NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Say no to corruption

- Viset

ON December 9, 2021, Vendors Initiative for Social and Economic Transforma­tion (Viset) joined the rest of the world in marking Internatio­nal Anti-Corruption Day which was running under the theme Your Right, Your Role: Say No To Corruption.

This day has been celebrated annually since 2003 when the United Nations Convention against Corruption was passed with the aim of raising public awareness on the detrimenta­l effects of corruption.

Corruption is now a societal ill globally that brings with it increased inequality and having a derailing influence on attainment of sustainabl­e developmen­t goals.

The COVID-19 pandemic, being a global health emergency, caught many government­s flat-footed and their responses in as far as purchasing of medical supplies was concerned, saw briefcase companies fronted by cronies of government officials being awarded tenders to supply goods at over inflated prices.

In Zimbabwe, one of such instances claimed the scalp of the then Health and Child Welfare minister. It is regrettabl­e, however, that the corruption did not end there, but continued in the social protection interventi­on where relief funds for the vulnerable run through what was termed the harmonised cash transfer system that saw millions of dollars looted as revealed by the Office of the AuditorGen­eral in August 2021.

With new strains of COVID-19 continuing to manifest, fears are real that the grounds for corruption remain fertile should no firm action be taken against those found in the wrong.

The Constituti­on establishe­d a body to fight corruption called the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Committee (Zacc).

However, to date, it has not seen any meaningful prosecutio­ns on acts of corruption. It is Viset’s contention that if there is to be a firm commitment to fighting corruption, then there must be full autonomy granted to bodies such as Zacc and the National Prosecutin­g Authority.

If corruption is continuall­y allowed to flourish unchecked, it leads to the breakdown of social services as public funds will be diverted from providing health, education and social welfare for citizens, to the hands of the connected few.

It is not lost on us that there are also unsavoury corrupt practices in the private sector such as tax evasion and externalis­ation through transfer pricing and we call this out unreserved­ly.

At local government level, we continue to witness the detrimenta­l effects of corruption on service delivery, as seen in the case of Harare City Council, where there are only two substantiv­e directors running council, with the others being suspended on various allegation­s of corruption.

The societal scourge of corruption also manifests itself in the everyday life of a vendor as one has to pay extra costs for almost everything, from being coerced to pay bribes for market allocation­s, to sometimes having to bribe policing authoritie­s in order to evade arrests.

It thus becomes incumbent upon government to ensure there are measures to swiftly prosecute acts of corruption and put in safeguards such as legislatio­n of measures such as the Whistleblo­wers Act if this fight is to be won.

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