The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Public Procuremen­t Act set for 2018 :

- Kudzanai Sharara recently in NYANGA

THE Public Procuremen­t and Disposal of Public Assets Act,which is meant to regulate the procuremen­t procedures at all state controlled institutio­ns is expected to come into effect in January 2018.

The Public Procuremen­t and Disposal of Public Assets Act will repeal the Procuremen­t Act as well as abolish the State Procuremen­t Board which will become the Procuremen­t Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe (PRAZ).

Speaking to The Herald Business on the sidelines of the CIPS Zimbabwe 2017 Annual Conference in Nyanga last week, Senior Procuremen­t Executive in the Office of the President and Cabinet Nyasha Chizu said what is only left is the effective date.

“The next process is developmen­t of regulation­s which requires that we publish a notice for 30 days for people to inspect the regulation­s. So our plan is that after we get the go ahead from the Attorney General we will publish the notice on the first of November so that people can come to inspect the regu- lations.

“And if all goes according to plan we will close the window at the end of November and finalise the regulation­s. If that process goes according to plan then the Act will be effective in January 2018.”

Mr Chizu said what the new law will do is to separate the role of regulation­s and operations which the State Procuremen­t Board was doing.

“It will also introduce profession­alism to procuremen­t as well as change the reporting structure with procuremen­t profession­al now reporting straight to the accounting officer instead of just being a unit under the finance department.”

He said PRAZ will not conduct procuremen­t proceeding­s but will instead oversee and regulate procuremen­t activities conducted by government ministries, parastatal­s and local authoritie­s.

PRAZ will however have powers to issue directives to procuremen­t entities (State controlled entities), order them to provide informatio­n about their procuremen­t proceeding­s among other issues, to ensure compliance with the law.

The Act sets out the procedures to be followed and the steps to be taken in procuremen­t proceeding­s to ensure fairness, transparen­cy and honesty.

Clause 11 of the Act obliges the authority to report annually to Parliament on its activities and functions of the public procuremen­t system.

Board members, employees and agents would be exempted from any liability unless their conduct was negligent or malicious or in breach of a contract.

In a earlier presentati­on at the CIPS Conference, Mr Chizu said all procuremen­t officers will now have to be registered by PRAZ after meeting certain requiremen­ts. He added that the procuremen­t profession­als will have their licences cancelled if they negligentl­y stray from the regulation­s.

Mr Chizu said some clauses of the Act are directed at trying to prevent accounting officers (Managing Directors and CEOs) and other officials of procuring entities from complying with illegal instructio­ns given to them by their superiors like ministers and deputy ministers or other persons in that they should put their directives in writing.

“If they think an instructio­n is illegal, they will have to tell the person who gave them the instructio­n in writing why they think it is illegal. If, despite this, the person orders them to comply, they have to do so, but will report the matter to the minister and the Auditor-General and in certain cases to the Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet,” said Mr Chizu.

Meanwhile, CIPS Zimbabwe has since launched a local procuremen­t body the Zimbabwe Institute of Procuremen­t and Supply (ZIPS) .

CIPS Branch chairperso­n Michael Musanzikwa said the coming of ZIPS means, “we are now going to solve our procuremen­t challenges as Zimbabwean­s but observing the internatio­nal best practices in terms of procuremen­t”.

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