The Anti- Corruption Bureau (ACB) says it is frustrating to prosecute high-profile corruption cases involving huge sums of money or politically exposed persons due to hurdles such as preliminary orders that stall progress.
Speaking to journalists in Blantyre on Friday ahead of observation of the International Anti- Corruption Day which falls on December 9, ACB director general Martha Chizuma said grand corruption cases are complex and their movement is slow as they attract numerous interlocutory applications.
Chizuma: It is not what you would expect
She mentioned cases involving businesspersons Karim Batatawala and Zameer Karim, former Inspector General of Police George Kainja and the National Oil Company of Malawi (Nocma) fuel import contracts deal case involving former minister of Energy Newton Kambala and others as examples.
Said Chizuma: “These cases are at different stages of hearing, but if you see the efforts that the bureau puts in, the amount of time that goes into these cases and the movement, it is not what you would expect.”
She said the bureau is hopeful that the rolling out of Financial Crimes Division of the High Court of Malawi will help resolve some of the challenges.
Rejected: Msisha
Chizuma’s sentiments also came a day after the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) Steven Kayuni confirmed to The Nation that he had barred senior counsel (SC) Modecai Msisha from prosecuting the case involving Vice-President Saulos Chilima.
Section 79 of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code empowers the DPP to appoint all prosecutors in the country and Chizuma said following the rejection, the bureau “has no option, but reflect on how it will move on considering the seriousness of the case”.
She said: “It’s not every day that we hear that a Vice-President is being accused of corruption charges, it’s such a serious case and it’s a national interest issue which has even attracted international attention.
“Our understanding was that we needed someone sober and mature, someone with gravitas to be able to handle such issue and that is why we settled for SC Msisha.
Barred Msisha:
Kayuni
“We are hoping that this will not affect the case as there are still a number of processes as we are waiting for the committal of the case to the Financial Crimes Court.”
Chizuma also mentioned as another example the case involving former president Bakili Muluzi, which has dragged for 17 years and some witnesses have died while others are told to testify as they have lost track of events.
She said the bureau is now trying to put together the counts and align them with the evidence it has so that it can bring the Muluzi case before the court for it to be concluded as soon as possible.
On the cement imports case involving former president Peter Mutharika, Chizuma hopes to resume investigations during the first quarter of 2023. The case stalled following a clash of actions between the bureau and the office of the DPP on some technicalities.
Reacting to the scenario, Centre for Social Accountability and Transparency executive director Willy Kambwandira expressed worry that while ACB is making good progress, other law enforcement institutions seem to be working against the bureau.
He said: “Despite the recent amendment to allow ACB to prosecute cases without the Director of Public Prosecutions’ consent, we continue to see the DPP and others, including some judges trying to frustrate the ACB efforts. The police also seem not to be proactive in corruption allegations.”
ACB inves t i g a ted 361 cases in the nine-month 2021/22 Malawi Government financial year as compared to 223 in the year 2020/2021, representing a 62 percent rise in investigated cases. The bureau has also recorded a 27 percent rise in cases whose investigations were completed.
The bureau, which has already investigated 347 cases in the current financial year running from April 2022, completed investigating 151 cases in the 2021/ 2022 fiscal year against 119 in the previous year.
However, Chizuma said more cases could not be prosecuted as the implementation period was short and that court processes are at times beyond ACB’s control.
She attributed the rise in investigated cases to strategic leadership on the law enforcement mandate of the bureau, intensified implementation of a recruitment drive that resulted in the recruitment of 26 officers (11 investigators and 15 prosecutors) as well as improved coordination between investigation and prosecution sections.
But Kambwandira said the rise could also be an indication that corruption is worsening.
In the 2020/21 fiscal year, 103 cases were prosecuted in various courts as compared to 83 in 2021/2022 and 84 in 2022/2023.
The bureau completed prosecuting 16 cases in each of the two previous fiscal years. Four cases secured a conviction in 2020/2021, three in 2021/2022, and one in 2022/2023. A total of 19 cases await judgement.
Recently, ACB has been criticised for hasty arrests before investigations are concluded, a thing which some say contributes to delays by the graft-busting body to bring cases for trial.
Examples abound from Cashgate cases that saw a flurry of arrests in 2014 to the ongoing corruption cases linked to United Kingdom-based businessperson Zuneth Sattar and other graft cases since the Tonse Alliance administration assumed power in June 2020.
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