The Citizen (KZN)

Bid to stamp out tender corruption

REGULATION­S: DELINQUENT OFFICIALS FACE ACTION

- Brian Sokutu – brians@citizen.co.za

‘Hardest thing has been how to conduct ethical business with government.’

Amid claims that National Treasury procuremen­t systems disempower­ed small, medium and micro enterprise­s (SMMEs); and failed to stamp out corruption in government, director-general Dondo Mogajane yesterday said the department of finance was in the process of tightening all public procuremen­t regulation­s.

Mogajane said Treasury would soon be aligning all public procuremen­t, following Cabinet’s recent approval and release of the draft Public Procuremen­t Bill for public comment.

“One of the objectives of the Bill is to address all the risks associated with public procuremen­t,” he said.

Mogajane was responding to charges by SA Communist Party activist Ndzipo Kalipa that the National Treasury failed the SMME sector due to lack of risk management in public procuremen­t.

Kalipa is on a crusade to champion a civilian oversight over the country’s public procuremen­t system, and he maintains is “open to abuse by corrupt officials”.

“In government and in stateowned enterprise­s (SOEs), decisions on who is awarded a tender are still shrouded in secrecy,” said Kalipa.

“Service providers are being run into the ground and when vulnerable SMMEs take government to court over non-payment, it is like a David and Goliath tussle because the state has resources to be represente­d by big legal firms.

“With widespread corruption in the country, the hardest thing has been how to conduct ethical business with government, due to those in position of influence expecting to be paid bribes.” Responded Mogajane: “We will monitor department­s that are repeat offenders and accounting officers of government department­s who fail to settle invoices timeously.”

Financial misconduct, said Mogajane, “is grounds for dismissal, suspension, or other appropriat­e sanction against an official of the public service”.

“If the accounting officer finds any transgress­ion, they must take swift action against the officials, including laying criminal charges or civil proceeding­s,” he added.

System open to abuse by corrupt officials

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