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ZIMBABWE: Feature on corruption fears
IRIN News
October 15, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=37232
HARARE - In
a further blow to business confidence, Zimbabwe was recently ranked
among the world's most corrupt countries by the anti-corruption
watchdog, Transparency International (TI).
In a damning
report, TI's Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) for 2003 ranked
Zimbabwe at 106 out of 133 countries sampled. In Southern Africa
it stood as second-worst after Angola. The TI index is determined
by the perceptions of business people who are directly doing business
with the sampled countries or are potential investors.
Commenting on
the latest index, the local chapter of the international body, Transparency
International Zimbabwe (TI-Z), said the perceptions of graft were
the result of a number of factors.
"Matters
relating to political and civic participation, media operating environment,
access to information, judicial independence - which is crucial
to the enforcement of all rights and particularly property rights
- all play a major role in forming a perception about the state
of fair play, or lack of it, in Zimbabwe," said a TI-Z statement.
Zimbabwe President
Robert Mugabe and his key lieutenants were last year slapped with
travel restrictions and had their offshore accounts frozen by the
United States and the European Union over alleged human rights excesses,
a disorderly and violent land redistribution programme, and electoral
fraud.
The country
is also under suspension from the councils of the Commonwealth after
the organisation accused the government of rigging the 2002 presidential
election.
Zimbabwe's rating
on the CPI has steadily worsened over the years. The country was
ranked 43 in 1998 and moved two places down two years later, before
plummeting to 71 in 2002. The slump indicated in this year's CPI
represents the country's sharpest fall yet.
Analysts say
the current rating will have a drastic impact on the economy, which
is already burdened with company closures and downsizing, a runaway
inflation rate predicted to hit 600 percent before the end of the
year, lack of foreign currency and shortages of even basic commodities.
"The implications
[of the latest CPI ratings] are dire for the country," Andrew
Nongogo, TI-Z's executive director, told IRIN. "It should be
understood right from the start that Transparency International's
index is based on perceptions of business people. As a result, there
will be a big knock on investor confidence, and following from that
will be reduced investment levels in the country, because business
people want to put their money where they are sure it will yield
results."
He cited the
fast-track land allocation programme, which started in 2000, as
one of the reasons why perceptions were so negative, saying the
government had shown the world it had no respect for private property
rights. Under the reforms, criticised for being lawless and politically
manipulated, about 4,000 commercial white farmers were forced off
their estates to make way for thousands of land-hungry black Zimbabweans.
Nongogo noted
that corruption was rampant in both the private and public sectors,
but that perceptions about graft mostly related to how public office
was used for personal enrichment. "The knock-on effect is larger
in the public sector. Lost income has to be recovered somehow, and
the tendency is to pass the buck over to the taxpayer. The higher
the level of corruption, the greater the need to increase taxes.
This is unlike in the private sector, where the prejudice is mostly
limited to the corporate establishment," he said.
An economic
analyst, speaking on condition of anonymity, told IRIN: "Whereas
in the private sector culprits can be dealt with in a more or less
transparent manner, the story is different in the public domain.
Considering that most of the culprits in the latter sector are influential
figures with political clout, the police's powers tend to be limited."
He cited the
case of police inaction when formerly white-owned farms were illegally
invaded, especially when top government officials were allegedly
involved in occupying the land and seizing farm equipment.
Two government-sanctioned
land audits have found that some government ministers, senior police
officers, provincial governors and President Robert Mugabe's own
relatives have acquired more than one farm, contrary to stated government
policy, in the land redistribution exercise. Although Mugabe has
publicly ordered the culprits to relinquish the extra farms, in
some cases his call has reportedly not been heeded.
Critics charge
that the government lacks the will to stem corruption. An anti-corruption
commission is provided for by section 108A of the constitution,
but the relevant government authorities have been accused of dragging
their feet in establishing a law that would regulate the commission.
In March, a
former cabinet minister and influential ruling ZANU-PF legislator,
Eddison Zvobgo, introduced a parliamentary motion for the establishment
of the commission. Despite its backing by Mugabe and Finance Minister
Herbert Murerwa, no debate has yet taken place on the motion.
"There
is need to establish an anti-corruption commission as a matter of
urgency. The commission would be used to fight corruption, abuse
of power, theft and misappropriation, and other improprieties in
both the public and private sectors," said Nongogo.
He added that
the commission should carry out investigations on its own initiative.
"In addition, there is need for the commission to have a high
degree of independence. Commissioners need not be appointed by the
president, as is the case with most commissions.
"The commission
should report to parliament and measures ought to be put in place
to make sure that the attorney-general's office does not interfere
with its operations," Nongogo said. He also recommended that
the commission should have its own vote in the national budget,
as a way of ensuring its independence.
In addition
to setting up a commission, TI-Z has called for a "whistleblower's"
fund. "The rationale of setting up the fund is to alleviate
the fear of blowing the whistle. This is the fear of recrimination,
loss of one's job and loss of income," said the organisation.
The government
and ZANU-PF have, however, dismissed TI's report, saying the organisation
was working closely with Britain and the United States to tarnish
the image of the country.
Phillip Chiyangwa,
former head of an anti-corruption taskforce working under the government-
controlled National Economic Consultative Forum, and a ZANU-PF member
of parliament, questioned how TI had come up with its rankings.
"Transparency
International's ratings should be dismissed with the contempt they
deserve. How do they rate the countries they would have sampled?
Is it not a mere case of perception, and if it is so, who is barred
from forming perceptions? Obviously, the people who conducted the
survey have never been to Zimbabwe," said Chiyangwa.
"Zimbabweans
are more respectful of the law than most of the countries that were
surveyed by Transparency International, and one tends to wonder
why we should continue being bastardised by partisan organisations
such as TI," he noted, adding that TI-Z put too much emphasis
on public corruption, ignoring sleaze in the private sector.
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