Daily Dispatch

SARS inquiry told of ‘slow bleed’ of bosses

- AMIL UMRAW

There was a “slow bleed” of senior managers at the SA Revenue Service (SARS) while its top leadership remained unaware of the issues that plagued the institutio­n‚ according to a senior national treasury official.

Treasury deputy director general Ismail Momoniat‚ along with his boss‚ Dondo Mogajane‚ testified before judge Robert Nugent’s inquiry into tax administra­tion and governance is- sues at the revenue collector on Wednesday. Momoniat said that under now-suspended SARS commission­er Tom Moyane’s new operating model‚ there was a sense that its executive committee was a “body unaware of the issues”.

“We began to see then a high turnover of senior managers … Let’s take the loss of staff from key units like the LBC [Large Business Centre] and customs. You got a sense that the leadership at SARS‚ the com- missioner and some of the exco managers‚ were really unaware of the extent that some of these changes actually made on the ground‚” Momoniat said.

Asked what Treasury would do to improve governance at SARS, Momoniat suggested legislatio­n needed to be amended for “bad scenarios”.

“We don’t have an official treasury view on how to proceed. The key questions that we have in trying to hold the commission­er and SARS accountabl­e is that I always say it’s like the PFMA [Public Finance Management Act]; we did legislatio­n just after 1994 only having good scenarios‚ a good minister‚ and a good DG [director general].

“I think what we learnt is that you could have a bad minister‚ a bad president … we didn’t stress test the legislatio­n for bad scenarios … The SARS act had a similar kind of approach. We didn’t deal with how do you deal with a bad commission­er? I think the big question for us is that the commission­er is too powerful,” Momoniat said.

 ??  ?? ROBERT NUGENT
ROBERT NUGENT

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