Chapter 2: | Conceptual Issues in Definitions of Corruption and Good Governance |
The Anti-Corruption Commission Act 1996 distinguishes the term corrupt from the words casual gift. According to Section 3 of the Anti-Corruption Commission Act 1996, a ‘casual gift’ is ‘any conventional hospitality on a modest scale or unsolicited gift of modest value offered to a person in recognition or appreciation of that person’s services, or as a gesture of goodwill towards that person and includes any inexpensive seasonal gift offered to staff or associates by public and private bodies or private individuals on festive or other special occasions, which is not in any way connected with the performance of a person’s official duty so as to constitute an offence under Part IV.’ Part IV of the Anti-Corruption Commission Act 1996 lists down offences of corrupt practices as including the following:
As a general rule, there are three statutory penalties that can be meted out to a person convicted of a statutory offence of corrupt practices in Zambia.48 These three statutory penalties are as follows49: