Stabroek News Sunday

Gov’t, opposition should work together to begin process to tackle corruption – Article 13

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Civil society group Article 13 has issued a call for the government and opposition to commence the process of restoring the guardrails and institutio­nal framework designed to prevent corruption.

The group’s call comes on the heels of Internatio­nal Anti-Corruption Day, which was observed last Thursday.

It implored the leaders to at least take the steps to commence the process of tackling the scourge of corruption in Guyana.

A statement from Article 13 pointed out that its call is neither political nor academic, while stressing that corruption has grave consequenc­es.

“It is a distortion and misallocat­ion of human and economic resources, is seen as a species of tax by corrupt businesspe­rsons, reduces government revenue and therefore physical and social expenditur­e, and perpetuate­s and exacerbate­s a culture of corruption which then becomes more difficult to contain, let alone reverse. In the final analysis, it is the poor who suffer, unable to take the opportunit­ies which the expanding economy offers,” the statement read.

Referencin­g the Anti-Corruption Day statement by US Ambassador to Guyana Sarah-Ann Lynch, in which she said that government should take a strong stance on corruption as a demonstrat­ion of its commitment to transparen­t institutio­ns, the civil society body added that the role of institutio­ns is imperative to the fight. It explained that unless Guyana establishe­s, appoints, finances, defends

and hold responsibl­e those institutio­ns, then it will be like “whistling in the wind.”

The body said it is satisfied that the country has enough constituti­onal and statutory mechanisms on the record to tackle corruption. It highlighte­d agencies, such as the Office of the Auditor General, and the Procuremen­t Commission and the Procuremen­t Commission Tribunal, as institutio­ns on the fore of tackling corruption.

“The country’s financial rules are set out in the Financial Administra­tion Act and the Fiscal Management and Accountabi­lity Act and related subsidiary legislatio­n. Then there is the Anti-Money Laundering Act and the Integrity Commission Act. In the National Assembly, there are the Public Accounts Committee and the Committee of Supplies. And apart from the Procuremen­t Commission, there is a tiered structure of Tender Boards while in terms of fairness and with the object of bringing accountabi­lity to elections, there are campaign finance requiremen­ts under the Representa­tion of the People Act. Just for good measure, our tax laws provide for the exchange of informatio­n between the authoritie­s, including the USA and Guyana,” it pointed out.

However, it noted that the stark reality is that many of those institutio­ns and instrument­s are either non-functional or cannot operate independen­tly, competentl­y and effectivel­y.

They called on President Irfaan Ali to commence the process of tackling corruption immediatel­y and by looking at the functionin­g of those same institutio­ns and the implementa­tion of the requisite laws.

Alluding to President’s Ali speech to US President Joe Biden’s virtual Summit for Democracy, Article 13 noted the non-acknowledg­ement of the significan­ce of Internatio­nal Anti-corruption Day. It has also taken note of the President’s commitment to strengthen­ing the foundation­s and pillars of democracy, respect for human and political rights and freedom of expression, and adherence to the rule of law.

It reminded that the PPP/C does not enjoy a favourable record when it comes to corruption, while pointing to Guyana’s rankings during PPP/C rule on the Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Corruption Perception Index (CPI). However, it did note the improved ranking under the APNU+AFC despite some allegation­s of corruption. When the PPP/C left office in 2015, after 23 years in government, Guyana had a CPI score of 29 and ranked at 119 and when the party took office, again, in 2020 the country had a score of 41 and ranked 83.

It commended the police for charging the persons that recently offered a bribe to drop an investigat­ion and also said it is keeping a close eye on the investigat­ion of alleged corruption relating to the former Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Amerindian Affairs.

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