The Star Late Edition

PP SLATED OVER R19M

Mkhwebane and previous public protectors taken to task for lax monitoring of the office’s spending

- MAYIBONGWE MAQHINA mayibongwe.maqhina@inl.co.za

AUDITOR-General Kimi Makwetu has made damning findings against the Office of the Public Protector, saying it has failed to comply with legislatio­n when buying goods and services.

This emerged in a shocking annual report tabled in Parliament recently, which stated that the Office of the Public Protector had raked in R19million in irregular expenditur­e dating back to 2006.

The payments were made during the period of incumbents Busisiwe Mkhwebane, Thuli Madonsela and Lawrence Mushwana.

However, Makwetu took issue with Mkhwebane, saying she failed to review and monitor compliance with legislatio­n and irregular expenditur­e that continued after she took office in October 2016.

“An action plan was developed to address external audit findings, however adherence to the plan was not adequately monitored to prevent non-compliance with legislatio­n,” he said.

Makwetu said non-compliance could have been prevented had compliance been properly reviewed and monitored by management.

“The majority of the irregular expenditur­e disclosed in the financial statements was caused by payments being made above the contracts as well as no procuremen­t process being followed,” he said.

These included payments made to attorneys who represente­d Mkhwebane in her various review court cases.

“Such payments have exceeded the original amounts contracted with the firms,” reads the annual report.

Makwetu also said no effective steps were taken to prevent R1.8m in fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e that arose from labour-related matters.

His shocking finding was that goods and services worth less than R500 000 were procured without three price quotations.

“Similar non-compliance was also reported in the prior year,” Makwetu said, adding that no competitiv­e bidding was undertaken in tenders worth more than R500000.

Makwetu also said some contracts were extended without approval of a properly delegated official in terms of the Public Finance Management Act.

These included R8m paid to Duma Travel, dating back to 2006, a cleaning service and security services at the head offices.

But Mkhwebane’s spokespers­on Oupa Segalwe said R18.2m of the reported irregular expenditur­e was for transactio­ns from previous financial years that were detected and reported in the 2017/18 financial year.

Segalwe blamed non-compliance with procuremen­t on lack of proper contract extensions and failure to obtain approval for deviations from relevant authoritie­s or delegated officials. “Exacerbati­ng the problem was the fact that our supply chain management unit was severely undercapac­itated,” he said.

Segalwe said key positions to enforce and monitor compliance had been filled.

“These include the senior manager: supply chain management and chief financial officer positions, which were filled between November 2017 and July 2018.”

Segalwe also said a number of officials had been discipline­d and final written warnings issued for a matter relating to 2015/16.

“Nine officials who were affected by the transactio­ns in question were requested to explain their roles and reasons for failing to comply with the relevant prescripts as part of investigat­ions.”

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