Ghana has made strides in legal and institutional laws to combat corruption but the enforcement of the laws remains outstanding.
This
observation was made by the Implementation Review Group (IRG) that
evaluated the country’s implementation of the United Nations Convention
Against Corruption (UNCAC).
The UNCAC is the first multilateral
convention negotiated by members of the United Nations and the first
international anti-corruption instrument.
Ghana ratified the
convention in June 2007 and, subsequently, developed the National
Anti-Corruption Action Plan (NACAP) in 2012, in line with its
international obligations in the fight against corruption.
Personal campaign
The
acting Commissioner of CHRAJ, Mr Richard Quayson, briefing the Daily
Graphic on the strides made and the way forward after the Conference of
Parties to the UNCAC on September 3 and 4, 2015, said the fight against
corruption depended on Ghanaians and their awareness of the debilitating
effects of corruption on their well-being.
That awareness, he maintained, had to incite all to fight against corruption and take on the fight as a personal campaign.
He said citizens were the key partners in the fight, as they had much to lose if the canker was allowed to fester.
Given
that awareness, he said, citizens had to actively engage in
anti-corruption campaigns by reporting on instances of corruption and
questioning duty bearers on services and policies.
Mr Quayson
said in the NACAP, the country had adopted the rights-based approach
that had citizens as focal persons in the anti-corruption campaign.
Strides
The
IRG observed that no jurisdiction for corruption offences committed
abroad had been established in the implementation of articles relating
to bribery and the trading of influence.
The country had, however, made strides in criminalising the bribery of public officials under its Criminal Offences Act.
Laws such as the Public Procurement Act also covered some aspects of active bribery in the private sector.
Issues
such as money laundering, embezzlement, etc, under the UNCAC had been
catered for under various laws such as the Criminal Offences Act, the
Anti-Terrorism Act, the Economic and Organised Crime Act and several
other laws.
Meeting
The Conference of Parties to the UNCAC afforded parties the opportunity to share experiences in their countries.
Ghana
has been through a cycle of review since 2013, reporting on its
implementation of the criminalisation of offences and international
cooperation under the convention.
Currently, the country has
moved to a second phase of reporting under the UNCAC relating to the
recovery of assets lodged abroad by corrupt officials and the prevention
of corruption.
Mr Quayson said there was the strong urge by
developing countries to work to ensure that public officials did not
hoard the scarce resources needed for development in safe havens abroad. |
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