Thiruvananthapuram: Vigilance and anti-corruption bureau (VACB) on Tuesday launched ‘Project Zero’, an ambitious anti-corruption initiative aimed at transforming the state into a corruption-free administrative system through proactive enforcement, technology-driven monitoring and public participation.
Launching the project at the vigilance headquarters in Thiruvananthapuram, home and vigilance minister Ramesh Chennithala said the primary objective of the project was to eliminate corruption and establish a system of zero tolerance towards corrupt practices.
The minister said the project would be implemented with public participation and urged people to report corruption-related information without fear. He assured that all information received would be kept strictly confidential, and that appropriate action would be taken against corrupt officials.
Speaking to reporters, Chennithala said govt’s aim was to protect the public’s right to receive services fairly and within a fixed timeframe. He said the initiative had been designed to effectively tackle emerging forms of corruption in the digital era.
According to the presentation made as part of the project, Project Zero is built on four major pillars — proactive vigilance, preventive vigilance, digital vigilance and participative vigilance.
Under the proactive vigilance component, VACB plans to strengthen detection and deterrence measures by increasing trap cases, conducting statewide surprise inspections, ensuring time-bound investigations and accelerating follow-up action.
The preventive vigilance framework focuses on stopping corruption before it occurs through departmental risk audits, simplification of procedures, transparent procurement systems, rotation and monitoring mechanisms and integrity indexing of govt departments.
Digital vigilance proposes the use of advanced technology tools, including AI-based complaint analysis, predictive risk mapping, data analytics for suspicious financial transactions, automated red-flag systems and facial and document verification tools. The project also envisages digital vigilance dashboards for real-time monitoring.
As part of the technology ecosystem under the project, VACB plans to introduce a 24x7 digital complaint system, QR-based reporting mechanisms, integrated case management systems and a dedicated cyber vigilance unit.
The participative vigilance model seeks to involve the public directly in anti-corruption efforts through a mobile app and web portal, anonymous reporting systems, whistleblower protection measures, community vigilance volunteers, social media campaigns and anti-corruption clubs in campuses aimed at engaging youth and Gen Z.
Chennithala said the project’s focus was not merely on taking action after corruption takes place, but on preventing situations that create opportunities for corruption. The minister also said the draft revision of vigilance manual had been prepared. He added that issues related to amendments to the Prevention of Corruption Act and matters concerning sanction for appointing authorities were discussed during a meeting of vigilance officials. Issues faced by vigilance officials were also discussed during the meeting.