useful contacts with the
Anti-Corruption Commission in Zambia, the Directorate on Corruption
and Economic Crime in Botswana, the Independent Commission Against
Corruption in New South Wales, Australia, and the Independent
Commission Against Corruption in Hong Kong. With the Bureau's capacity
improving all the time, these contacts will be fully utilised in order
for Malawi to learn about best practices in the anti-corruption fight
in other jurisdictions.
THE LAW ON CORRUPTION
Although the Corrupt Practices Act is less than
three years old, there are already signs that a review will become
necessary soon. Corruption is not defined in the Corrupt Practices Act
although the Act does define "corruptly" as the
"soliciting, accepting or obtaining, or the giving, promising, or
offering of gratification by way of a personal temptation or
bribe". "Gratification" means payment in cash or kind
or in other forms made with the intention to bribe.
Accordingly, all offences centre upon the giving or
receiving of bribes (or the possession of unexplained property). This
has caused some constraints to effective investigation and
prosecution.
Section 10 (1) (b) of the Corrupt Practices Act
permits the Bureau to receive and investigate complaints of corrupt
practices and, subject to the direction of the Director of Public
Prosecutions, prosecute offenders.
Essentially, this means that the Bureau is
restricted to handling cases only of corrupt practices as mentioned
above. However, it has already become apparent that many cases of
alleged or suspected corrupt practices which are reported to the
Bureau turn out, upon investigation, to involve other offences,
particularly fraud, Fraudulent false accounting and theft. In strict
terms, the Bureau is not permitted to investigate such complaints.
In order to allow the Bureau to pursue each and
every case to its logical conclusion, therefore, the Bureau will
propose in due course an amendment to Section 10 of the Act to allow
the Bureau to investigate and prosecute any other offence which comes
to the notice of the Bureau during the course of an investigation into
a specific act of corruption.
A review of the burden of proof may also be
necessary. It is a legal norm in Malawi that no person can be
convicted for a criminal offence unless guilty "beyond reasonable
doubt". Acts of corruption are very often conducted in secret
with few or no witnesses and both parties to the corrupt arrangement
are "satisfied" with the outcome.
Getting direct evidence of a corrupt act is
therefore generally very difficult and more often than not it is the
"consequences" of a corrupt act that are apparent, drawing a
conclusion that the result must have been as a result of corruption.
The Bureau feels therefore that there will need to
be a review at some stage to consider the burden of proof necessary to
secure a conviction for corruption, and suggests that a more
appropriate standard would be a conviction based on a "balance of
probabilities."
The protection of Whistle Blowers is also
important. A "Whistle-blower" is a person who believes that
the public interest overrides the interest of the organisation or
institution in which he or she serves, and publicly informs the
authorities of any corrupt or illegal act in which that organisation
or institution is involved.
It is a matter of serious concern to the Bureau
that very often those people who are engaged in corruption within an
organisation will use whatever means within their power to punish
people who are regarded as informers. The Bureau depends upon people
who are prepared to dissent openly against corrupt practices which are
occurring in any organisation. If an organisation itself does take
punitive action against the dissenter then he or she will become the
victim of such "whistle-blowing". In order therefore to
correct the imbalance, the Bureau intends as soon as possible to
propose legal and other protection for whistle-blowers.
The Corrupt Practices Act is not specific in its
definition of misuse or abuse of public office. There are signs
already that some public officers are very clearly taking advantage of
their official positions to accumulate wealth and property or to get
goods and services advantageously.
To correct this, a proposal will be made to tighten
up Section 32 of the Act which deals with "possession of
unexplained property" by including specific authority for the
Bureau to "investigate any public officer who has abused or
misused his or her office, position or authority to obtain property,
wealth, advantage or profit directly or indirectly for himself or
herself or any other person". Such an amendment will close
permanently this anomally in the present Act.
At the National Integrity Workshop held in Lilongwe
in November 1996, other key recommendations were made. These mainly
centred upon the independence of the Bureau and included the
recommendation that the Director of the Bureau should be answerable to
Parliament and not to the Minister as the Act requires at present.
It was also felt that there should be no need for
the Director to obtain the consent of the Director of Public
Prosecutions before instituting a prosecution as is required at
present.
The present situation whereby officers do not have
powers of arrest without a warrant is proving to be a handicap to
operational efficiency. An effective law enforcement officer will need
this power especially in cases where offences of corruption occur
within the sight and hearing of the officer.
The Bureau will in due course make formal
representations in regard to amendments to the Corrupt Practices Act
after holding discussions with major stakeholders to get a general
consensus that the changes are necessary.
CRIME AND CORRUPTION: THE ROLE OF THE MEDIA
Public accountability becomes more meaningful where
information on crime and corruption is made public and access to
information is not limited. Fear of exposure or public ridicule may
encourage those in public office to lead a cleaner life.
The Bureau welcomes the positive role the media can
and does play in promoting transparency and accountability which are
essential components of good governance. However, there is a
realization that some of the information reaching the public through
this means is either inaccurate or simply politically motivated. If
the media is to discharge their responsibilities in informing and
educating the public on matters concerning corrupt practices then they
are urged to exercise high reporting standards so that there is a
clear balance between good media ethics, public interest and what the
media perceives the public to want.
THE ANTI-CORRUPTION
BUREAU
P.O. BOX 2437
LILONGWE
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