Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda
By Katare Mbashiru,The Citizen Reporter
In Summary
Dar es Salaam. As the Treasury
struggles to pay $89 million (Sh149 billion) for the Biometric Voter
Registration kits (BVRs), emerging details show that Prime Minister’s
Office rejected an offer from French and Canada to supply 12,233 kits
through a “government-to-government” arrangement.
Under this deal, the Canadian and French
governments would have provided funding for the project through a soft
loan, but attached with some conditions: awarding the contract to a firm
from either of the two countries.
Investigations by The Citizen show that the deal would have cost $84 million, as opposed to the $89 million the NEC is set to spend on the BVRs project.
But, for reasons not stated clearly by the PMO,
the offer, which among other things involved financing the
multimillion-dollar project funded by the Canadian and French
governments.
The Citizen further established that one of the
conditions for the deal was that the supply of the BVRs be handled by
either French or Canadian based company—a similar condition always
issued by foreign financiers, including China.
According to documents seen by The Citizen, the
Canadian and France governments, through their ambassadors to Tanzania,
wrote on May 19, offering a financing solution to the BVRs project,
whose procurement was earlier marred by irregularities.
The letter from Canada and France was followed by
another dated May 22, from the Canadian Commercial Corporation (CCC), in
which the company expressed its intention to offer the possibility for
Tanzania to procure a supply, installation, testing and commissioning
of high quality BVR system.
The CCC informed the PMO that the 12,233 BVRs were
to be delivered within 60 days from the effective date of the Contract
between CCC and NEC.
It further stated that the central and the
regional systems would have been delivered within 90 days from the
effective date of the contract between CCC and NEC. Four weeks prior to
delivery, according to the letter, NEC kit operators would undergo
training.
But, despite the offer, which would have entailed
80 per cent of the cost, whereby the remaining 20 per cent would be
settled by the government of Tanzania, no one gave the nod to the
proposal.
“The French embassy and the Canadian High
Commission in Dar note that further to the nullification of last year’s
tender award for the project by the Public Procurement Appeals Authority
(PPAA), the subsequent use of emergency procurement through single
source method led to a significant increase of the selected company’s
quotation from $84 million in 2013 to $117 million in 2014,’’ reads a
letter in part.
The letter, signed by the French ambassador Mr
Marcel Escure, adds that his office and that of the High Commission of
Canada were ready to jointly express their full support to the
establishment of ethical, timely, efficient and trustworthy
government-to-government contract between the government of Canada’s
Canadian Commercial Corporation (CCC) and the United Republic of
Tanzania’s NEC for the purpose of procuring BVRs.
Read part of the letter from Canada and France governments: “For
the project, CCC would work with Morpho Canada, which is part of Safran
Morpho, an international company, 30 per cent owned by the French
government, with 8,100 employees in over 40 countries…Morpho is a
leading provider of BVR technology, whose technical skills,
qualifications and experience has been recognised around the world.”
The letter further read: “For all the above
reasons, the French Embassy and High Commission of Canada are jointly
offering their full support to the proposal submitted by CCC and Morpho,
and believe this project will represent an excellent value-for-money
solution for the United Republic of Tanzania and an opportunity to
intensify and strengthen further partnership cooperation between our
countries.”
According to reports made available to The
Citizen, the NEC tender board awarded a South African company; LithoTech
exports the deal to supply BVRs at a contract price of $117.18 million
(Sh196.5 billion).
Earlier, the tender was awarded to a consortium
comprising M/s SCI Tanzania, Invu IT Solutions and Jazz Matrix
Corporation on August 26, 2013, at a contract price of $78.9 million
according to documents seen by this newspaper.
However, PPAA nullified the tender in November
2013 after it was established that the process was marred by serious
irregularities.
But in a dramatic turn of events following the
PPAA decision, NEC raised the cost from $78.9 million to $117.18 million
on February 5—
a difference of $39 million (Sh65 billion)— according to various tender details obtained by The Citizen.
Following the nullification of the earlier tender
by PPAA, NEC decided to go for single source procurement whereby the
commission picked LithoTech Exports, a firm it had earlier disqualified.
According to a letter from the French and Canadian
diplomatic representations, the CCC guaranteed that the project to
supply BVRs would be completed on time and for 20 per cent less than the
selected company’s price with a reputation of integrity.
“It must also be noted that on top of providing
the highest quality solution, CCC can facilitate very advantageous
financing for the project on a commercial basis,’’ reads a letter in
part.
The two governments added that they would offer
full support to the proposal submitted by CCC and that they believed the
project would represent an excellent value-for-money solution for
Tanzania and an opportunity to intensify and strengthen further
partnership and corporation between the three countries.
The Citizen’s efforts to get comments
from the PMO on why the offer was rejected proved futile because no one
was willing to respond to various queries sent to the office yesterday.
Read part of the letter from Canada and France governments: “For
the project, CCC would work with Morpho Canada, which is part of Safran
Morpho, an international company, 30 per cent owned by the French
government, with 8,100 employees in over 40 countries…Morpho is a
leading provider of BVR technology, whose technical skills,
qualifications and experience has been recognised around the world.”
The letter further read: “For all the above
reasons, the French Embassy and High Commission of Canada are jointly
offering their full support to the proposal submitted by CCC and Morpho,
and believe this project will represent an excellent value-for-money
solution for the United Republic of Tanzania and an opportunity to
intensify and strengthen further partnership cooperation between our
countries.”
According to reports made available to The
Citizen, the NEC tender board awarded a South African company; LithoTech
exports the deal to supply BVRs at a contract price of $117.18 million
(Sh196.5 billion).
Earlier, the tender was awarded to a consortium
comprising M/s SCI Tanzania, Invu IT Solutions and Jazz Matrix
Corporation on August 26, 2013, at a contract price of $78.9 million
according to documents seen by this newspaper.
However, PPAA nullified the tender in November
2013 after it was established that the process was marred by serious
irregularities.
But in a dramatic turn of events following the
PPAA decision, NEC raised the cost from $78.9 million to $117.18 million
on February 5—
a difference of $39 million (Sh65 billion)— according to various tender details obtained by The Citizen.
Following the nullification of the earlier tender
by PPAA, NEC decided to go for single source procurement whereby the
commission picked LithoTech Exports, a firm it had earlier disqualified.
According to a letter from the French and Canadian
diplomatic representations, the CCC guaranteed that the project to
supply BVRs would be completed on time and for 20 per cent less than the
selected company’s price with a reputation of integrity.
“It must also be noted that on top of providing
the highest quality solution, CCC can facilitate very advantageous
financing for the project on a commercial basis,’’ reads a letter in
part.
The two governments added that they would offer
full support to the proposal submitted by CCC and that they believed the
project would represent an excellent value-for-money solution for
Tanzania and an opportunity to intensify and strengthen further
partnership and corporation between the three countries.
The Citizen’s efforts to get comments
from the PMO on why the offer was rejected proved futile because no one
was willing to respond to various queries sent to the office yesterday
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