Civilian Review

Independent Complaints Commission

ICC

69/100

Summary

The Independent Complaints Commission (ICC) was established by Police Act 2010, Part XIII, s. 128 (Chapter 13:01, Laws of Malawi) and became operational July 2021 after over a decade of dormancy. Its mandate (s. 129) is to receive and investigate public complaints against Malawi Police Service officers, examine all deaths and injuries in police custody, and investigate deaths or injuries resulting from police action — including use-of-force incidents — independently of the Police Service (s. 131). The ICC may obtain information from police and other state organs, commence own-initiative investigations, and conduct probes concurrent with any parallel criminal proceedings (s. 130). Officers-in-charge must immediately notify the ICC of all custody deaths or police-action injuries (s. 145). The Independent Complaints Commissioner is appointed by Parliament's Public Appointments Committee for a five-year renewable term and may be removed for incompetence, incapacity, or compromised impartiality (ss. 133-134). Annual reports are submitted to Parliament within three months (s. 146), with no executive prepublication review. Discipline outcomes are recommendations; the Commission does not issue binding sanctions directly.

Independence Scorecard

Independence Score: 69/100 (good)
69/100
Limited
Methodology v0.1
AppointmentLegislative appointment
Term length5 years
Removal standardFor cause only
Budget independenceLegislative line item
Subpoena powerYes
Compel testimonyYes
Records accessFull access
Public reports requiredYes
Pre-publication reviewNone — reports published directly

Statute

Name
Police Act
Citation
Act No. 12 of 2010, Part XIII, ss. 128-148, Laws of Malawi (Chapter 13:01)
Full text
Full text of law →

Jurisdiction scope

All members and units of the Malawi Police Service; mandate covers public complaints of misconduct or offences by officers, all deaths or injuries in police custody, and all deaths or injuries resulting from police action, including use-of-force incidents.