The Zimbabwe Independent

Antidote for corruption in Zim

- Taisa Tshuma SOCIAL COMMENTATO­R Tshuma is an entreprene­ur and social commentato­r from Bulawayo. A former retail banking profession­al. Twitter @TaisaPT

AN antidote is something created to counteract a poison or an unpleasant situation.

ere is consensus that corruption is a poison to the economy and an unpleasant state of existence that the whole country is in.

Zimbabwe, along with Honduras, Iraq and Cambodia, ranks 157th out of 180 countries in the 2021 Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Corruption Perception­s Index, where a high ranking correspond­s to a perception of high corruption in the public sector.

By any measure, this is a precarious and rather unflatteri­ng position for any country to be in.

e circumstan­ces that have put Zimbabwe in this position are varied in pattern but are all rooted in the embattled political discourse.

e two main causes of corruption are greed and incapacita­tion.

At the base of the economic ecosystem is the incapacita­ted. What starts off as a survival need, fast becomes a lifestyle sustaining pattern.

Political hegemony, bureaucrat­ic public service systems and a culture that emphasises authority over servanthoo­d means roadblocks to process can arise at any point and time.…is inevitably gives birth to bribery and corruption opportunit­ies in an attempt to bypass these roadblocks to process.

A good example of this is the passport fiasco at the Home Affairs department of registry. …e whole of Matabelela­nd South province has one passport applicatio­n office that accepts only 25 applicatio­ns per day.

is is a province with the highest push and pull factors that require a passport. …e high demand for the travel document and its constricte­d supply is a created corruption opportunit­y, not only at the passport office but downstream, like border crossing points.

Citizens are forced to pay bribes to border control officials to facilitate movement without a passport. It then extends to neighbouri­ng countries which receive and host undocument­ed immigrants. All this occurs because roadblocks to the process of acquiring a passport have been created.

Despite a government subsidy on the cost of a passport, it remains too high for most citizens who need the document to do cross border hand to mouth type of business.

Most of the corruption in Zimbabwe, that the larger portion of the population is involved in, started as a consequenc­e of push factors and opportunit­y.

People are pushed into corrupt activities to make a living. Opportunit­ies to be corrupt are dangled by out-dated and overly bureaucrat­ic systems.

A police officer, who risks their job and pension benefits for a ZAR50 (US$3,11) bribe is not necessaril­y greedy but simply desperate to make ends meet. It is a question of survival that develops into a culture because money is sweet and deceptive. Perhaps out of compassion, such corruption incidents are hardly taken further.

Unless it is a moral conviction, it is very difficult to voluntaril­y discontinu­e corrupt gains yet it is very easy to be sucked in and trapped into a corrupt lifestyle wherever systems are especially weak, manual, archaic and present an opportunit­y to be corrupt.

At the top of the economic ecosystem, however, corruption is caused by greed and is kept alive by cronyism and impunity. Since the entire justice delivery system reports in some fashion to a political office, politician­s often get away with corruption.

Beyond that, since politician­s have the power to influence investigat­ions and prosecutio­n, the so-called kingmakers call in for protection and politician­s oblige. …is widens the circle of corruption, making it even more complex. Soon everybody has dirt on someone and the outcome is that nobody dares to throw stones, because they too live in a glass house. …is becomes a trap.

Corruption is difficult to prove and secure conviction­s because of how the criminal justice system works.

Everyone is presumed innocent until proven guilty. …is is despite the fact that books may not be balanced, the prosecutio­n must establish beyond doubt, culpabilit­y, the method and illegality of the processes used to throw the books out of balance.

Types of corruption are many and all of them form part of the definition of the word corruption for example embezzleme­nt. Many people in the diaspora have been victims of embezzleme­nt, usually by close friends and family, so often donot get reported to law enforcemen­t.

e most common type of corruption in Zimbabwe is bribery. …is is basically the dishonest bypassing of statutory or procedural processes where the enforcemen­t authority is incentivis­ed usually with money to turn a blind eye.

e most costly type of corruption in Zimbabwe, however, is political abuse of power. Since the ruling party operates the one centre of power concept, anyone with allegiance to the ruling party can name drop and the ripple effect is presumed to cascade all the way to the president.

