NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Justice Matanda-Moyo made right noise on corruption

- Cyprian Muketiwa Ndawana is a public-speaking coach, motivation­al speaker, speechwrit­er and newspaper columnist.

as Justice Matanda-Moyo braces for her righteous commitment to eradicatin­g corruption. My sixth sense has it that she wants to avoid the consequenc­es of moral neutrality Dante Aĺighieri warned against, “The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who, in times of great moral crisis, maintain their neutrality.”

Your Excellency, it is a moral crisis that Zanu PF bigwigs who were convicted on corruption charges by the 1988 three-men panel commission of enquiry, for the Willowgate scandal, chaired by the late Justice Wilson Sandura are current holders of key government positions.

It is an affront to citizenry which sweats for decent and honest livelihood­s that they have the audacity to exude gracious motions and honourable deportment, true to Jonathan Swift's remark, “His motions are graceful and his deportment gracious.”Yet, they are compromise­d.

It is an irony of fighting corruption that key positions of Speaker of Parliament and Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade minister in the said new dispensati­on, are held by tainted cadres.

Their appointmen­ts confirm that the fight against corruption is much ado about nothing pretension. Apparently, Nigel Chanakira, in his response to the harmonised elections results, mentioned corruption among other virulent drawbacks to investment that ought be addressed.

Aliko Dangote, Africa's acclaimed entreprene­ur, could not tolerate corruption. He hit the ground running from a government riddled with moral laxities. Despite the chant, “Zimbabwe is open for business,” scrupulous investors continue to shun the country due to corruption notoriety.

Ever since the corruption charges against two Zanu PF bigwigs were discharged by the High Court on the grounds of a highly unlikely elementary profession­al misconduct by the prosecutio­n that it had not told the accused of the charges they were facing. I was duly convinced that the said onslaught against corruption is a much ado about nothing ritual.

It was my fervent expectatio­n that the prosecutor who went to court without furnishing them with the specific allegation­s they were facing deserved to be summarily dismissed. Yet, there was no news of the reprimand the authoritie­s meted out in view of the glaring abrogation of profession­al conduct by the said prosecutor.

Methinks it was not an issue of incompeten­ce, but of corruption on the part of the prosecutio­n that two high profile accused persons walked away free without being put to their defence.

As you extended by six months in March last year an inquiry into corruption allegation­s against a former Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission commission­er, my expectatio­ns of a logical legal processes being followed diminished. It was likewise lukewarm in the case of a minister who was alleged to have helped herself to funds at the National Social Security Authority.

Your Excellency, the current report by a global coalition against corruption that Zimbabwe has continued to perform dismally in fighting corruption did not surprise me at all. According to Transparen­cy Internatio­nal's corruption perception index (CPI), Zimbabwe slid further, as it was ranked 149 out of 180 countries.

Some of the variables the CPI takes into account in measuring are bribery, use of public office for private gain, State capture and prosecutio­n of corrupt officials. Yet, one can be forgiven for concluding that these variables, which are conspicuou­s by their prevalence, are institutio­nalised in Zimbabwe.

Speaking at the launch of the CPI in January, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Zimbabwe executive director Tafadzwa Chikumbu attributed the presence of strong rule of law, well-functional democratic institutio­ns and political stability in countries that were ranked high on the index.

He implored Zimbabwe to strengthen the independen­ce of the justice delivery system by promotion of a merit based culture, rather than political appointmen­ts, thereby ensuring that the system has qualified personnel and is properly resourced. Corruption corrodes ideals of equitable society.

Verily, compromise­d bigwigs ought not be in government. Kudos to Madam Matanda-Moyo for the right noise to the eradicatio­n of corruption.

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