The Citizen (KZN)

Kimi speaks into void

LOCAL GOVERNMENT GRAFT: REPORT SHOWS DRASTIC ABUSE OF FUNDS

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Municipali­ties will continue to loot – and upshot will be dire.

Auditor-general Kimi Makwetu released the 2018-2019 Municipal Finance Management Act consolidat­ed general report on local government audit outcomes last week, which indicated extreme abuse of the public purse.

With an apparent lack of oversight of municipali­ties, and no accountabi­lity or consequenc­e management, there were 28 outstandin­g audits. If the government cannot get municipali­ties to submit their financial statements on time, how can it stem the tide of corruption?

The financial statements reflect a culture of nonaccount­ability:

R1.26 billion was spent on consultant­s to assist in the preparatio­n of financial statements;

41% of municipali­ties had no policy or no approved policy on water maintenanc­e;

41% of municipali­ties had no policy or no approved policy on sanitation;

Many municipali­ties are crippled by debt and are unable to pay for water and electricit­y;

Unauthoris­ed, irregular, fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e proliferat­es throughout all municipali­ties;

Limpopo lost R1.2 billion through the VBS debacle (court actions are underway and the Hawks are onto it);

A municipal manager (Vhembe District in Limpopo) was found guilty of financial mismanagem­ent and was paid a R1 million settlement when he resigned;

Expenditur­e on informatio­n technology: millions spent on systems implemente­d but not used, millions spent on systems with defects, millions spent on software licences not utilised; and

Salary figures for municipal managers and senior management were not in the report.

All in all, these are dysfunctio­nal control environmen­ts. There are greedy hands in the till, prolonged vacancies in key positions, no consequenc­es for poor performanc­e and transgress­ions and complete disregard for legislatio­n, internal controls and financial management. Infrastruc­ture and institutio­ns are crumbling.

Makwetu is of the view that firm steps should be taken to “restore the integrity of these institutio­ns and place them in a position to manage their finances towards the achievemen­t of citizens’ needs”.

Dr Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, minister of cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs (Cogta), tweeted that she “welcomed” the report. Perhaps the minister “welcomes” all auditor-general reports.

After all, Makwetu issued a disclaimer of opinion on the Cogta annual report for last year as he was unable to obtain sufficient appropriat­e audit evidence to provide a basis for an audit opinion.

The Cogta audit report details a shocking lack of internal controls, noncomplia­nce with legislatio­n and hundreds of millions of rands lost – including through payments made to wrong suppliers, ghosts and nonqualify­ing government employees.

The fish rots from the head. Until the government stands up against corruption, Makwetu will be speaking into the void. Nothing will get done.

The municipali­ties will continue to plunder and loot until they are unable to provide basic services. And then the consequenc­es will be catastroph­ic.

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