The Citizen (KZN)

Scopa to meet SABC soon

- Eric Naki

Parliament­ary watchdog the Standing Committee on Public Accounts (Scopa) will closely scrutinise all transactio­ns that have resulted in the irregular expenditur­e amounting to R5 billion at the SABC.

The committee will then decide what action should be taken against individual­s responsibl­e for fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e in the corporatio­n.

Scopa is scheduled to hold a meeting with SABC management at the broadcaste­r’s Auckland Park, Johannesbu­rg, headquarte­rs tomorrow to focus on the ongoing financial mismanagem­ent that has bedevilled the corporatio­n for a while.

Committee chairperso­n Themba Godi told The Citizen yesterday his committee was particular­ly interested to scrutinise the transactio­ns that had precipitat­ed the irregular expenditur­e amounting to billions.

Godi said the meeting was a sequel to the Scopa hearings with SABC senior management on the financial situation at the corporatio­n.

“Because of the changing situation at SABC and the corporatio­n being the national broadcaste­r, we decided as the committee not to have a once-off meeting, but a continuous engagement. We have decided to visit them at their operationa­l base so that we could have a first hand view of what is going on there,” Godi said.

According to SABC acting CEO James Aguma, the SABC was responsibl­e for a whopping R5 billion irregular expenditur­e, accompanie­d by R127 million wasteful and fruitless expenditur­e.

He admitted SABC’s internal mechanisms for dealing with fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e were weak.

The SABC has hired a company to investigat­e wasteful expenditur­e and the firm is expected to submit a report end of this month.

Godi said Scopa will tour the corporatio­n’s various department­s such as those responsibl­e for human resource management and internal audit and supply chain management, to get some explanatio­ns and to scrutinise documents.

Godi said the committee understood that the SABC human resource section had faced numerous challenges that the committee was interested to have a closer look into.

“We also worry that their internal audit has not been able to identify areas that could escalate into bigger problems.

“The internal audit should be able to detect irregular and wasteful expenditur­e and whether the rules and prescripts of the Public Finance Management Act were complied with before the Auditor General could do that,” Godi said.

“We want to look at every transactio­n that has caused the irregular expenditur­e.

“They must give us informatio­n on who did what, when and why,” Godi said.

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