“If this practice (of politicians awarding themselves prizes in the form of money) continues unchecked, there is a likelihood that our nation’s coffers may be depleted,” the Judge warned. "It was a dereliction of duty for the Clerk to Parliament to have failed or neglected to detect such an obviously flawed process... as the paying officer he has all the powers to decline to make payment which is procedurally improper."
Mathias Mpuuga, the LOP
The High
Court in Kampala has declared that the service award of 500 million to the
former Leader of Opposition in Parliament, Matthias Mpuuga and 400 million each to three other Commissioners
was lawful but improper. The court said it was made possible by the negligence of the Clerk to Parliament.
The Finance Permanent Secretary/ Secretary to the Treasury has therefore been directed to punish the Parliament Clerk within 12 months.
The three Commissioners who were each awarded 400 million shillings
are Akampurira
Prosy, MP, District Woman Representative, Rubanda County (NRM) Constituency,
Solomony Silwany, MP, Bukooli County, Central
Bugiri District Constituency (NUP) and Prosy
Afoyochan, MP, District Woman Representative, Zombo District(NRM) Constituency.
In his August 12 2024 ruling, Civil
Division Judge, Dr Douglas Singiza said the 'award' was approved by Parliament and formed part of the budget presented
by the Executive.
However, Dr
Singiza has ruled that the Clerk to Parliament as the accounting officer has a
special role in the budgeting process and should have detected mistakes in the
budget since the service award is unknown in the payment system of parliament
and therefore improper.
As a consequence, Justice Singiza has ruled that the the Clerk to Parliament was negligent.
He says
under the law, Parliament cannot
increase it emoluments even if it’s disguised as a service award without a motion by the Executive head or his
representative, and therefore since it was done without the executive, it was improper.
As a Consequence,
the Judge has ordered the Permanent Secretary/Secretary to the Treasury to
institute disciplinary proceedings against the Clerk to Parliament within 12
months from the date of this ruling.
The decision
arises from a petition filed in May 2024 by a Concerned Citizen Daniel Bwette
against the Parliamentary Commission.
In his
petition, Bwette told the Court that Commissioners of Parliament, who are also Members
of Parliament (MPs) for different constituencies, sat and approved a payment
described as a service award on May 6th 2022 at 10:00 hours in the
Rt. Hon. Speaker Anita Among’s Boardroom at Parliament.
He asked
court to declare the 500 million
shillings to Mpuuga, and 300 million each to three other Commissioners under the guise of this being a
so-called service award, illegal, oppressive, arbitrary, biased,
high-handed, irrational, unfair, and therefore null and void.
He also
sought a declaration that the decision to create and award payment under
the name of a service award is ‘an abuse of power and in contravention of [the
principle] that a
[political]
leader should not make a decision when he or she has a pecuniary interest’.
Bwette
further asked the court to quash the decision in issue and also to issue an order
of prohibition restraining the respondent or its agents from continuing to misuse
or misapply its discretionary power in awarding itself money not authorized by
law.
It was Bwette’s
evidence that the impugned payment was described as a service award, a term
which is
unknown in the parliamentary system as it does not form part of the official
benefits of members of the Parliamentary Commission.
He also noted that neither the full House nor any of its committees participated in the
process that led to the decision whose legal and rational basis he contested.
On their part, the Parliamentary Commission asked the Court to dismiss the matter arguing that the
approved payment followed a proper act of the exercise of their legal
administrative mandate and that prior to the payment, the Rt. Hon Speaker
sought presidential approval in line with Article 155 of the Constitution.
In his
decision, the Judge has explained that the evidence before him showed that the
monies given to Mpuuga and the three Commissioners was mixed up in the Ex-Gratia Payment for Political
Leaders with a sub-heading, ‘Retirement Benefits for Former Speakers and Deputy
Speakers. He also notes that their 'service award' was listed immediately below as the
seventh and eighth item without any justification.
“Retirement
benefits are entitlements and not ex-gratia, it is puzzling why the accounting
officer placed them under ex-gratia payments," Justice Singiza noted. "And if this item was for
retirement benefits, then why are the beneficiaries of gratuitous awards mixed
up in this item?”
He adds
therefore: "It was a dereliction of duty for the Clerk to Parliament to
have failed or neglected to detect such an obviously flawed process. Even if an
accounting officer does not participate in a decision-making process, as the
paying officer he or she has all the legal powers to decline to make payment
which is procedurally improper. In this case, the Clerk both participated in
the decision and proceeded to make payment.”
Before
taking leave, the Judge indicated that Newspaper articles and social media
posts in this country are awash with reports of allegations of government agencies
and politicians awarding themselves prizes in the form of money.
He said this is common in government agencies
and entities whose staff are already highly paid. “If this practice
continues unchecked, there is a likelihood that our nation’s coffers may be depleted”, added Singiza.
Accordingly,
he said a proposal is made to the Hon. Attorney General to urgently consider a Salary
and Emoluments Review Board Bill, whose object would be to review and harmonize
Emoluments and allowances of government and political leaders.
“Such a
board would reduce the temptation of leaders adopting rather ad hoc ways of enhancing
their emoluments under the cover of prize money, these being matters which the
board should in fact report directly to the President,” said Singiza.
Dr Singiza’s decision comes at the time when MPs
opposed to the Service award led by Lwemiyaga County MP Theodore Ssekikubo have collected more than enough signatures to table a motion to censure them as Commissioners.