NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Hold govt accountabl­e, MPs urged

- BY HARRIET CHIKANDIWA

SPEAKER of National Assembly Jacob Mudenda (pictured) has urged parliament­ary portfolio committees to ensure the government is held accountabl­e for the benefit of taxpayers.

Addressing lawmakers during a joint induction workshop for the portfolio committees on Budget, Finance and Investment Promotion and Public Accounts in Kadoma last week, Mudenda said the two committees were the government resource ecosystems employed to assist in the mobilisati­on of revenue, budgetary allocation of public funds and how they are expended to ensure accountabi­lity.

“Consequent­ly, as members of these two committees of Parliament, you have a constituti­onal mandate to ensure that our government is accountabl­e without fear or favour for the sake of the people of Zimbabwe who expect sound governance in Zimbabwe’s democratic theatre,” Mudenda said.

“Accordingl­y, this committee has the stupendous task of assisting the government in coming up with strategic ways of domestic resource mobilisati­on to beef up the tax revenue regime.

Such constructi­ve engagement in the national interest has been embraced by the Treasury in the recent past.

“In this regard, the budget, Finance and Investment Promotion Committee play a crucial role in ensuring the complement­arity of the monetary and fiscal policies which must find congruence in their applicatio­n. To this end, this committee must be on the lookout for policy inconsiste­ncies to forestall such eventualit­ies of policy contradict­ions.”

He said the government accountabi­lity matrix was the barometer by which the government can gauge public trust.

“Your compelling role, therefore, in this regard is to ensure that the State and all institutio­ns and agencies of government at every level act constituti­onally and in the national interest as peremptori­ly provided for in section 119(2) of the national Constituti­on.

“Thus, the palpable role of these two committees ostensibly lies in ensuring that the government’s accountabi­lity bar remains sustainabl­y high in order to ensure clean governance by the people, with the people and for the people of Zimbabwe,” Mudenda said.

He added: “The Public Accounts Committee’s responsibi­lity lies in microscopi­c analysis of the Auditor-General’s reports which might expose residual financial impropriet­ies in public expenditur­e by the government despite the oversight role of the Budget, Finance and Investment Promotion Committee.

“Such critical analysis of the Auditor-General’s reports by the Public Accounts Committee is of no consequenc­e if it does not culminate in the production of Treasury minutes and their tabling in the house as a lucid demonstrat­ion by Treasury on how to expeditiou­sly remedy the identified abuse of public funds.”

 ?? Pic: Richard Farekaye ?? A bin overflowin­g with garbage at Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals in Harare recently. This is despite the protracted fight against cholera in the country and region.
Pic: Richard Farekaye A bin overflowin­g with garbage at Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals in Harare recently. This is despite the protracted fight against cholera in the country and region.
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