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Asia and the Pacific
Western Asia

Zambia’s anti-corruption board dismissed following corruption allegations

On 18 July, President Hakainde Hichilema dissolved the board of Zambia’s Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC), a move the presidency said was intended to ‘renew the [ACC’s] sacred mandate’. The dissolution came 10 days after a former member of the board alleged that the commission was corrupt and two days after the resignation of the ACC’s Director General, Thom Shamakamba. According to the whistleblower, O’Brien Kaaba, law enforcement institutions, including the ACC, were complicit in corrupt deals that undermined anti-corruption efforts by failing to prosecute politically-connected individuals. He laid the blame on Shamakamba and other senior officials, who he accused of receiving payments in exchange for ‘legally senseless settlements immunising some of the most corrupt individuals.’ Kaaba’s revelations were made in response to a report published by the state Financial Intelligence Centre earlier in July, which found that in 2023 corruption had significantly increased compared to previous years.          

Sources: Mail & Guardian, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, Amulufe Blog, Financial Intelligence Centre, ISS Africa

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