Tag Archives: Justin Dzonzi

Director of Public Prosecution undecided on Speaker and his deputies house allowance scam

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) Mary Kachale this week said she is undecided on the issue involving the Speaker of the Malawi Parliament and his Deputy Speakers, who allegedly pocketed house allowances beyond their mandated entitlements.

The Prosecutor, who was asked for her opinion a year ago by the Malawi Law Society (MLS), said she has not made up her mind on the matter, because it is unprecedented.

She said: “There are some matters that are not possible to process expeditiously due to the novelty of the issues raised and the human resource challenges we have. This referral from MLS is one such. We hope to conclude the consideration of this issue as soon as practically possible.”

But MLS President Khumbo Soko, said his office is still weighing options on what course of action to take.

“We are still waiting for the response. We always have options, but you can imagine. I don’t think it would be prudent for us to be broadcasting those options in the media.”

The Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) and Parliament differ on a number of issues, which include whether Speaker and Deputy Speakers’ conduct is tantamount to corruption; whether Parliament secretariat is culpable in the overpayments; why the National Assembly continues to pay rentals for Speaker Richard Msowoya, yet it discontinued the Deputy Speakers’ rental payments, and whether the President approved new housing allowances for the Speakers, according to an ACB report and interviews with PSC and Parliament secretariat.

Under fire are Deputy Speakers Chiwaya and Mcheka-Chilenje Nkhoma.

When Weekend Nation exposed the issue in 2016, the Parliamentary Service Committee (PSC) asked the ACB to investigate if corruption was involved.

An ACB confidential report, which our sister namation confirmed, (Ref No. CR /LL/152/2015) recommends, among other things, that administrative action should be taken against the Deputy Speakers and Deputy Clark of Parliament (corporate services) Renard Mapemba, whom the ACB accuses of negligence of duties.

ACB’s investigations found that the house which Esther Mcheka-Chilenje is residing in, on plot number 47/1/42 located in Area 47 in Lilongwe, is owned by herself, and also that property title number Alimaunde 49/1/921 belongs to Clement Chiwaya.

On whether corruption was involved, ACB says in the report that it sees no evidence of the vice by Mcheka-Chilenje and Chiwaya residing in their houses and receiving rent instead of housing allowance.

The Bureau argues that terms and conditions for Deputy Speakers allow them to stay in their own houses or in rented properties. Either way, says the Bureau, they would be entitled to the same allowance.

Reads the report in part: “The National Assembly should calculate and surcharge the Speaker and the Deputy Speakers for all the housing allowances overpaid to them based on the [2009] Terms and Conditions of Service for the Speaker and Deputy Speakers in force at the material time.”

But the suggestions by ACB to drag the Speaker of Parliament into the scam have not gone down well with some PSC members, who believe the Bureau erred in some of its recommendations.

A member of the Commission, who sought anonymity, queried the Bureau for dragging Msowoya into the matter.

“This is an issue of social justice and the reason this issue has stagnated is because the ACB faulted the Speaker, without any justification. If there are people that need to be disciplined, then perhaps it is those at the secretariat for ill-advising the Commission, and not dragging innocent people into this issue,” said the member.

A PSC’s response to the ACB investigations report, dated June 6 2016, also blames the Bureau for making its findings without interviewing or recording statements from members of the PSC, except the Speaker.

The PSC states that as a corporate body it has powers to procure services for Parliament and that accommodation for the political leadership, is an administrative issue which it has powers to handle under Section 1(1) (f) of the Parliamentary Act.

PSC adds that it did not make any changes to the housing allowance payable to the political leadership, as this could not be implemented without the approval of the President.

The response reads: “The Deputy Speakers are elected officials who occupy offices created under the Constitution. Apart from removal from office… there is no provision for any administrative action in the Constitution, Standing Orders or Conditions of Service. We are therefore unaware of any administrative action (and the basis of such action), which can be imposed on the Deputy Speakers.”

In response to our questionnaire, Assostant Clerk of Parliament, protocol and public relations Leonard Mengezi also queried why the Speaker was being faulted.

“The Speaker is residing in rented accommodation and has at no time received housing allowances. The Parliament secretariat remits rental money directly to the landlord,” said Mengezi.

Mengezi added that the secretariat was acting on the directions of the Deputy Speakers and genuinely believed that the money was being remitted directly to the landlord.

Private practice lawyer Justin Dzonzi observed that the matter is neither an issue of corruption nor that of theft.

Said Dzonzi: “This is, strictly speaking, an employment matter. It’s a contractual issue between an employer and an employee.

The two Deputy Speakers do not have the power or mandate to pay themselves. So, if there was a mistake in either making a decision to give them house allowances, which were different from approved ones, or whatever, then that fault cannot be placed on the Deputy Speakers.

“It [the mistake] ought to be placed on the decision makers. So, it might be the Parliamentary Service Commission or the Parliament Secretariat.”

Parliament had to adjust the house rental limits for the three Speakers after the secretariat could not get suitable accommodation within the old limit of K450,000 per month for the Speaker, K150,000 per month for Deputy Speakers, and K100,000 per month for the Leader of Opposition.

At an extraordinary meeting held on July 13 2014, the PSC resolved that rates for housing be adjusted to K750,000 per month for the Speaker, and K550,000 per month for the Deputy Speakers, to be paid directly to landlords for the procured services (house rental), and not to the individuals as an allowance.

This is why Opposition Leader in Parliament, Dr Lazarus Chakwera, who opted to live in his own house, has consistently been getting K100,000 per month house allowance, as there was no need to find accommodation for him, which may also have been possible at a rate beyond his allowance entitlement.

AFORD President Enoch Chihana wants arrested in solidarity with Joyce Banda

chihana

RUMPHI-(MaraviPost)- Former cabinet minister in the Joyce Banda administration, Enoch Chihana, who is also Alliance for Democracy (AFORD) President, this week challenged Government that he was ready to be arrested alongside Banda.

Chihana, who was a Minister of Youth, Sports and Culture under the former Malawi President, claims Banda was not alone when she made some of the decisions that resulted in the warrant of arrest.

The AFORD President said this in reacting to last week’s Malawi Police Service (MPS) announcement of the warrant of arrest for Banda over Cashgate charges, issued by the police.

In the statement, Police said they have “credible evidence” against the former President on matters of abuse of office and money laundering.

“Running Government is a collective responsibility, because the President, the Vice and all the Cabinet ministers are involved in making the decisions. If Dr. Joyce Banda did something wrong, then all the ministers, including me, did wrong, and we should be arrested,” Chihana challenged.

Chihana’s sentiment on the matter has attracted mix reactions from various scholars wherein, some have differed with him.

Fahad Assani, who was Minister of Justice and Constitutional Affairs in the Banda administration, differed with Chihana and argues that the Police work, is evidence.

Assani observed that Banda’s warrant of arrest, was not a question of collective responsibility, since the
“Police base it [warrant of arrest] on evidence they gather on a particular individual, unless there are leads linking to others involved. Ordinarily, when you apply for a warrant of arrest, it is a particular person’s involvement in whatever suspicions you have in terms of the investigation,” Assani observed.

In his, remarks legal expert, Justin Dzonzi, said collective responsibility is a general statement and if Chihana proved there was a cabinet decision made involving all the ministers, then his claim would hold.
Dzonzi asked Chihana to prove that the cabinet agreed to plunder public resources.

“Chihana must show that cashgate was a Government policy under Joyce Banda, and that it was itself a subject of a cabinet discussion and adoption.

“If however, if the connection between the President and cashgate does not necessarily revolve around a cabinet policy approval, then only individuals who participated in that scheme, would be called to answer. All in all, the question is: is there evidence to show who participated and to what extent?” Dzonzi said.

People’s Party Administrative Secretary, Joseph Chikwemba, said it remains incumbent on former cabinet ministers who feel they were involved to surrender themselves to the authorities.

“We are yet to see the evidence the Police have (but) if any former minister feels they were involved, they can surrender themselves to the authorities,” Chikwemba said.

Former ministers in the Joyce Banda administration have also differed over the calls to put all former cabinet ministers behind bars on the basis that the former Malawi leader was not making unilateral decision that resulted in the infamous plunder of public funds.

 

Cashgate convict Esnart Ndovi pardoning stirs controversy; Judiciary gagged 

survey says public losing trust in the judiciary

BLANTYRE-(MaraviPost)-President Peter Mutharika pardon of the cashgate convict Esnart Ndovi this past week, stirred controversy over the legitimacy of the other arms of Government, including the judiciary, which is at the centre of fraud trials in the courts.

The comments come after some sections of society expressed concern over Mutharika’s decision to pardon Ndovi; they said this would send bad signals to would-be offenders.

The Judiciary is said to be helpless and gagged over President Mutharika decision to pardon Ndovi, as he is backed by the Republican Constitution.

Judiciary spokesperson, Mlenga Mvula, told Malawi News that his office could not do anything regarding the President’s decision. He said President has the authority to make the pardon and his decision, must be respected.

“We are in a different arm of the Government. We mete out the sentence as the Judiciary and the President made the pardon as head of the Executive and we all derive powers from the same Republican Constitution. Therefore, we cannot question the President’s decision,” Mvula said.

Echoing on the same, Justice Link Executive Director, Justin Dzonzi, said that people should consider circumstances before arriving at conclusions.

“We should look at the circumstances that led to her pardoning. She was sentenced to three years in prison in 2015. She had already served two-fifth of her term and, therefore, she was due to be released in six months’ time. That is not insignificant,” Dzonzi said.

Ndovi is among the 378 inmates whom President Mutharika pardoned as part of Malawi’s 53rd Independence Celebrations.

This is an annual independence prerogative that empowers the head of state to pardon inmates, particularly those that have served three quarters of their sentences, and have a clean record while in prison.

Ndovi was convicted in November 2015, of charges of tendering a certificate for personation and money laundering involving MK12.9 million. She is one of the 47 prisoners pardoned at Maula prison, and was released two weeks ago. Her release date was supposed to be in February 2018.

Minister of Justice and Constitutional Affairs Samuel Tembenu, defended President Mutharika’s decision to pardon Ndovi on health grounds.