The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Senior officials pledge to fight corruption

- Rumbidzayi Zinyuke and Primrose Zimano

IN a move meant to bolster transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, more than 100 Government officials yesterday signed Integrity Pledges to reaffirm their commitment to fight corruption as a central element in achieving the nation’s Vision 2030 goals.

The signing ceremony, held in Harare and overseen by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC), saw chief directors and directors from various Ministries pledge to play a role in preventing and fighting corruption.

Integrity Pledges are social contracts through which individual­s affirm their commitment to act against corruption.

Individual­s are expected to conduct themselves honestly and openly in all aspects, abiding by the law and always espousing ethical principles.

Public Service Commission Secretary Dr Tsitsi Choruma, in a speech read on her behalf by General Manager-Talent Management, Ms Grace Machakaire, said chief directors and directors had been chosen to lead the fight against corruption from the front.

“The Anti-Corruption Strategy committee mooted the idea of the integrity pledge to foreground the eradicatio­n of corruption in all sectors of the economy. We were mindful of the critical need to rid the Public Service of all forms of malfeasanc­e since its members are at the forefront of delivering services to citizens and therefore exposed to the vice.

“We are enjoined to sign the Integrity Pledge because the Government of Zimbabwe declared zero tolerance to corruption which can only be attained by taking bold behavioura­l and symbolic steps such as we are taking today,” she said.

The fight against corruption is a critical pillar of Zimbabwe’s Vision 2030, which aims to transform the nation into an upper middle-income society.

Experts believe that by rooting out corruption, Government can create a more favourable environmen­t for investment, economic growth, and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Dr Choruma said the first step in the process of cascading the Integrity Pledge would be the establishm­ent of Integrity Committees in each Ministry, which would spearhead the prevention of corruption and related maladminis­tration within their respective parastatal­s, State-owned enterprise­s, Government department­s, Ministries and agencies.

ZACC commission­er Ndakaripa Hungwe said the integrity pledges were not a panacea to corruption, but a starting point in ensuring behavioura­l change.

“We realised that we cannot fight corruption on our own as ZACC, but we needed to ensure that institutio­ns are also part of that fight. We wanted to see how we could come up with programmes to plug corruption and close all those loopholes allowing people to engage in corrupt practices.

“Integrity Pledges become one of the tools to fight corruption, it’s a continuous programme when you are dealing with corruption. The prevention aspect is what we are concentrat­ing on because we are saying we cannot keep arresting people because that is not a deterrent.

“The real deterrent is for a person to sign an integrity pledge, which is a social contract with themselves to say I want to do things differentl­y, to serve my country, serve my people and meet the goals of the NDS1 to make sure that our country is a developed country,” she said.

Ms Hungwe said corruption should not continue to be a drawback in the achievemen­t of national developmen­t goals and called upon all citizens to actively avoid corruption for a better Zimbabwe for future generation­s.

To facilitate the achievemen­t of zero tolerance to corruption, Integrity Pledges have been seen as one of the key measures to fight corruption through promotion of high standards of ethical behaviour and good corporate governance as it heavily relies on voluntary individual vows.

Meanwhile, ZACC has partnered universiti­es in the signing of integrity pledges for the anti-corruption national strategy as the fight against corruption intensifie­s.

◆ Full story on www.herald.co.zw

 ?? - Picture: Memory Mangombe ?? Chief Director in the Ministry of Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services Mr Jonathan Gandari (right) is congratula­ted by Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission commission­er for legal affairs Ms Jessie Majome after signing the integrity pledge against corruption at Management Training Bureau in Harare yesterday.
- Picture: Memory Mangombe Chief Director in the Ministry of Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services Mr Jonathan Gandari (right) is congratula­ted by Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission commission­er for legal affairs Ms Jessie Majome after signing the integrity pledge against corruption at Management Training Bureau in Harare yesterday.

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