THE Prime Minister, Mr Kassim Majaliwa, has warned of sterner action against unethical and corrupt officials as the Ethics Secretariat revealed yesterday that a number of ministers and their deputies had not declared their assets and liabilities as required by the law.
He sounded the warning in Dar es Salaam
during a seminar on ethics for ministers and deputy ministers, which was
facilitated by the Ethics Secretariat in the President’s Office.
“Public leaders and servants ought to adhere to ethics and laid down
regulations, failure of which they will face the long arm of the law.
They have to avoid conflicts of
interests, selfishness and favouritism when serving the people,” Mr
Majaliwa stressed. During the occasion, the Ethics Commissioner, Judge
(retired) Salome Kaganda, noted with concern that several ministers and
deputies had as well not signed the pledge of integrity certificates.
“The Public Leadership Code of Ethics
Act of 1995 requires public leaders to declare their assets and
liabilities to the Ethics Secretariat but a number of them have not
fulfilled the condition as we speak.
I will present the names before you,”
Judge Kaganda told the PM. The commissioner on the other hand hailed
President John Magufuli for his purge on underperforming and unethical
leaders; noting that moral decay in public service was becoming rampant.
“There are incidences where ministers
went as far as ordering permanent secretaries in their ministries to
allocate for them funds for personal use, which is a blatant breach of
public leadership code of conduct,” she stated.
The retired judge disclosed further that
some leaders were fond of providing false information on the
declaration forms, forcing the secretariat to cross-check with various
state organs to verify the information.
Even with such misconducts, Judge
Kaganda said her secretariat “had its hands tied up” due to limited
funds and shortage of manpower to enforce ethics in public leadership.
“During the past three years, we have
not assessed declaration forms on assets and liabilities filled by pubic
leaders due to lack of money. It is useless to have the declaration
forms which are not evaluated to ascertain their genuineness.
“What is more; there are over 15,000 leaders who are supposed to be assessed and yet the secretariat has less than 200 workers.
However, if required cash was availed to
us we could at least work on 400 leaders,” she explained. On his part,
Mr Majaliwa explained that the seminar was not a retreat for ministers
but rather a platform to train them on the do’s and don’ts for public
leaders.
“The aim of training the ministers is to
have in place solid base for public leadership to avoid unethical
practices such as conflict of interests which has been cited as among
leading vices in the public service,” Mr Majaliwa remarked.
The PM pointed to the fact that ethics
in public leadership was a crucial pillar in the development of any
nation as it ensured equal treatment of all the people.
Earlier, the Minister of State in the
President’s Office (Public Service and Good Governance), Ms Angellah
Kairuki, said such trainings will be extended to permanent secretaries
and their deputies as well as other civil servants.
Ms Kairuki said her office will put in place proper systems to enforce ethics and curb corruption to achieve good governance.
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