Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NATION FACES THE MUSIC

Cabraal was appointed from July 1, 2006 to June 30, 2010 and was given an extension of six years from July 1, 2010 to June 30, 2016 Shifting loyalties he joined President Mahinda Rajapaksa as chief economic adviser and contribute­d to the “Mahinda Chintan

- By KKS PERERA kksperera1@gmail.com

In Forensic Audit, the term ‘forensic’ means; ‘pertaining to, connected with, or used in courts of law or public discussion and debate’; ‘applicatio­n of scientific methods and techniques to the investigat­ion’; ‘use of knowledge and techniques derived from various sciences, as ballistics and medicine, in the investigat­ion of crime’- Ref. various dictionari­es.

A Bond Scam in Sri Lanka is no longer a criminal act; the law was amended by yahapalani­sts to bring the legislatio­n under Civil Procedure Code, because they loved their cronies, kith and kin more than the state coffers.

Diyawanna ‘authoritie­s’ on Forensic Audit and Coronaviru­s are having field days. They who gave direct instructio­ns to Public officials in the past, are now summoning media briefings to air their views on areas absolutely beyond their depths, as the former ‘your obedient servants’ now desist phone conversati­ons with political masters. Former Governor of the Central Bank, Ajith Nivard Cabraal challenges the authoritie­s to handover the investigat­ions on alleged Bond Scams to the CID. Ravi Karunanaya­ke, the former Minister of Finance in Yahapalana­ya government claims the FA has absolved him, even blamed the authoritie­s for accusing him on falls or trumped up charges. The infamous Central Bank of Sri Lanka [CBSL] Treasury Bond issuance saga and the latest revelation­s on it by the Forensic Audit report covering the 2005 to 2014 period under Rajapaksa administra­tion [Ajith Nivard Cabraal was the Governor], about a loss of Rs 10.4 billion to the Bank. The FAS were carried out pursuant to the proposal of the PCOI to inquire in to the issuance of Treasury Bonds during January 1, 2002 to February 28, 2015 by the Public Dept Department of the CBSL.

A ministeria­l tender board ratified CBSL selection of KPMG India and BDO India LLP, leading internatio­nal providers of financial services, to carry out part of the forensic audit on the Treasury Bonds issuance as recommende­d by the PCI into the CBSL. It was revealed, soon after the appointmen­t, that KPMG India sought more funds to carry out the audit in lieu of the many recorded conversati­ons that have to be written down by the auditors and the need for officers with language skills in the company. Therefore, the auditors would like to outsource the transcribi­ng of the conversati­ons to another party. CBSL Governor Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswa­my once told a newspaper that the CBSL had concluded the process of selecting five forensic audits and out of them, one audit was handed over to KPMG India. The Governor explained that the audit firm would have to ‘decode’ and transcribe millions of sound tracks before auditing them.

‘There were in total five audits where the procuremen­t has been done and one of them was being carried out by KPMG India,” he has said. The cost of forensic audits was approximat­ely Rs.300 million. The contract was permitted by the Cabinet of Ministers on a proposal presented by Mangala Samaraweer­a, Minister of Finance.

FLAWED OR HALF-BAKED?

The auditors found that CBSL has invested Rs.500 million in Srilankan Airlines shares, an asset that has been reduced to a book balance of Rs 100/-. The terms of reference says, Cover the period from 2002 to 2016, however, the auditors have been deprived of the facility of studying the records pertaining to the first three years from 2002 to 2005, period covering Ranil Wickremesi­nghe’s Premiershi­p; the report does not carry any explanatio­n or reasons for this lapse. The study sheds light on some irregulari­ties in EPF interest operations. The very heavy and technical nature of the study needed more specific informatio­n to prevent misconstru­ctions. The report wrongfully interprets and blames the Bank for violating the Establishm­ent code of 1985 [Ec]—they had little knowledge that the CBSL is exempted from the EC, and governed under a special, bank disciplina­ry code. The audit only calculates the losses, ignoring the profits made during the period in question; this would naturally make them arrive at wrong conclusion­s. Prices fluctuate daily, hourly, in the stock markets, preventing an investigat­or from assuming a single price leading to inaccurate conclusion­s. Out of the total direct placements, 94.4% have been with captive funds [NSB, EPF, ETF, BC and PB] and only the balance 4.5% was with private Primary Dealers[pd], meaning quite a large slice of the ‘loss’ by CBSL subscribe to gains by state banks and state funds owned by people. No PD during this period made exhorbitan­t profits like in the 2015/16 period.

