APC condemns Bio’s government refusal to be audited for use of COVID-19 funds

Sierra Leone Telegraph: 4 November 2020:

A leaked letter signed by Sierra Leone’s Attorney General refusing calls for the government to allow an interim auditing of the government’s use of COVID-19 funds, has caused a stir, with the opposition political parties and the media criticising the government for its lack of transparency and accountability.

Since the beginning of the covid pandemic in March 2020, the government of Sierra Leone has received no less than $400 million from the World Bank, the IMF, the African Development Bank, the European Union, as well as Billions of Leones in financial donations from individuals and businesses in the country to help fight the virus and cushion its impact on the economy.

But so far, there has been little or no accountability as to how much has been spent by the government and how the funding is being expended.

Critics of the government point out to the former APC government whom they say, set a good example by allowing a full audit of all Ebola funds received by the Koroma-led government in 2015 which unearthed the misappropriation of more than $14 million by corrupt officials.

In response to accusations of lack of transparency and accountability, the Bio-led government says that it will allow auditing of Covid funds to be done after the pandemic has ended. The opposition are refusing to accept the government’s position.

Yesterday, the National Secretary General of the main opposition All People’s Congress Party (APC) – Dr. Alhaji Osman Foday Yansaneh, published this statement, condemning the government:

“The All People’s Congress is disturbed by a letter issued by the Attorney General and Minister of Justice and addressed to the Auditor General, the contents therein stating outright refusal to allow the audit of CoVID-19 funds expended by government since the beginning of our country’s response to the pandemic.

“We view the reason advanced for such refusal, viz the existence of a State of Public Emergency that conferred on the President extraordinary powers as Chairman of the National COVID-19 Emergency Response Centre (NaCOVERC) to do whatever he deems expedient to prevent or control the pandemic as an uncanny pretext to veil corruption.

“To start with, no law insulates the President or government officials from financial audits of their activities as public officials even if such activities were carried out in calamitous circumstances. The purport of a State of Emergency and the special powers conferred on the President is to enable the seamless performance of specific processes without the usual bureaucracies that occasion them. It is not a blank cheque for non-accountability.

“We are minded to lay this distinction bare to further highlight travesties that have characterized the operations of this government since its inception in 2018. Moreover, Sierra Leone has over the years since the end of the war acquired the reputation of operating sound state institutions that have great democratic compass. Such a blatant resistance to financial audit is therefore anathema to the good governance credentials that have made us the envy of many nations in the world.

“At this point we may wish to oblige this government with an exemplary anecdote of Ernest Bai Koroma’s presidency. Under the scourge of a ravaging Ebola pandemic a State of Emergency was invoked that gave President Koroma the same powers conferred on the current President.

“As Chairman of the National Ebola Response Centre (NERC), the former Head of State, imbued with high sense of duty to his countrymen allowed a real-time audit of funds used to fight the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

“Audit Service Sierra Leone enjoyed absolute independence and had complete freedom to look into every aspect of Ebola financing. Their findings were held sacrosanct by government and in record time parliament acted on the contents of the report. President Koroma further expressed his support for the probe and reminded all of his earlier warning to public officials.

“Interestingly, despite such demonstration of financial propriety by Ernest Koroma, the 2012 presidential candidate of the Sierra Leone People’s Party (SLPP) Rtd. Brigadier Maada Bio, now the incumbent President felt the urge to write an open letter to him requesting further audit on the management of Ebola funds.

“Ironically SLPP supporters took the umbrage to stage protests at home and abroad in a bid to begrudge President Koroma’s efforts in ensuring transparency and accountability in public service. It therefore eludes reasoning that President Julius Maada Bio and his SLPP government should now have the audacity to publicly dismiss an audit into funds used and entrusted to them for the good of all Sierra Leoneans.

“We need not over-state that in the abundance of legislations that provide for accountability of public servants there is none to the contrary that precludes any official or MDA, including one Chaired by the President from accounting for Funds entrusted to them.

“The Public Financial Management Act, 2016; Public Procurement Act, 2016; Fiscal Management and Control Act, 2017 et al which provide for special circumstances for procurement or fiscal administration do not expressly or implicitly denounce auditing of public funds. Furthermore, there is no regulation before the parliament endorsing the Attorney General’s flagrant refusal of audit of COVID-19 funds.

“Conclusively, the Attorney General’s letter is only an action replay of this Government’s blatant attempt to table before parliament an instrument providing for non-accountable imprest of President Bio’s numerous travels and, from the onset, the futile push to introduce a regulation that expressly kicks against accountability of COVID-19 funds. Therefore there is a pattern of abuse of due process that is glaringly obvious to even the most inattentive Sierra Leonean.

“Once again, by this Press Statement we hope democratic institutions of the state, non-state actors, members of the Diplomatic and Consular Corp, our development partners, the international community and Sierra Leoneans at home and abroad are alive to yet another sad rejoinder to the spate of financial impropriety, abuse of due processes and the speedy erosion of the country’s democratic credentials since President Maada Bio assumed power in 2018.

“In denouncing a President and Government that have shown visible signs of not respecting the people they govern we the All People’s Congress will remain steadfast.”

2 Comments

  1. Where is the leaked document refusing to allow the Auditor General’s office not to audit the covid funds? Produce the evidence.
    When the time comes for auditing, you will see it. It will not be like the Ebola funds which was squandered by the past government.

  2. President Bio’s mentality of either my way or the highway needs to be brought to a screeching end. Or playing the role of the high priest sitting in his raised alter ego, dressed in white robes telling his unsuspecting Sierra Leonean congregation to do as I say, don’t do as I do is not only deceiving to the public, but completely out of kilter . This is what president Bio has successfully managed to do, two years to his presidency . I mean you can’t make this stuff up. This president is not interested in fighting for the little man in the street, but more or less checking his bank balance, and suppressing decent. Bread and butter issues don’t feature in the list of this president priority plans for our country. What he is good at is blaming others for the problems he has thus far created for our country . He only has himself to blame.

    President Bio is becoming more of a problem to our country than the problems themselves. Unless and until Sierra Leoneans see the Emperor has no clothes, then we will be for ever stuck in the roller coaster of underdevelopment. Not long ago, this president was extolling his ministers to be seen to be transparent and whiter than white when they execute their roles in public office. By refusing to allow the auditor general to audit the COVID19 public funds, it goes to show there is one rule for president Bio’s government and a different set of rule for the rest of the population. In effect the president is sticking two fingers to the APC party and the rest of the country, and saying to us catch me if you can. That his government is answerable to no one but themselves. That they can literally get away with murder.

    The only people that Bio and his government ministers listen to, are our international donor communities. Because they don’t want to cut the hand that feeds them. They have more influence over them than the population that entrusted them with power in the first place. Bio talks of tackling corruption, not because of his sudden conversion to the cause, but he sees it as tick box exercise to meet the demands of the donor communities. The idea of saying the auditing of the COVID19 funds will take place after the pandemic, is just an other way of buying time. No one not even the president knows when this nightmare COVID19 pandemic will be over. May God bless Sierra Leone.

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