Anti-Corruption Commission

Supreme National Authority for Combating Corruption

SNACC

7/100

Summary

The Supreme National Authority for Combating Corruption (SNACC) was established by Anti-Corruption Law No. 39 of 2006 and activated in July 2007. Its mandate covers all government employees, including police and corrections personnel. SNACC receives corruption complaints, conducts preliminary investigations, and refers findings to the Attorney General for prosecution. It has no binding discipline authority, no specific use-of-force investigative function, and no statutory access to BWC or police personnel records. Like all Yemeni oversight institutions, its operational capacity has been severely degraded by the conflict since 2015.

Independence Scorecard

Independence Score: 7/100 (minimal)
7/100
Nominal
Methodology v0.1
AppointmentExecutive appointment
Term lengthNot specified
Removal standardAt will (weak protection)
Budget independenceExecutive discretion
Subpoena powerNo
Compel testimonyNo
Records accessRestricted
Public reports requiredNo
Pre-publication reviewExecutive review

Statute

Name
Anti-Corruption Law No. 39 of 2006
Citation
Law No. 39 (2006), Art. 1 et seq.
Full text
Full text of law →

Jurisdiction scope

All public institutions and government employees, including security and law-enforcement agencies; receives corruption complaints, conducts preliminary investigations, and refers to the Attorney General.