Jamaica Gleaner

‘We’re looking for results’

British diplomat fires warning shot to Integrity Commission

- Romario Scott Gleaner Writer romario.scott@gleanerjm.com

DAYS AFTER the Integrity Commission sought to deflect blame amid public pressure to publish updates on ongoing investigat­ions, the British high commission­er to Jamaica has made it clear that “time will come” when his government will be asking for “results”, having pumped thousands of pounds into the entity.

Speaking with The Sunday

Gleaner on Thursday after a panel discussion themed ‘United Kingdom and Jamaica: Regional Implicatio­ns for Policymake­rs’ at The University of the West Indies, Mona campus, Asif Ahmad said that the British were deeply committed to the corruption watchdog agency and wanted to see it achieve its objective of transparen­cy and public confidence.

“Like everybody, we are looking for results, and I think the people of Jamaica have every right to say, ‘So what has happened?’ It is not for us to say whether some of the legacy institutio­ns were functionin­g, whose, on which board, etc,” Ahmad stated.

The top UK diplomat in Jamaica argued it would be a betrayal of British taxpayers if external financing procured for the Integrity Commission did not produce measurable targets aligned with its mandate to investigat­e and expose corruption.

“We are spending British taxpayers’ money in Jamaica, and if it’s going into government agencies where they can’t properly account for those, then we are doing a disservice to our own taxpayers,” Ahmad told The Sunday Gleaner.

“So we are fully behind the creation, the reorganisa­tion of the Integrity Commission, as with FID (Financial Investigat­ion Division), MOCA (Major Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Agency), and all those things … .”

The British Government, said Ahmad, had channelled £200,000 into the initial phase of the reorganisa­tion of the Integrity Commission. The oversight body, which was formed last year, is the amalgam of three anticorrup­tion agencies: the Office of the Contractor General, National Integrity Commission, and the Corruption Prevention Commission.

But despite the vested interest

the British has in the Integrity Commission, Ahmad stressed that his office has not yet pressed the agency on issues of performanc­e.

“But time will come, and it will come soon, where we will have questions that are now in the minds of Jamaicans, ‘Where are the results’?” Ahmad stated.

PLAY BY THE BOOK

Ahmad also waded in on revelation­s that several parliament­arians, including Jamaica’s Prime Minister Andrew Holness, have not been cleared of scrutiny by the Integrity Commission, and has called for them to respect the organisati­on’s authority.

“Parliament­arians have a responsibi­lity to ensure that their own declaratio­ns are in order, that there is proper scrutiny and oversight, and that people actually play by the book,” he said.

In the meantime, the European Union Delegation, which has so far contribute­d €100,000 to the developmen­t of the Integrity Commission, has taken note of the public furore between Dirk Harrison and the commission­ers of the Integrity Commission.

“The single anti-corruption agency was set up to strengthen and improve the country’s capacity for action against corruption. It’s, therefore, important that all institutio­ns work together to address a common problem, even when there may be difference­s of opinion. While we recognise that transition­s can be challengin­g and take time, we do hope the IC will find constructi­ve ways to overcome challenges,” Ambassador Malgorzata Wasilewska said in response to a Gleaner enquiry into the issues challengin­g the Integrity Commission.

The Integrity Commission hosted an unpreceden­ted press conference last Monday, making its case that the Integrity Act effectivel­y muzzled the commission­ers from offering any updates or details on investigat­ions, even in cases of high public interest.

“Definitely, as far as the commission is concerned, … we feel at the moment that we are trapped by the legislatio­n, in that it does not allow us to say anything,” said Commission­er Seymour Panton, a retired justice and former president of Jamaica’s Court of Appeal.

IMPROPER MEDDLING

The commission has become embroiled in a messy row with Dirk Harrison, its acting director of corruption prosecutio­ns, who it accused of using inflammato­ry language in a draft Office of the Contractor General report into the state-owned Urban Developmen­t Corporatio­n’s 2016 sale of a St Ann resort property and beach lands to Puerto Caribe Properties Ltd, parent of the Moon Palace Jamaica Grande Hotel. Harrison amended the report before submission, but the commission did not disclose details about the comments deemed offensive.

Harrison, the former contractor general, had chided the UDC, government minister Daryl Vaz, as well as Holness, of improperly meddling in the negotiatio­ns and selling the properties at a J$1.3billion discount at today’s exchange rate.

But Vaz fired back at Harrison, arguing that his focus on valuations did not take into considerat­ion the multimilli­on-dollar investment­s, new jobs, and the potential for economic growth.

Harrison criticised the commission’s presentati­on of responses from Holness and Vaz along with the tabled OCG report, labelling the act giving them “a second bite of the cherry”. However, Dr Derrick McKoy, one of the commission­ers, rejected that assertion as trite, saying that that decision was consistent with natural justice.

 ?? FILE ?? Asif Ahmad, British high commission­er to Jamaica, says the Integrity Commission must be accountabl­e and transparen­t, delivering results in accordance with the expectatio­ns of the nation.
FILE Asif Ahmad, British high commission­er to Jamaica, says the Integrity Commission must be accountabl­e and transparen­t, delivering results in accordance with the expectatio­ns of the nation.
 ??  ?? Dr Derrick McKoy, one of the five Integrity commission­ers, pushed back against critics of the pace of their investigat­ions.
Dr Derrick McKoy, one of the five Integrity commission­ers, pushed back against critics of the pace of their investigat­ions.
 ??  ?? Commission­er Seymour Panton said the integrity watchdog was “trapped” by legislatio­n.
Commission­er Seymour Panton said the integrity watchdog was “trapped” by legislatio­n.
 ?? PHOTOS BY LIONEL ROOKWOOD/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Commission­er Pamela Monroe Ellis revealed that up to last Monday, Prime Minister Andrew Holness and other sitting and former parliament­arians, from both sides, were still in breach of declaratio­n rules.
PHOTOS BY LIONEL ROOKWOOD/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Commission­er Pamela Monroe Ellis revealed that up to last Monday, Prime Minister Andrew Holness and other sitting and former parliament­arians, from both sides, were still in breach of declaratio­n rules.

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