Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Govt. to set up new institutio­n on social media

Except for a very few state department­s like the three armed forces and the police, the rest do not maintain their registers of personal assets of its staff members

- BY YOHAN PERERA

The government is discussing setting up an institutio­n to monitor social media usage, Minister of Digital Infrastruc­ture Technology Harin Fernando said yesterday.

A top official of the Commission to Investigat­e Allegation­s of Bribery or Corruption said except for a very few state department­s like the three armed forces and the police, the rest do not maintain their registers of personal assets of its staff members.

Under the Declaratio­n of Assets and Liabilitie­s Act all government employees in Staff Grade and above as well as all government politician­s should declare their assets and liabilitie­s annually to the heads of their department­s or their superiors. State officials are required to fill the form, ‘Declaratio­n of Assets and Liabilitie­s’, with actual details of their present movable and immovable assets, bank accounts and funds of every year and hand it over to their respective department head, prior to March of the following year.

Although this was the usual practice, a recent survey carried out by the Commission had disclosed that many government institutio­ns were not adhering to this and not maintainin­g their registries of staff asset details, as per the legal requiremen­t.

This came into light when the Commission initiated a spree of legal action against such errant department heads since 2016. Although the act was pretty much active previously, the Commission (which has the sole authority to check on that) did not frequently file law suits against such errant officials, before. The official said another main reason that caused to amend the act was the poor amount of fines being imposed on the errant officials. The maximum fine for a state official who fails to declare his assets and liabilitie­s is only Rs.1, 000 and it is not surprising how they take this for granted. Compared to the developed countries, this fine is considered significan­tly low and the laws should be amended to increase the fine at least up to Rs.100, 000, he said. In a bid to address this issue, the Bribery Commission has taken the preliminar­y steps to amend the act, where a special discussion was held yesterday in Colombo with the participat­ion of a number of key government institutio­ns as Attorney General’s Department, Legal Draftsman, Elections Commission, Auditor General’s Department, Police Department as well as foreign bodies like United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). A good response had been received from all the participan­ts at the meeting and the Bribery Commission is to sit down for further talks with the Legal Draftsman in the coming days, on the new proposals for the amendment of the act.

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