Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Café exposure: Minister stops colossal allowances paid to NLB directors and staff

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Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a has ordered an immediate halt to exorbitant allowances claimed by National Lotteries Board directors and senior staff for taking part in “lottery draws.”

This follows exclusive revelation­s in the Sunday Times (Café Spectator) last week. Our report bared details of how “about Rs 8.1 million ( or exactly Rs 8,1456,750) has been drawn by the Chairman and four directors for ten months from January to October 2017. Only one director had declined payment. In addition, senior staff (220 of them) had drawn a whopping Rs 41 million ( or exactly Rs 41, 711, 250) for the same ten month period.”

Minister Samaraweer­a has named an official committee to come up with a new set of allowances both for the National Lotteries Board ( NLB) and the National Lotteries Developmen­t Board (NLDB). He wants to implement this from January 1 next year.

The committee is headed by P. M. P. Atapattu, Director General of the Department of Finance, and includes Public Enterprise­s Division Director G. K. Nammewa and Publ i c Management Service Director G. Samarasing­he.

The Finance Minister has told the committee memebers that they should come up with an amount commensura­te with the tasks they carry out and identify those who will be entitled to such allowances. Since revenue for lotteries came from poorer sections of the society, he has told the committee that this money should not be abused.

Notwithsta­nding this, on a board paper presented by the director who did not accept allowances, a decision had already been made by the NLB to lower the allowances. However, a Finance Ministry official said the Committee will forward its report to the Minister.

Another aspect the committee will examine is whether the NLB Chairman had adhered to a Public Enterprise­s Circular ( PED 3/ 2015) where drawing of such allowances has to be not only decided by the Board of Directors but also the concurrenc­e of the Minister of Finance needs to be obtained.

These developmen­ts came as NLB Chairperso­n Shyamila Perera, sent what she called a “clarificat­ion” on the Sunday Times report. In essence it confirmed the facts in our report but sought to justify the payments. Highlights of her letter, relevant to last week’s report, appear below with comments from Jamis Banda (in ital- ics). In terms of the NLB rules, the NLB lottery draw is conducted under the direction of the head of the organizati­on. In order to ensure the accuracy, transparen­cy of each draw an authorisin­g panel consisting of one member from the board – i. e. the Chairman or Director or GM or Addition GM or CFO from the NLB and a member from the Auditor General’s Department and a senior Police officer sit at the draw to confirm the official results of each draw. The Sunday Times report did not refer to the accuracy or transparen­cy of the draw process. It is irrelevant. As is clear, it made the point that the Board of Directors as well as management personnel have drawn millions of rupees of what ought to be the public’s money. Around 20 officers and employees of all categories attend the draw per day. The staff who attends to draw duties work between 5-7 hours after 4.15 pm daily. While the draw comes to a close around 9 p. m. some of them have to work until around 11 p. m. in order to close the related activities and dispatch results to the district dealers. The most important question is whether the NLB Chairperso­n feels that such large amounts need to be paid for them to work extra hours. See the montage on this page for the list of payments for 220 management staff and the board of directors. The amounts drawn in some instances are equal or more than half the amounts involving their salaries. We emphasise no fraud or illegal activity has taken place with regard to these payments. Firstly, no such claim has been made in the Sunday Times report. Secondly, and much more importantl­y, Finance Minister Samaraweer­a has through his actions acknowledg­ed that the amounts paid have been colossal and exorbitant. The fact that he named a committee to examine the matter in itself is further acknowledg­ement that the Chairperso­n’s justificat­ion is without any basis, more so when public funds are involved. The management is unaware that a Rs 92,000 made to a director had been donated to a poor family. As reported last week, the director in question has donated this to a female employee who had been rendered homeless. All that the management would have to do is ask him instead of casting aspersions on a director appointed by Finance Minister Samaraweer­a.

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