ACC Commissioner Promises to Chase Billions of Leones Contained in 2021 Auditor General’s Report

Francis Ben Kaifala Esq,

In an engagement by the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) on the 4th January, 2023 at its St. George’s Cathedral Hall Building on 3 Gloucester Street in Freetown, media practitioners and civil society activists were briefed on issues related to the 2021 Auditor General’s Report which was released by the Audit Service Sierra Leone.

Deputy Commissioner of ACC, Augustine Foday Ngobie in his opening statement welcomed all participants and thanked them for the turnout even at a short notice, to the first Press Conference anchored by the Commission in 2023, bordering around the 2021 Auditor General’s Report. He stated that the ACC shall always continue to be accountable to the people of Sierra Leone in the conduct of the national campaign against corruption.

In his presentation on the 2021 Auditor General’s Report, the Commissioner of the ACC Francis Ben Kaifala Esq, registered his dissatisfaction with the constant failure of MDAs to adhere to the recommendations of the Auditors, as the same issues keep repeating themselves every year.

He furthered that the responsibility to act on corruption issues lies on all of us; from administrators who should play their part and them at the ACC and other law enforcement authorities who should at all times ensure persons are held accountable for their actions.

“We have to be serious with our destinies as a people. We must not allow ourselves to be held down by the same set of issues,” he stated. The ACC Boss continued by thanking the Auditor General’s Department for a professional job well done.

“What this audit report shows is what we have always been saying, an auditor should not be a gourd-hound, an auditor is supposed to provide professional opinion and guidance based on established principles,”  he said.

He continued that, like other Auditor General’s Reports in the past, most of the issues captured are emanating from administrative lapses as people who should take responsibility to monitor, guide, direct and manage the processes have failed to show the required leadership, and that all Sierra Leoneans must embrace the fight against corruption willingly by taking deliberate and calculated actions.

Highlighting areas and issues of interest to the ACC that shall require its intervention or wherein it has already intervened, Ben Kaifala informed newsmen that a lot of the issues require a quick-fix approach which investigators are already working on.

“Those who have not accounted for resources entrusted to them must be prepared to do so now with us and do so convincingly. The convincing explanations they failed to provide to the Auditors, which they fully know they must do, they are now going to do so with us at the ACC and I assure the people of Sierra Leone that they will be held accountable; all of them,”, he emphatically said.

Highlighting the issues of concern to the ACC, contained in the 2021 Audit General’s Report as suspected misappropriation of state resources, Commissioner Ben Kaifala disclosed the following; that, an alleged estimated cash loss of $:3,523,588 (Three Million Five Hundred and Twenty-Three Thousand Five Hundred and Eighty-Eight United States Dollars), €183,949 (One Hundred and Eighty-Three Thousand Nine Hundred and Forty Nine Euros), and £ 752, 859 (Seven Hundred and Fifty-Two Thousand Eight Hundred and Fifty-Nine Pounds  was reported at some of  the country’s Diplomatic Missions; an alleged estimated cash loss of _Le:5,610,439,736 (Five Billion Six Hundred and Ten Billion Four Hundred and Thirty-Nine Thousand Seven Hundred and Thirty-Six Leones) was reported in 14 Local Councils; an alleged estimated cash loss of  Le. 65,181,048,963 (Sixty Five Billion One Hundred and Eighty-One Million and Forty-Eight Thousand Nine Hundred and Sixty-Three Leones) plus $132,000 (One Hundred and Thirty-Two Thousand United States Dollars) was reported in revenue-generating entities; an alleged estimated cash loss of Le.560,204,104,073 (Five Hundred and Sixty Billion Two Hundred and Four Million One Hundred and Four Thousand and Seventy-Three Leones) was reported as tax liabilities and a further alleged estimated cash loss of Le.116,238,191,455 (One Hundred and Sixteen Billion Two Hundred and Thirty-Eight Million One Hundred and Ninety-One Thousand Four Hundred and Fifty-Five Leones) plus $338,424 (Three Hundred and Thirty-Eight Four Hundred and Twenty-Four Leones) was reported under the general category.

Commenting on the repetitiveness of the concerns and allegations, the Commissioner also briefed his audience that according to the Report, foreign missions were again indicted by auditors, adding that, “…diplomatic missions have been running as if they are not part of the Republic of Sierra Leone and the policies regulating the operations of public institutions. They do not follow best finance processes and procedures”.

He assured the people of Sierra Leone that actions will be taken against all those who should account for mismanaged resources.

The event was climaxed by a plenary session where journalists were allowed to ask questions and seek clarifications to same.

 

 

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The Calabash Newspaper The Calabash Newspaper
The Calabash Newspaper Established in 2017, The Calabash Newspaper serves as a trusted platform for news and general information dissemination, catering to a broad Sierra Leonean audience both at home and abroad through its active presence on social media. The publication is committed to engaging its diverse readership by reporting on topical news events in Sierra Leone, enriched with editorials and insightful commentaries on pressing issues of the day. In addition to local news, The Calabash Newspaper expands its scope to include topics of continental interest, drawing from various international publications that address political, economic, and social developments across Africa.
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