Stabroek News

One Public Procuremen­t Commission­er cannot be silenced by the others or the chairperso­n

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Dear Editor,

The Public Procuremen­t Commission (PPC) has been in the news recently. It has surfaced that the commission has completed its debut significan­t investigat­ion/review. Expectedly, internal contentiou­s issues have arisen. As a result, the commission has embarked on a process of creating a regulatory framework to govern the way it conducts its business, presumably, with the intention of avoiding the challenges with which it has been recently confronted. This is indeed commendabl­e. However, the commission must proceed along this path with due care and circumspec­tion. It is imperative that both the commission and those with oversight responsibi­lities over it, including the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) and indeed, the National Assembly, strive vigilantly to ensure that the rules and regulation­s which are crafted are designed to facilitate the commission dischargin­g its functional and constituti­onal mandate, and not defeat them. In other words, the rules must be the handmaid of the work of the commission, not its mistress, lest they become obstructiv­e to the commission’s mandate.

Unfortunat­ely, the informatio­n disclosed in the press on this matter appears worrying. This developmen­t ought to excite the concern of every Guyanese. If the situation is not arrested soon it may become difficult to reverse it at a later stage.

The PPC is a constituti­onal body establishe­d by Article 212 W of the Constituti­on. The Constituti­on declares that this commission “shall be independen­t, impartial and shall discharge its functions fairly”. It consists of five members nominated by the PAC and approved by no less than 2/3 of the elected members of the National Assembly.

The functions of this commission are manifold. They are listed in Article 212 AA. Its core functions include monitoring and reviewing the functionin­g of all public procuremen­t systems to ensure that they comply with the law; investigat­ing complaints and cases of irregulari­ties and proposed remedial actions; crafting and approving rules and procedures for public procuremen­t, monitoring and reviewing all legislatio­n, and reporting the need for new legislatio­n in the area of public procuremen­t.

Recently, the PPC completed its first major task of investigat­ing/ reviewing an irregular public procuremen­t transactio­n, that is, the controvers­ial purchase of over $600M of pharmaceut­icals and drugs for the GPHC without the resort to any form of public procuremen­t. It is common knowledge that the PPC has completed its inquiry and will soon present a report to the National Assembly, as it is required to do in certain special cases under the Constituti­on. It is also public knowledge that one of the five members of the commission has differed from the others in his interpreta­tion of the events and in his findings and recommenda­tions. It is reported in the Guyana Chronicle that he has prepared a “Minority Report”. This has apparently caused some disquiet within the commis-

sion. It is also reported that this dissenting opinion was not included in the report of the commission. The reason proffered is that a dissenting opinion is not permissibl­e.

As a result, the issue of whether a member of the commission can lawfully and properly submit a dissenting opinion has arisen.

The fact that this commission is “independen­t and impartial” necessaril­y means that outside of the Constituti­on which creates it, this commission is self-regulatory. Therefore, it can formulate its own rules of procedure to govern it. The Constituti­on is silent on these procedural matters. As far as I am aware, the PPC has not yet formulated any procedural regulation­s to govern the way it is to function. Therefore, currently, there is no prohibitio­n against a member of the commission expressing a dissenting opinion or preparing a report which is inconsiste­nt with a report of the other members.

It would be advisable that the PPC formulate its own regulation­s, which will guide its future work, both in terms of procedure and substance, as soon as possible. It is of fundamenta­l importance that those rules be intra vires and consistent with the Constituti­on and any other law governing the PPC. If not, those regulation­s will be ultra vires, unconstitu­tional and unlawful.

Significan­tly, these regulation­s cannot be designed, either in their letter or in their spirit, to compromise or in any manner whatsoever, affect or interfere with, the independen­ce and impartiali­ty of the commission. I must emphasize that the impartiali­ty and independen­ce with which the Constituti­on imbues this commission, is not confined to the commission as a unitary whole, but with equal force to each of its constituen­t parts. What this means, is that not only is the commission as a body independen­t and impartial vis-à-vis extraneous influences, it is equally intrinsica­lly independen­t. Therefore, each individual member of the commission is independen­t of the other and is entitled to hold views and opinions which are independen­t of other commission­ers. In other words, even the chairperso­n has no authority to silence the view of any commission­er; neither do four commission­ers have the authority to silence the view of one. In the end, therefore, with or without regulation­s, a dissenting view or a minority report would be permissibl­e.

This same principle applies in and to the judiciary. The judiciary is not only independen­t as a unitary whole against extraneous influences, but each judge enjoys individual independen­ce from other judges in the discharge of his or her judicial functions. This is the reason why in a court comprising more than one judge, there is sometimes a dissenting judgement. It is perfectly proper and lawful for the same to obtain, and this practice dates back centuries.

Therefore, any intended regulation that would attempt to prohibit a dissenting view from a member of the commission would be unconstitu­tional and unlawful.

The PPC is a public body and its work is public. Regulation­s which are designed to cloud the work of this commission in secrecy, would again, run afoul of the Constituti­on. Like any other public organizati­on, some aspects of its work at some particular stage may require some degree of confidenti­ality, but that would be more to protect the integrity of the process rather than shield its work from public scrutiny. Save for those exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, the work of the PPC should be as transparen­t and accountabl­e as possible. After all, a large part of its very mandate is to investigat­e transactio­ns because of their lack of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. It would be an ironic tragedy if it is to be accused of the very wrong it was establishe­d to investigat­e!

Yours faithfully, Mohabir Anil Nandlall, MP

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