2024

ANTI-CORRUPTION COMMISSION OF SIERRA LEONE

An independent institution established for the prevention, investigation, prosecution and punishment of corruption, corrupt practices and to provide for other related matters. 

Contact us on: +23278832131 or info@anticorruption.gov.sl
Address:  Integrity House, Tower Hill, Freetown Sierra Leone, West Africa.

ACC EXPRESSES CONCERN OVER THE NEW SPATE OF PROLIFERATION OF COERCIVE OATHS OF SECRECY IN PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS

PRESS RELEASE

 It has come to the attention of the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) that the leaderships of some Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) in Sierra Leone are creating and forcing their staff to sign what they call “Oaths of Secrecy and Confidentiality.” These designed oaths prescribe coercive undertones and punitive sanctions for non-compliance by staff or set consequences for divulging information that the staff comes into contact with by virtue of their position or duties.

 

While purportedly presented to safeguard sensitive information, this practice raises significant questions regarding integrity, transparency, and accountability, which are values public institutions must uphold at all times. There is often no legal and policy basis for such moves outside of proper but limited best practice justifications like national security, public health, law enforcement, or specific fiduciary responsibilities like banks. Even more concerning is that they are drafted so broadly that they are designed to operate simply as a “gag” on staff. Therefore, outside of the minimal spheres where such secrecy requirements may exist, compelling staff to sign Oaths of Secrecy in Ministries, Departments, and Agencies, outside of standard professionalism requirements generally required for all public officers, can undermine transparency and accountability and create an unsafe space for subordinates in their professional public duties.

                        

The Commission views this new spate of forced proliferation of “Oaths of Secrecy and Confidentiality” as deliberate and intended to avoid public accountability and scrutiny, more so when they deter employees from speaking out on issues of public concern, thereby stifling whistle-blowing efforts and hindering efforts to address systemic problems and sometimes maladministration, corruption, and corrupt practices. Public officers should not be unduly burdened with constraints that inhibit their ability to fulfill their duties professionally, ethically, and responsibly, nor should they be coerced into silence regarding matters that affect the public interest. As a result, the Commission wishes it to be known that these secrecy documents cannot override the laws of Sierra Leone and may be used as evidence of deliberate failure to follow processes and procedures, corrupt enterprises aimed to gag staff, and abuse of authority or power. There are also STRONG CONSEQUENCES in the Anti-Corruption Act, 2008 for RETALIATION against whistle-blowers. We accordingly advise against both the proliferation or the signing of them by the staff of non-sensitive institutions like the security sector, health, or fiduciary institutions.

 

For further inquiries on this and other ACC matters, please contact Sylvanus Blake, the Public Relations Officer, at +232-78-832131 or via email at info@anticorruption.gov.sl.

 

 

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ABUBAKARR TURAY

DEPUTY DIRECTOR, PUBLIC EDUCATION AND OUTREACH