Stabroek News

Jamaica Integrity Commission head under fire

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(Jamaica Gleaner) Integrity Commission (IC) Executive Director Greg Christie has strongly rejected calls for his resignatio­n, declaring that he has been unbiased in his duties over the last three years at the anticorrup­tion agency.

The commission’s publishing of a ruling exoneratin­g Prime Minister Andrew Holness two days after the February 14 tabling of a report referring him for a corruption probe sparked a firestorm about procedure, law, and conspiracy.

“I have carried out my job obligation­s faithfully and diligently, and above all, with scrupulous integrity. I have done nothing wrong,” Christie said in a Gleaner interview Sunday.

“I have faithfully complied with the instructio­ns and directives of the chairman and commission­ers, to whom I report, inclusive of instructio­ns that are associated with the issues that are now in the public domain,” the anti-corruption campaigner added.

Government senators have called for the resignatio­n of Christie or that the commission­ers ask him to quit.

“The unjust treatment of the recently tabled Integrity Commission report and belated publicatio­n of the related ruling has been presided over by its executive director,” the senators said in a statement issued last Friday.

The report, which was published by the clerk to the Houses of Parliament on February 15, indicated that Holness may have influenced the award of contracts to Robert Garvin, a former employee, business partner, and someone he knew for more than 20 years.

Director of Investigat­ions Kevon Stephenson had referred the report, dated October 2022, implicatin­g Holness in an alleged conflict of interest to Director of Corruption Prosecutio­n Keisha PrinceKame­ka for a ruling.

However, the February 16 release by the commission of the January 12 PrinceKame­ka decision, which absolved Holness of any criminal action, triggered an avalanche of criticism from several non-government­al and private-sector groups.

Some claimed that the delay in publishing the ruling brought the office of the prime minister into disrepute and tarnished Jamaica’s standing.

Turning to scathing criticism about his tweets, Christie said that he has posted anti-corruption content from as far back as May 2010.

“I try to bring an understand­ing to the public about the standards of governance, integrity, and accountabi­lity. I have tweeted every day from the day I have started over 13 years ago,” said Christie.

He said that the narrative in the public domain was “a disingenuo­us characteri­sation of what has taken place”.

According to Christie, part of the IC’s mandate is public education on anti-corruption best practices.

“Our job is to ensure that Jamaica has the highest standards of integrity and accountabi­lity in the administra­tion of public functions in this country.

“That’s our job, and I am the ED, so there is nothing inconsiste­nt with what I am doing. It’s within the commission’s mandate,” he argued.

Christie directed The Gleaner to the commission’s and his personal Twitter pages.

He made it clear that he has not made “one single comment” on the report or ruling by the commission.

A review of the IC’s Twitter page, according to Christie, will show that once an investigat­ion report is tabled in Parliament and there are media reports on the issue, the IC retweets the stories.

“This investigat­ion report, we tweeted the Gleaner story, the Observer stories, and we also tweeted the stories from The Gleaner, Nationwide, and the Observer when the prime minister challenged the report,” he said.

“Nobody has mentioned that. The commission made no comment. It just merely retweeted the reports.”

He said that the commission also tweeted the stories from several media houses on the ruling.

In its statement last Thursday, the IC’s five commission­ers said they had not been guilty of any procedural misstep.

The commission­ers declared that “the ruling of the director of corruption prosecutio­n in a matter does not change the content of the report of the director of investigat­ion. They are independen­t in their operations”.

“We have been neutral, we have been balanced, and we have been unbiased,” Christie said.

The executive director said that he has no control over the timing of the publicatio­ns as he acts on the instructio­ns of the commission, a claim that was corroborat­ed by the commission­ers last Friday.

 ?? ?? Greg Christie, executive director of the Integrity Commission.
Greg Christie, executive director of the Integrity Commission.

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