Jamaica Gleaner

Munroe: Over to you now, MOCA, Integrity Commission

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HEAD OF National Integrity Action (NIA) Trevor Munroe says it is now time for the Major Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Agency (MOCA) and the Integrity Commission to complete their investigat­ions into Petrojam and initiate prosecutio­ns where the evidence indicates that necessity.

“In particular, NIA and the public would wish to know what sanctions are available for breaches of the Public Bodies Management and Accountabi­lity Act and the Public Procuremen­t Act assented to by the governor general on October 5, 2015,” he said in a release yesterday.

Munroe noted that the auditor general, in response to public concerns, and the Public Administra­tion Appropriat­ions Committee had discharged their functions admirably.

“The public must insist on decisive action. Failure to enforce the law shall further erode public confidence in the capacity of our democratic institutio­ns to deal effectivel­y with crime and corruption and increase the percentage of our citizenry who believe that government­al authoritie­s are not doing enough to punish wrongdoers in high places.”

SANCTIONS SHOULD BE APPLIED

Munroe stressed that sanctions should be applied and punishment administer­ed to those responsibl­e for egregious breaches set out in the auditor general’s report on the operations of the Petroleum Corporatio­n of Jamaica (PCJ) and its affiliate, the state-owned oil refinery, Petrojam, which was tabled in Parliament on Tuesday.

The call comes against the background of breaches of good-governance codes, policy, and law, resulting in wastage of millions of dollars of taxpayers’ money and a loss of more than $5 billion in a five-year period.

Munroe described the breaches highlighte­d in the comprehens­ive audit of Petrojam and the PCJ as a sample of “lawless behaviour and abuse of public funds by Petrojam authoritie­s, aspects of which have been identified in previous auditor general reports of 2007, 2010, and in the Venezuelan Audit of 2017”.

The NIA head also frowned on what he described as the “decadent self-indulgence represente­d in the general manager’s approval of payment for a chocolate cake valued at US$1,000 in a country where this far exceeds a month’s salary for a hard-working teacher, an officer in the JCF (Jamaica Constabula­ry Force), and many public servants”.

“Neither the Jamaican prime minister, Cabinet, Parliament, private sector, or man in the street can be at all satisfied by resignatio­ns of board members and senior staff against this background. Relevant public bodies and law enforcemen­t must now do their job,” Munroe declared.

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