THE Treasury Registrar (TR), Mr Lawrence Mafuru, said the Controller and Auditor General (CAG), is conducting a special investigation on allegations that public servants pocket the interest income that arise from the fixed deposit accounts in commercial banks.
Mr Mafuru told reporters in Dar es
Salaam yesterday when giving clarification on emerging issues on fixed
deposit accounts, saying all public institutions, agencies and
parastatals have been given until next month to ensure the money in
commercial banks accounts are moved to revenue collection accounts at
the Bank of Tanzania (BoT).
The TR said during a meeting with
Parliamentary Public Accounts Committee last month, they decided to task
CAG to investigate the allegations of all transactions on fixed deposit
accounts starting with the Tanzania Ports Authority (TPA).
“Having fixed deposit accounts in
private commercial banks is not a sin; the problem that irks President
John Magufuli was due to the fact that public institutions applied for
funds while even the procurement process has not started, which could be
channelled to other development projects,” he noted.
Mr Mafuru noted further that as a
result, projects were struck as the government has inadequate funds to
meet the obligations, which could have been the opposite case, should
the public institutions whose projects are yet to mature had not applied
for the fund prematurely.
Speaking on Tanzania Education Authority
(TEA), which was labeled among the institutions with fixed deposit, Mr
Mafuru said they find it proper to have it mature so that they get the
profit.
“Not only TEA; many other institutions
had fixed deposits in commercial banks. But when the directive was
issued, the accounts were operating. So we decided to wait so that they
mature and get the profit.
That is why we have served them all with
ultimatum until December for the money plus interest to be sent to
BoT,” said the TR. Mr Mafuru said the decision by the government to
direct the public institutions to open revenue collection accounts at
BoT was meant to monitor their revenue and expenditure against their
approved budgets.
“Prior to that, it was difficult to
monitor the accounts,as it was hard to access the information from
private commercial banks due to limitations. But right now it is easy as
the BoT could issue you with monthly statements and see if there is
fund mismanagement,” he clarified.
Mr Mafuru added that nothing had changed
as public institutions and parastatals apply for their monthly
expenditure from the BoT and deposit the same in commercial banks for
running their operations in accordance with their budgets.
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