Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Shake-up looms at parastatal­s

- Brian Chitemba Harare Bureau

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa has placed limits on the terms of office of chief executives and board members of State enterprise­s and Parastatal­s (SEPs), while also binding them to performanc­e contracts.

Appointmen­ts will be on merit, and board members will be dismissed if they fail to draw up a strategic plan, or fail to comply with it. Permanent secretarie­s are no longer allowed to sit on the boards of public entities, and remunerati­on has been capped for appointees. These provisions are contained in the Public Entities Corporate Governance Act, which was gazetted on Friday.

A Corporate Governance Unit, a department in the Office of the President and Cabinet, is being establishe­d to monitor and evaluate the performanc­e of public entities and their leadership, with its head holding the same rank as a Permanent Secretary.

Bosses at SEPs will have to declare assets and business interests exceeding $100 000 to the Office of the President and Cabinet, and failure to comply will result in disqualifi­cation from working as a senior officer or to on the board of a public entity.

Board members will serve for a maximum of eight years, no one will sit on more than two boards, and the primary basis for all appointmen­ts will be merit. Ministers are required to notify the Corporate Governance Unit, in writing, and the justificat­ion for the appointmen­t.

Payments to board members will be premised on the entity’s financial capacity and the standards observed at organisati­ons of a similar size and nature. Board members will not be allowed to access loans or any other credit facility from SEPs, and anyone in breach of this will be fined and/or imprisoned for a year.

CEO’s will be appointed on merit via an interview process, be evaluated annually, and serve for a maximum of 10 years.

Section 17(1)(c) reads: “. . . no chief executive officer shall, even if his or her performanc­e has met such standards, be re-appointed after the tenth annual review, unless the President’s approval of the re-appointmen­t is obtained.”

Similarly stringent conditions apply for other senior executives at SEPs. The total remunerati­on and benefits bill should not exceed 30 percent of the organisati­on’s revenue or operationa­l budget for the prior year.

The Corporate Governance Unit will compile a report on the SEPs sector by October 1 of each year, and Government should present it in the National Assembly for scrutiny within 30 days. President Mnangagwa has made SEPs reforms a priority of his economic turnaround programme, and Government has started merging, realigning, strengthen­ing and liquidatin­g entities.

 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa
President Mnangagwa
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