Daily Dispatch

EC’s irregular spend almost half of SA’s R28bn total

Province’s illegal usage more than double last year

- By ZINE GEORGE

ALMOST half of South Africa’s R28.33-billion irregular spend was accumulate­d by Eastern Cape municipali­ties in the past three years, Auditor General Kimi Makwethu said yesterday.

Municipali­ties such as the OR Tambo district in Mthatha and the Buffalo City and Nelson Mandela metros are among the top 10 worst offenders.

Makwethu also singled out Mnquma municipali­ty, which is among five provincial municipali­ties to receive a disclaimer from the AG indicating it had found insufficie­nt documentat­ion on which to base an audit opinion. He said disregardi­ng the AG’s advice had lead to the total collapse of the municipali­ty.

“The disregard for our messages and warning signals was most noticeable at Mnquma, where there was a collapse in oversight and governance accompanie­d by a breakdown in internal controls, caused by leadership that was in conflict with itself, unrest and strikes.”

The Daily Dispatch has reported on the collapse of the Butterwort­hbased council, where ANC factional fighting has led to a total shutdown of operations several times in the past year.

Irregular expenditur­e is spending that does not comply with the manner prescribed by legislatio­n.

The AG scrutinise­d 257 municipali­ties and 21 municipal entities nationwide. Of these, 39 municipali­ties and 10 municipal entities are from this province.

The report revealed that Eastern Cape municipali­ties alone spent a whopping R13.558-billion of taxpayers money irregularl­y, and this accounted for 35% of the province’s local government budget.

This is a drastic regression from the 2015/16 financial year, where the province recorded a R5.55-billion irregular spend.

The details show that Nelson Mandela Metro leads the province’s irregular spender offenders list substantia­lly at R8.1-billion in the past three financial years. OR Tambo accumulate­d R3-billion and BCM R584-million.

This is despite BCM’s books showing a marked audit improvemen­t compared to the previous year as it moved from qualified with findings to unqualifie­d with findings in 2016/17.

Addressing the media yesterday Makwethu said the challenge with Eastern Cape municipali­ties is that “municipal leadership did not heed our numerous warnings about the impact that changes at an administra­tive level and the failure to fill vacancies timeously would have on accountabi­lity”.

Another example was that of an Eastern Cape municipali­ty – which Makwethu did not name – that used a contract secured by another municipali­ty to appoint consultant­s to assist with financial reporting at a cost of R62-million over three years.

“The original contract stipulated a contract value of R7-million over 10 months, which the second municipali­ty exceeded by R55-million and 26 months.

“Thus, this municipali­ty did not comply with the requiremen­ts of regulation 32, as it was not participat­ing in an existing contract but entered into a new contract with the supplier. Therefore, this contract was irregular and should have gone out on open tender,” he said.

But not all is doom and gloom. Two municipali­ties –- Ingquza Hill in Lusikisiki and Senqu local municipali­ty – received clean audits.

The AG said the department of cooperativ­e governance should assist municipali­ties to investigat­e the prior year’s irregular expenditur­e and to deal with the large number of investigat­ions required.

“Councillor­s should receive training on how to conduct investigat­ions into irregular expenditur­e appropriat­ely, which will ensure that oversight bodies take a strong stance against irregular expenditur­e and that transgress­ors face adequate consequenc­es,” he added.

 ??  ?? BAD NEWS: AG Kimi Makwetu says his warnings have been ignored, especially in Mnquma
BAD NEWS: AG Kimi Makwetu says his warnings have been ignored, especially in Mnquma
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