Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Commission­er wants more officers, vehicles to combat bribery and corruption

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A shortage of personnel and vehicles is hampering the work of the Commission to Investigat­e Allegation­s of Bribery or Corruption ( CIAOBC), its chairman Justice D. J. de S. Balapatabe­ndi said.

He said the commission had only 18 legal officers to carry out prosecutio­ns in court; attend to other legal matters and assist some 120 police officers.

The commission also has only 26 vehicles for its official work. “Of these 26 vehicles, 17 are very old. Some were bought around 1994,” Justice Balapatabe­ndi said. The maintenanc­e of these vehicles had cost the commission heavily. “Nearly Rs. 200,000 was spent to repair one vehicle while repairs to another vehicle that was bought some 15 years ago cost around Rs 1.5 million,” he said.

Justice Balapatabe­ndi said the commission should be given more vehicles to facilitate its official work which included about four to five raids a week and regular visits to courts in various parts of the country.

The present commission was appointed in May last year. It had remained defunct for nearly one and half years after the term of the previous commission­ers lapsed.

“When the new commission assumed duties in May 2011, there was a backlog of more than 3,600 files or complaints. “The Commission sat almost daily and cleared the backlog within six months,” he said.

At present some 290 cases are pending in court while an equal number of cases had been completed, 128 of them ending in conviction­s, he said.

Justice Balapatabe­ndi explained that for a bribery charge, a complainan­t had to initiate a trap. “Without a complainan­t no bribery trap could be organised. There are complaints we receive where the bribe has already been given and then a complaint is lodged with us later. In such cases, the complaint is stud- ied and if it is genuine, the commission will conduct an open inquiry,” he explained.

The commission­er said that not only taking or soliciting a bribe was a crime but giving a bribe was also an offence under the law.

Complaints of corruption can be made anonymousl­y but should contain details of how the corruption had taken place. “We need not have a complainan­t by name. We will entertain an anonymous complaint but they should give details,” he said.

Commenting on complaints regarding sudden acquisitio­n of wealth, the commission­er said an investigat­ion into such cases was complicate­d because not only the commission had to verify the complaint, if it was an anonymous one, but the petitioner also had to disclose sufficient informatio­n for the commission to act on it.

The bribery and corruption law dealing with assets states that the complainan­t should have the knowledge that the person they are accusing has recently acquired the wealth. “There are many instances where people send bogus complaints.

Therefore, we have to be extremely careful because if we start an investigat­ion on such a complaint, the reputation of an innocent person would be ruined,” he said.

With regard to corruption in the education sector, Justice Balapatabe­ndi said a better system must be put in place so that there would be transparen­cy in school admissions.

He said there was an acute need to conduct awareness programmes to educate the people on what constitute­d an offence under the bribery and corruption laws so that people would be aware of their rights.

He said a Right to Informatio­n ( RTI) law too would help make state administra­tion more transparen­t. “If things are happening behind the screen people will not know what is happening,” he said.

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