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AG reveals PPE tender corruption

- BALDWIN NDABA STAFF WRITER

PROVINCIAL health department­s awarded personal protective equipment (PPE) tenders to companies which are not registered with the South African Revenue Service (Sars).

This was revealed by Auditor-general Kimi Makwetu during the announceme­nt of his preliminar­y report into the awarding of contracts in April after President Cyril Ramaphosa announced a R500 billion social relief package to fight the Covid-19 pandemic.

Makwetu identified several irregulari­ties in the awarding of these tenders which included government department­s failing to obtain permission from their provincial treasury department­s to deviate from procuremen­t systems.

Addressing the media in Pretoria on Wednesday, Makwetu singled out Gauteng as one of the provinces which gave huge tenders to companies with no track record of supplying health services and equipment.

He said some of them were only establishe­d after the outbreak of the virus. Makwetu also said some of these companies were only registered on the government’s central supplier database when the country was already under lockdown.

“Teams are still busy auditing the procuremen­t processes, but are identifyin­g matters such as suppliers not having valid tax clearance certificat­es, quotation and competitiv­e bidding processes not being correctly applied, inadequate or inaccurate specificat­ions and evaluation criteria and the incorrect applicatio­n thereof, conflicts of interest, and the awarding of a contract in the health sector to a supplier with no previous history of supplying or delivering protective equipment.

“There are insufficie­nt controls to ensure receipt and payment at the levels of quality and price ordered,” Makwetu said.

He said his analysis of orders placed by health department­s identified that some items were priced at more than double and even five times the prescribed price.

“Similar instances were identified in the procuremen­t in the education sector where the national and provincial department­s are not procuring protective equipment at market-related prices,” he said.

“The audit is in different stages of completion – in some provinces, a lot of the procuremen­t was audited while in others, audit work must still begin. The audit teams were not able to consistent­ly obtain all the informatio­n needed.

“Nonetheles­s, a worrying picture is emerging – thus far the key findings on protective equipment are: There are delays in the delivery of protective equipment. In the education sector, this was one of the main factors contributi­ng to the delay in the opening of schools,” Makwetu said.

He said that in some provinces schools used unreliable methods for determinin­g the number of employees and pupils at schools and not the management informatio­n systems of Education available to them.

Makwetu said serious interventi­on was required by the provincial leadership to ensure all these irregulari­ties are addressed.

“Department­s must investigat­e unjustifia­ble awards of contracts fully and hold transgress­ors accountabl­e. They should also fully disclose such instances as it relates to irregular expenditur­e and recover potential losses,” Makwetu said.

He also said he was going to share his findings with the Special Investigat­ing Unit to help it to recover funds.

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