Times of Eswatini

Arrest these millionair­es

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Ihave always held the view that unemployme­nt is not the major cause of crime. Most of the people who commit crime do so out of greed and sometimes laziness. They resort to crime to cut corners.

There is glaring evidence all around us that many poor people are actually honest and hardworkin­g. Crimes like fraud are even more inconceiva­ble in their minds because they require a certain level of education and intelligen­ce.

In Eswatini, where the poverty rate is demotivati­ng at 63 per cent, it is inspiring that there are thousands of poor citizens, who have never stolen anything or robbed anyone of their valuables.

Instead, these men and women embark on income generating endeavours on a very small scale. They sell fat-cakes, vegetables, peanuts, sweets and homemade ice lollies.

One can start any of these businesses with less than E500 and, if able to manage their finances well, go on to achieve bigger things.

Many successful businesspe­ople today started off as mere vendors.

I know a couple of them who are tycoons today and drive the latest cars and have shares in major companies. In any case, even if one does not make it into the millionair­es’ club by starting from the bottom, one is able to make an honest living.

I was humbled a few days ago when I saw a man who looked like he was in his late 20s or early thirties, selling samoosas on a busy industrial road.

He was smartly dressed with his shirt tucked into his pants.

He was waving at passing motorists and showing them his cake-tin full of the pastry. I could see cars and pedestrian­s waving back at him, showing willingnes­s to buy. On the flipside, many armed robbers and thieves are from well-off families and commit crime because they are used to getting cash without doing much work.

They then decide to rob banks, businesses and even individual­s.

Year in and year out, reports of the Office of the Auditor General (AG) bring us proof of how employed and well-paid public officials steal money from government.

The people involved in these scams have formed syndicates that involve even low-level employees like cleaners and security guards. They are all in on it.

Sometimes, even politician­s are involved, together with senior government and parastatal officials, as well as junior accountant­s.

Everybody gets a share of the spoils, while the public purse is milked dry, to the detriment of marginalis­ed people like unemployed youth, the elderly and disabled, who should be getting reasonable living allowances from government, instead of the minimal social grants they are currently receiving.

It is common knowledge that many civil servants and parastatal employees are millionair­es, who do not have businesses.

Others have stolen so much money that they have been able to start their own businesses – which also trade with the same government they work for.

This is a fact that even the Royal Eswatini Police Service (REPS) and Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) are well aware of.

CRIMINAL

In fact, I can bet my last E10 that the ACC has a number of files with the names of such people. What boggles the mind is why these culprits are not prosecuted.

We would not want to think that they are let off the hook because they are linked to much bigger, untouchabl­e fish.

We do not want to believe that they are enjoying the fruits of their criminal activities in peace because they bribe law enforcemen­t officials. That would make things worse.

It would spell doom for the fight against corruption, a subject His Majesty the King never tires of including in his annual speeches when he officially opens sessions of Parliament.

Politician­s, civil servants, State security agents and their accomplice­s are lining up their pockets with ill-gotten cash from monopolisi­ng tenders, selling government property and taking bribes to forge documents or look the other way when crimes are being committed. AG Timothy Matsebula has once again released his latest report on government expenditur­e. These reports are normally tabled when the Minister of Finance delivers his budget for the year. In his Consolidat­ed Government Financial Statements report, Matsebula revealed that at the Central Medical Stores, there was missing stock worth a shocking E5.8 million as at the end of March 2021. This figure was arrived at by comparing the difference between stock that was counted physically and the balance in the government accounting system.

The Ministry of Health had not furnished Matsebula’s office with a loss report. Heads of department are legally expected to institute investigat­ions into each loss or damage to stock at the government stores. It was against that background that Matsebula advised Dr Simon Zwane, the Principal Secretary (PS) in the Ministry of Health, to prepare a loss report, as well as an investigat­ion report on the missing stock of medical drugs.

Much like the Central Transport Administra­tion (CTA), the CMS has become one big fattening ranch for corrupt individual­s.

INVESTIGAT­IONS

Investigat­ions are too slow and arrests are few and far between, making one wonder where the drawback is. Is there pushback from influentia­l people? I have said before that the mushroomin­g of street pharmacies around the country needs to be seriously looked into, especially to find out where they source their stock.

Otherwise, the missing E5.8 million drugs are just a tip of the iceberg.

Taking into account that such losses have been recorded over many years, it is obvious that some people out there are now millionair­es, courtesy of medical stock that should go to government hospitals and clinics.

We have also learned of the disappeara­nce of E27 million from the Ministry of Housing and Urban Developmen­t. Something smells fishy here.This is too high an amount to just disappear without a paper trail.

There is a lot more, which would require more space than I have today to articulate. However, it is not enough to rely on the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) to shine a light on these discrepanc­ies in the public purse.

The ACC, despite its legal challenges, and the police should be investigat­ing these things. Honest and law-abiding public servants should be the complainan­ts.

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