In November 2005, ACC head
Valentine Collier was himself sacked, accused of involvement in corruption, although his defenders argue he was sacrificed by the Sierra Leone parliament to appease the British government's
Department for International Development (DFID), the ACC's primary funder. In 2005, its power to prosecute was removed from the office of the Sierra Leone Attorney General, and given to an independent three person body. In early 2008, the commission's powers were again amended to give it direct arrest and prosecutorial powers following the electoral victory of President
Ernest Bai Koroma in September 2007 on a platform that made new anti-corruption actions a central plank. In October 2007,
Henry Joko-Smart was removed as chair, accused of not doing enough to move prosecutions forward, and replaced with human-rights lawyer
Abdul Tejan-Cole. Active cases have dramatically increased from 2004. The story of the Anti-Corruption Commission has been different since June 2018 with the change in leadership not just for the commission but also for the country. Prosecutions and investigations now cover the high and low including current and past government officials, the judiciary, the police, the private sector, the revenue generating bodies, the educational sector and even the Presidency. High Profile cases include those against the Former Vice President Victor Foh, the former Head of the National Revenue Authority Haja Kallah Kamara, Former head of the National Maritime Administration, the current Minister of Labour Alpha Timbo, and many others. These new developments are encouraging as the commission is becoming the model of the fight against corruption in Africa with a lot to be hopeful about. The current head of the ACC is Francis Ben Kaifala. ==References==