Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

National Audit Bill to be passed soon

- By Jayampathy Jayasinghe

The National Audit Bill has not been shelved under any circumstan­ces and the government has given top priority in passing the bill. Just like the Right to Informatio­n Bill and the Missing Persons Act which were also controvers­ial, the National Audit Bill too is likely to be passed soon, said Minister of Public Enterprise­s Developmen­t Kabir Hashim during a Colombo discussion on the manifestoe­s of the two major political parties - the United National Party (UNP) and the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP).

The discussion on issues that affect the public at large saw the involvemen­t of Agr i c u l t u re Minister Duminda Dissanayak­e and MP M.A. Sumanthira­n, in an event organised by Verite Research, a private interdisci­plinary think tank in Colombo.

Mr. Hashim said that there are key issues such as re-structurin­g state enterprise­s that come under his ministry and the National Audit Bill was an important one. However he attributed the delay in passing this bill due to various constraint­s and obstacles facing the government. He said the government finds it difficult to keep to a timeframe owing to various objections and representa- tions made by the civil society and the delays they encounter at the Attorney General's and other government department­s.

"There are also various Public Service Administra­ive and Financial Regulation­s that have further aggravated the problem,” he said.

Minister Dissanayak­e said he welcomed the open discussion­s on election manifestoe­s of the two major political parties due to the environmen­t created by the good governance policies. On the National Audit Bill, he said the matter was discussed at a recent Cabinet meeting to expedite the matter. "When expediting the bill we want to see that it was done properly."

He said the bill was a "necessary requiremen­t although many political parties had reservatio­ns about it at the outset”. Empowering the bill with extra powers that exceeds all other laws could have a negative impact that can impede the job performanc­e of public servants. The revised version has now been forwarded to the Attorney General's Department for an opinion on whether it is inconsiste­nt or not with the Constituti­on.

JVP MP Vijitha Herath, providing his views on the bill, said it had surfaced before the Parliament­ary General Elections where an election pledge was made in 2015 that the Audit Bill would be passed following the setting up of an Independen­t Audit Commission.

"Three years have lapsed but the National Audit Bill has not been presented in parliament so far,” he said adding there is no legal validity in setting up of an I n d e p e n d e n t Au d i t Commission without the bill being passed.

Opposition MP M. A. Sumanthira­n said while the bill was not a controvers­ial one and most of the MP'S were not against it, the passage of the bill was delayed due to the lethargy shown by parliament­arians.

Minister Dissanayak­e said he welcomed the open discussion­s on election manifestoe­s of the two major political parties due to the environmen­t created by the good governance policies. On the National Audit Bill, he said the matter was discussed at a recent Cabinet meeting to expedite the matter. "When expediting the bill we want to see that it was done properly."

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