the Government to evaluate the work of the Task Force on Corruption considering the huge amount of money that is paid to lawyers on the investigative wing.
TIZ president, Reuben Lifuka said in an interview in Lusaka that if an evaluation process was undertaken, the Government would draw up lessons on how best to set up the financial intelligence unit under the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC).[quote]
Justice Deputy Minister, Todd Chilembo last week told Parliament that the Government had this year budgeted US$720,000 for legal fees for local lawyers on the task force.
“While we appreciate that fighting corruption is expensive, the results should justify these huge expenses. “We want to urge the Government to conduct a thorough evaluation of using a task force to investigate and prosecute high-profile corruption cases and use these lessons as it embarks upon setting up the serious frauds unit or the financial intelligence unit,” Mr Lifuka said.
He said the TIZ had for some time been concerned with the design of the task force and its subsequent operations especially in terms of securing the services of private legal practitioners.
He said one of the reasons advanced for setting up the task force was that experts from the different law enforcement agencies would be pooled together and, thus, ensure success in the investigation and prosecution of high-profile cases. “The engagement of private legal practitioners is a clear indication that the task force on its own lacks the necessary technical capacity. The payment of $700,000 each year would not be necessary if Government had concentrated on developing the institutional and technical capacity of the ACC.
“This is not to say we do not recognise some of the important successes scored by the task force, but we are convinced that it is an expensive undertaking,” Mr Lifuka said. He said part of the money being paid to private lawyers on the task force could have been used to strengthen the work of the ACC.
“The unfortunate part of this whole episode is that it is possible that despite Government spending such colossal sums on lawyers and other operational costs, little may come out of the several court cases,” Mr Lifuka said.
[Times of Zambia]