What new EACC sheriff Twalib Mbarak must do to succeed

The anti-graft agency has a new boss but will he manage in cleaning up corruption? A moribund intelligence unit, bureaucracy and rent seeking officers are among the biggest problems bedeviling the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission.

Twalib Mbarak, a former military intelligence officer, was sworn into office at the Supreme Court by Chief Justice David Maraga.

Mbarak will have to spearhead a radical house cleaning at Integrity Centre to succeed.

The EACC’s intelligence division is dysfunctional as it is headed by an incompetent person.

As a result, the commission mainly relies on whistleblowers, media reports and public pressure to commence investigations.

Bureaucratic red tape in the investigation chain has also been cited for long delay in investigations and the bungling of some critical cases.

Once a case is lodged at the agency, it is assigned to a team who gauge its merits.

If the complaint is compelling, it is then assigned investigators.

Once the investigations are over, the file is taken to the team leader, who analyses and forwards it to the departmental head of investigation.

If the head of investigations gives the nod, the file is sent to the legal department.

From there the file is forwarded to the deputy CEO and head of operations.

According to a local daily, the feeling among some EACC insiders is that the long chain should be abolished and the teams made to work together.

Mbarak has also been urged to spearhead vetting of staff that aborted in 2016.

Ex-EACC chairman Philip Kinisu had insisted that all EACC staff be vetted to ascertain their suitability but he left office before the exercise was done.

The new boss will also be confronted by the challenge of investigating his own staff. Some EACC top dogs have been adversely mentioned in scandals, with others accused of either hiding files or compromising investigations.

Also top on the list for Mbarak will be to normalise strained relations between EACC and other investigating agencies especially the DPP and DCI.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *