The Citizen (Gauteng)

Sars IT chief’s qualificat­ions queried

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i

Finance Minister Tito Mboweni has been asked to look into whether the South African Revenue Service (Sars) chief officer for digital and informatio­n technology (IT), Mmamathe Makhekhe-Mokhuane, was qualified for her post following a bizarre series of public appearance­s in which she was criticised for displaying a “shocking” lack of expertise in the running of her department.

Democratic Alliance (DA) member of parliament Alf Lees said the party was demanding answers on how she came to land the R3-million-a-year job.

“What we are concerned about is her competency and so we submitted a parliament­ary question yesterday asking for details of her qualificat­ions and whether due diligence was done on those qualificat­ions because the informatio­n we are receiving is that at least one of those qualificat­ions is not as claimed.”

Meanwhile experts weighed in on the risks posed to taxpayer data under an “incompeten­t” head of IT and the uncertain future of the e-filing system.

Chief executive of the Organisati­on Undoing Tax Abuse Wayne Duvenage said the organisati­on was doing its own fact-finding on the state of affairs at Sars because Makhekhe-Mokhuane’s conduct during the Commission of Inquiry into Tax Administra­tion and Governance at Sars, and an SABC news interview this week indicated a possible crisis.

“This is all about data and security of data and when your systems become compromise­d and you don’t have the security updated. For instance, hacking becomes a concern and that compromise­s the security of everyone.”

Bernard Sacks, former deputy director at Sars and a senior tax consulting partner at Mazars, said while he could not comment on the Sars commission, he was worried about the effects of the institutio­n’s governance issues affecting taxpayers.

“It is in the interest of the organisati­on that the matter is resolved as expedientl­y as possible. I think there has to be some measure of certainty so that we can rebuild tax-payer confidence.”

Commenting on the dangers of organisati­ons using outdated software, IT expert Brendyn Zachary made the example of the UK where the country’s health department was hacked.

“It was discovered the [National Health Service] had not applied a patch to the Windows operating system, which may have prevented the attack.”

It was reported by the UK’s department of health that the cost of the breach totalled £92 million.

While patching software can be tiresome, he added, it was becoming increasing­ly vital for firms to understand the risks of not using best practice when it comes to cyber security.

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