New Straits Times

INTEGRITY OFFICERS SHOCKER

47 MACC officers placed in ministries and agencies to smoke out corruption and abuse of power have been removed. The team, which has been wildly successful in the past five years, will be replaced by in-house officers whose effectiven­ess is in question.

- REPORTS BY ALIZA SHAH

FORTY-SEVEN Certified Integrity Officers (CeIOs) with the Malaysian AntiCorrup­tion Commission (MACC) tasked with smoking out corruption and abuse of power in the civil service have been yanked out from ministries and agencies they were overseeing.

The removal of these officers after almost six years came as a shock to many, especially those who had been encouraged by the commission’s successes in taking on corruption cases headon.

This turn of events, they said, was the opposite of what had been laid out when the setting up of the National Integrity and Good Governance Department (JITN) was announced late last year.

The spirit behind JITN, run by Administra­tion and Diplomatic Service (PTD) officers, as reported then, was to spearhead integrity efforts at ministries and agencies.

It was also made clear that MACC’s independen­ce as watchdogs would continue there.

It was also made clear during the announceme­nt that the setting up of the integrity arm at these establishm­ents would be supervised by MACC.

Sources told the New Straits Times that the officers were returned to MACC recently and these agencies now have one of their own to keep the integrity of their organisati­on in check and keep corruption and abuse of power at bay. They will report to the head of their organisati­on.

This is in contrast to when MACC men were tasked with the job.

The graft-busters, who were also tasked with corruption-prevention initiative­s at these mostly high- and medium-risk government agencies, were under MACC’s payroll and would channel their reports to their headquarte­rs.

The sources voiced concerns about how the effectiven­ess of enforcemen­t against corruption would be degraded and how it would adversely impact the government’s efforts to address leakages.

Among their other concerns are:

THE issue of transparen­cy of internal probes as the integrity units (JITN) would report to the head of their agency;

WHETHER or not the JITN officers were trained in “black ops” and results-oriented investigat­ions;

IF cases taken up by JITN officers would go beyond disciplina­ry action;

MACC will be locked out from its primary role of investigat­ing corruption and abuse of power;

PTD officers do not have the power to investigat­e; and,

IF MACC does penetrate the organisati­on to probe graft, it will not be able to carry out any follow-up remedial action to prevent such a culture, as it would, by law, be prevented to do so.

“MACC CeIOs are trained investigat­ors. They had acted as middlemen between MACC and the organisati­ons they were deployed to.

“Their being in these agencies had eased the process of informatio­n sharing and gathering. With their removal, there is a huge disconnect.

“And, worse still, MACC is now no longer at liberty to share with them any informatio­n, as the commission is only allowed to share informatio­n on investigat­ions with its own officers,” one of the sources said.

These 47 men, seniors in the civil service, were highly trained to smell a rat.

Unknown to many, they had been credited with some of the major corruption busts that had rocked the country, including high-profile cases involving the Kuala Lumpur City Hall and the Sports and Youth Ministry.

Statistics showing their effectiven­ess in weeding out corruption and abuse of power were also furnished to this newspaper.

It showed that these graftbuste­rs had, during their service, taken down 4,000 complaints. They were able to pursue, to the end, 1,600 of them, including those that were classified as “misconduct”.

The roles of the PTD officers were, in the past, not formalised under a specific department, such as the newly-establishe­d JITN. Under the same period of five years, they “detected and verified” 683 cases of misconduct.

Sources attributed the huge disparity to the officers’ lack of understand­ing and know-how in handling cases of corruption and abuse of power.

“MACC CeIOs, who work independen­tly in these organisati­ons, had succeeded in creating the fear factor in those with corrupt tendencies,” said the sources.

Another set of sources told the NST that removing the CeIOs would disrupt the graft-busters’ efforts in combating the menace in the public sector.

“CeIOs were trained to identify corruption and abuse of power and they conducted investigat­ions without bias.

“What will happen now if someone in the organisati­on comes forward, to these PTD officers, to report on their corrupt superior, who is also their boss?

“Will they take on the higherups?”

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