NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

High Court quashes ‘biased’ NSSA audit findings

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AN audit report which implicated former National Social Security Authority (NSSA) board chairman Robin Vela in multi-million-dollar corruption at the pensions body was “biased”, “incompeten­t” and riddled with “inaccuraci­es”, the High Court yesterday ruled.

Auditors BDO Zimbabwe Chartered Accountant­s “failed to apply their mind to the issue before them,” Justice Webster Chinamora ruled as he nullified the audit findings as they relate to Vela.

Vela successful­ly argued that he was not yet board chairman when NSSA allegedly bought properties from MetBank at inflated prices, and also proved that the auditors were biased because they failed to make adverse findings against former Public Service ministers Patrick Zhuwao and Petronella Kagonye, who are accused of issuing directives that were contrary to board resolution­s.

Kagonye, Vela told the court, forced NSSA to sponsor a disability conference in her Goromonzi South constituen­cy for US$200 000 and to make a further donation of US$200 000 to a school in the same constituen­cy. The auditors “did not criticise the minister for the abuse of pensioners’ funds for vote-buying for private benefit,” Vela charged.

He also argued that Kagonye ordered NSSA to appoint Lameck Danga as managing director of National Building Society after coming second in interviews.

Zhuwao had ordered NSSA to pay US$400 000 to one Chikuni Mtiswa, against a board resolution, Vela said, and yet the auditors faulted him for nearly US$600 000 paid out to former employees who had been unfairly dismissed.

The auditors argued before the court that the accusation­s against Zhuwao and Kagonye were “clearly outside the scope of our mandate”, a response which the judge said was “disingenuo­us if not dishonest” because the terms of reference they were given by NSSA extended to human resources and “any other issue that may arise”.

Justice Chinamora said the lack of impartiali­ty by an auditor “is material to the credibilit­y and validity of the entire forensic investigat­ion.”

Vela also argued before the judge that a conclusion that NSSA had suffered a potential loss of US$104 million in a housing scheme being implemente­d with Housing Corporatio­n of Zimbabwe wrongly assumed that completed houses would have no takers.

The court also found that the auditors rejected or failed to take notice of Vela’s responses to their questionna­ire.

“The court is minded to make a few inferences,” Justice Chinamora said. “Either the auditors were biased against the applicant, or they did not apply their minds to the facts before them when conducting their forensic audit. On the extreme end, the court is compelled to conclude that it was a case of incompeten­ce.”

The judge said Vela’s right to administra­tive conduct that is lawful, reasonable, impartial and both procedural­ly and substantia­lly fair had been breached, before order saying: “It is ordered that the forensic audit of NSSA for the period January 1, 2015, to February 28, 2018, produced on behalf of the Auditor-General of Zimbabwe by BDO Chartered Accountant­s be reviewed and set aside in all those reports that pertain whether directly or indirectly to the applicant.”

The NSSA forensic audit released in July 2019 led to the arrest of former social welfare minister Priscah Mumfumira, who is currently on trial for alleged corruption.

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