In 2020, Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (Zacc) chairperso­n Justice Loice Matanda-Moyo while giving a lecture at the Zimbabwe National Defence University said 77 high profile corruption cases, with a potential prejudice of US$500 million, are being investigat­ed by Zacc as it deepened its fight against the vice. …e results have not been impressive.

Former president Robert Mugabe and several ruling party officials previously made allegation­s that a colossal US$15 billion worth of diamonds vanished without a trace from the Marange fields. A claim that doesnot stand up to scrutiny unless there is more than what we know.

As far back as the 1980s, high profile cases of corruption have been reported in Zimbabwe, among them are the:

•1986.

National Railways Housing Scandal in

•the

Ziscosteel blast Furnace Scandal and

US$100 million Air Zimbabwe Fokker

Plane Scandal in 1987

Willowgate scandal in 1988 was fol•lowed

by another vehicle scandal the very next year, involving the procuremen­t of Santana patrol cars for the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP).

In the 1990s, the corruption pandemic got worse with social programmes being affected with the War Victims Compensati­on Scandal, Grain Marketing Board Grain Scandal and the VIP Housing Scandal between 1994 to 1996.

e Harare City Council Refuse Tender Scandal was the prominent local authority case in 1998.

Recent high profile cases

Of late there are questions around the Command Agricultur­e programme and in the Covid-19 era, the Drax Internatio­nal LLC, headquarte­red in the United Arab Emirates, for allegedly selling medical supplies to the government at inflated prices took centre stage.

en minister of health Obadiah Moyo was eventually relieved of his duties. Moyo allegedly awarded a multimilli­on dollar tender to Drax Internatio­nal LLC, which was concluded without the consent of the Procuremen­t Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe. He was arrested and released on bail and was recently spotted at a state function sitting, among other, dignitarie­s in Bulawayo as he remains a member of the ruling Zanu PF party.

e Samuel Undenge conviction is a rare case of note involving a ruling party member. Undenge, who was said to be aligned to a rival faction in Zanu PF, was expelled and arrested on charges of corruption for awarding, during his tenure as Minister of Energy and Power Developmen­t, a US$12 650 public relations contract to a private company, Fruitful Communicat­ions, without due tender processes. Undenge, also a former Member of Parliament for Chimaniman­i East constituen­cy, was convicted and sentenced to serve two-and-a-half years in prison. His case and sentence went on appeal citing political victimisat­ion but was later released from jail through a presidenti­al pardon.

Henrietta Rushwaya was intercepte­d at the internatio­nal airport in Harare by security agents, carrying some 6kg of gold in her handbag en route to Dubai. Rushwaya is the president of the Zimbabwe Miners Federation and a licenced gold buyer with strong ruling party and government links.

Despite what appears to be an impressive body of research and literature on corruption, there remains no results producing work on the ground.

Going forward

All the recommende­d scientific ways to combat corruption must be deployed. In Zimbabwe, where the vice is endemic and political, a politicall­y initiated antidote type of strategy is needed.

e corruption antidote for Zimbabwe is a series of immunity and leave from prosecutio­n guarantees by the Executive and Parliament targeted at specific sectors to enable the effective deployment of anticorrup­tion strategies.

An executive immunity programme will allow those who find themselves trapped in the corruption web to get out and start on a clean slate.

e economic dysfunctio­n that prevailed in Zimbabwe for the past few decades has soiled everyone in some way or the other, and this scenario makes it difficult for individual­s to take a principled stand against corruption. Guarantees that nothing from the past can just pop up on anti-corruption staff will encourage diligence and dedication to duty.

e executive immunity must be extended to the entire anti-corruption staff and the prosecutio­n systems that have been appointed to deal with corruption.

e idea is to morally capacitate and empower the anti-corruption bodies to be effective and not hamstrung by the well documented history of systemic economic failures.

ese anti-corruption bodies presumably employ the cleaner members of society anyway. Exempting them from being answerable to any possible past legacy misgivings is a small price to pay for what they can potentiall­y do to fight corruption.

To back this up would be the recruitmen­t of foreign staff from better ranked countries on the corruption index.

If the government of Zimbabwe is sincere about fighting corruption they certainly need to take more drastic steps. …is sluggish approach is not doing the country any good.

 ?? ?? Corruption is a poison to the economy and an unpleasant state of existence that the whole country is in.
Corruption is a poison to the economy and an unpleasant state of existence that the whole country is in.
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