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ZISCO saga-our right to know the truth
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
November 09, 2006
THE suppression of information
pertaining to the plunder and looting of Zimbabwe Iron and Steel
Company (ZISCO) should cease in the interests of our ailing economy
and for the sake of transparency, accountability and the commitment
to stamp out corruption from the public service sector.
The looting at ZISCO Steel
smacks of government’s hypocrisy on anti-corruption and the notions
of comradeship, imperialism and people first.
The hype that this fictitious,
half-hearted and piecemeal crusade by government dismisses the value
of the notion of comradeship, when the very "comrades"
amass ill gotten wealth at the cost of the entire nation.
The current anti-corruption
overtures are a mere smokescreen, political gimmick, and a marketing
bait that is meant to hoodwink the electorate and give an impression
that the ZANU-PF government is purging those that are corrupt and
is committed to rid society of the vice of corruption.
Abuse of public office
by high-ranking government officials through bribery, chicanery,
and nepotism and kickback point to a Shadow State that Zimbabwe
has become. The characterization of Zimbabwe as a Shadow State follows
eminent political scholar, William Reno’s thesis that in most parts
of post-colonial Africa, including Zimbabwe, government power is
used as a tool for self-enrichment and control of economic markets
and resources by government elites.
Transparency, equity,
accountability and integrity are values that are at the core of
the notion of good democratic governance. Since the attainment of
independence in 1980, corruption in the public sector has had far-reaching
consequences, triggering the economic woes currently being experienced
in the country. Such scandals, among many, include the Willowgate
Scandal of 1988, the NOCZIM scandal (1996), the War Victims Compensation
Fund (1999) , the Land scandal (Bhuka report of 2003) and the ZUPCO
and Agricultural Fuel scandals of 2005. Those that have looted the
national coffers must face the full wrath of the law despite their
political standing.
The Crisis in Zimbabwe
Coalition emphasizes that the government needs to uphold the Integrity
Pledge and popularize the Leadership Code if it is serious about
arresting corruption.
As part of our duty as
responsible citizens, and to avert the further collapse of our economy
including the intensification of poverty, we demand that the following
be urgently effected
-
Those linked to
the looting of public entities must be investigated and prosecuted
despite their political standing.
-
Institutions such
as the Anti-Corruption Commission and Parliament execute their
duties without undue influence
-
That government
commits itself to promoting a National Integrity Pledge that
requires all public officials to declare their economic worth
upon assumption of national duty.
Visit the Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition fact
sheet
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