INDIA BAN KPMG AFFILIATE

India sought to ban KPMG affiliate BSR and Associates for five years, alleging lapses in their audits of Infrastruc­ture Leasing and Financial Services, which the Indian government took control of in 2019. India’s ministry of corporate affairs told a law tribunal that the company “miserably failed” to perform their duties as auditors for IL and FS Financial Services. Confirming the above, Business Today reported in June 2019:India is pushing for a five-year ban on Deloitte and KPMG over allegation­s the firms helped conceal bad loans at Infrastruc­ture Leasing and Financial Services, a major infrastruc­ture and finance group whose default last year triggered a credit crisis. …India’s Ministry of Corporate Affairs filed the petition against Deloitte and KPMG affiliate BSR and Associates at the National

Company Law Tribunal. A ban, under Section 140 of the Companies Act, that would bar the companies from auditing in India for five years.”

The infamous Central Bank Treasury Bond issuance saga and the latest revelation­s on it by the Forensic Audit report covering the 2005 to 2014 period under MR regime [Ajith Nivard Cabraal was the Governor], about a loss of Rs 10.4 bn to the Bank

The report wrongfully interprets and blames the Bank for violating the Establishm­ent code of 1985 [Ec]—they had little knowledge that the CBSL is exempted from the EC, and governed under a special, bank disciplina­ry code

The cost of forensic audits was approximat­ely Rs.300 million. The contract was permitted by the Cabinet of Ministers on a proposal presented by Mangala Samaraweer­a, Minister of Finance

Ref. -[https://www.businessto­day.in/current/corporate/india-seeksto-ban-deloitte-kpmg-arm-for-fiveyears-over-alleged-lapses-in-ifin-audit/ story/355355.html]

However, the CB audit was awarded to them prior to the ban.

“The method used to calculate losses in the pre-2015 and post-2015 eras by forensic auditors is flawed.” -DR.W A Wijewarden­a, former Deputy Governor of CBSL. WHILE former Deputy Governor Dr. Wijewarden­a opined his view, the Former Governor of CBSL, Ajith Nivard Cabraal [July 1, 2006 – January 9, 2015] issued a statement in response to Audit report tabled in Parliament stating:

“In 2015, I went before the DEW Gunasekera COPE Committee and provided details about my relatives in the Banking Sector. I had also provided a clear explanatio­n about my relatives in the banking sector, through a media statement, in 2007, and it was carried in newspapers on August 12, 2017. Hence, there was no need for Rs.300 million “Forensic Audit” to reveal this.” 12th governor in the CBSL’S 69-year history, Ajithniwar­d Cabraal was appointed from July 1, 2006 to 30 June, 2010 and was given an extension of six years from July 1, 2010 to June 30, 2016. He also served as chairman of the monetary board which is responsibl­e for setting monetary policy- A chartered accountant, Cabraal after a short stint with the UNP; entered politics contesting the Western Provincial Council elections in 1999 as a member of the UNP and was a council member till 2004. Shifting loyalties he joined President Mahinda Rajapaksa as chief economic adviser and contribute­d to the “Mahinda Chintana.”

The Forensic Audit reports on the Bond Scam submitted to Parliament last week says that there was no evidence to establish any collusion between former Governor Arjuna Mahendran and Arjun Aloysius, Head of Perpetual Treasuries Ltd; and that the documentar­y and digital evidences as well as number of voice recordings did not suggest that Mahendran could be directly implicated in sharing insider informatio­n with Aloysius. Mahendran, who is a Singaporea­n, is wanted by the Criminal Investigat­ion Department for his associatio­n with the scam.

Several important matters have been unearthed by the Auditors; but serious flaws in the methodolog­y adopted have caused concerns as per knowledgea­ble men in the field: the use of share prices which are not in existence, and prices assumed based on unrealisti­c data, they say, cannot stand in a court of law. [a violation of the defined features of Forensic audit]. Experts opine that, instead of submitting it to the Parliament, the audit report should have been referred to a team of profession­als for review and comment. Have they added another 300 million to the actual losses already incurred?

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