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Rs40b irregularities detected in PM Imran Khan’s Covid package

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After holding on to it for nearly six months, Pakistan on Friday gave in to the International Monetary Fund’s pressure by releasing the audit report of expenditures incurred on Covid-19, disclosing over Rs40 billion irregularities in operations.

The findings of the Auditor General of Pakistan (AGP) –the constitutional body – showed misprocurement, payments to ineligible beneficiaries, cash withdrawal through fake biometrics and procurements of substandard goods by Utility Stores Corporation (USC) for consumption.

The release of the report by the Ministry of Finance is one of the five prior actions that the IMF has asked Pakistan to implement if it wants to get the $1 billion loan tranche by January next year.

The auditors attempted to scrutinise Rs354.3 billion expenses but did not get all the records, the report showed. From the record of expenses and procurements available, the auditors have unearthed Rs40 billion irregularities.

The maximum irregularities of over Rs25 billion were found against Rs133 billion spent under the banner of the Benazir Income Support Programme, which was equal to 19% of its spending. The USC spent Rs10 billion but the auditors raised questions on Rs5.2 billion or 52% of its spending.

The National Disaster Management Authority’s spending was Rs22.8 billion and the auditors raised a red flag on Rs4.8 billion or around 21% of the spending.

The defence ministry also had doubtful and irregular spending to the tune of Rs3.2 billion while other government departments had dubious expenses to the tune of Rs1.5 billion, showed the report.

This report is based on the audit of the accounts of government agencies and departments involved in relief activities at the federal level for the year ending June 30, 2020, to the extent of expenditure related to Covid-19.

This includes all government allocations, loans and grants received or repurposed from the foreign donor partners for dealing with Covid-19. The IMF had also given a $1.4 billion loan under the Covid relief package.

The key issues highlighted by the AGP were “instances of mis-procurements, delays in the delivery of procured items, procurement without proper need assessment, instances of weak financial controls, lack of proper record-keeping and non-production of records to audit authorities”.

Also, there were issues about lack of warehouse management, issues in the distribution of equipment, advance payments to supplier firms without properly securing guarantees, data problems resulting in the release of cash grants to both spouses in the same family and beneficiaries excluded by NADRA during profiling checks, the release of cash grants to the insured persons and pensioners of EOBI and beneficiaries from both BISP and Zakat.

The auditors also caught serious issues like payment to ineligible beneficiaries like government servants, pensioners and their spouses, taxpayers and to those having poverty scores above the cut off scores approved by the federal cabinet and the BISP board.

“Weak monitoring and implementation resulting in withdrawals through fake biometric and withdrawals out of the district of registration, irregular and unjustified prequalification of flour mills by the USC” were among the other issues.

There were also issues of service delivery under the Ehsaas Emergency Cash Programme that resulted in non-disbursement of cash transfers to 1.32 million enrolled beneficiaries.

In order to combat the pandemic, the prime minister approved Rs1.24 trillion Economic Stimulus Package on March 24, 2020. The key objectives of the relief package were to contain the Covid-19 pandemic, provision of medical and subsistence relief to citizens and support to business and economy.

The amount released out of the announced package was Rs354.2 billion till June 30, 2020.

“The finance ministry issued Rs314 billion less supplementary grants from the PM’s stimulus package due to which citizens of Pakistan could not avail the complete benefit of the announced package resulting in suffering, economic hardship and many private factories laying off their workers during Covid-19 process,” revealed the report.

Against Rs200 billion promised to daily wagers, only Rs16 billion were distributed among them. The vulnerable families were promised Rs150 billion but given Rs145 billion. The Utility Stores package was Rs50 billion but was given Rs10 billion. There was a promise to pay Rs100 billion electricity and gas bills but the actual payments were Rs15 billion.


Key irregularities

The NDMA was the main coordinating agency for relief activities in the country. Against Rs33.3 billion funds that the NDMA received, it spent Rs22.8 billion. But the auditors found glaring irregularities.

“During the course of the audit, a number of instances of mis-procurements, weak contract management, delays in delivery of procured items, improper storage management etc were observed.”

The auditors found mis-procurement on account of the installation of Resource Management System (RMS) by the NDMA with Rs42.5 million cost. A million-dollar loss was caused to the public exchequer on account of purchase of ventilators at higher rates and China donated $4 million for construction of 250 beds Isolation Hospital and Infections Treatment Center (IHITC), but the money was never used. There were cases of overpayment to Chinese firms on account of the procurement of ventilators.

The NDMA did not adjust advances of Rs690 million against payments made to the Frontier Works Organisation for the renovation of Haji Complex, Rawalpindi, provisions of quarantine facilities in Karachi and establishment of the National Control Room during the financial year.

During the course of the audit of NDMA, a considerable number of record and allied documents were not produced for audit scrutiny despite repeated written and verbal requests.

The NDMA did not impose liquidated damages on supplier firms causing a loss of Rs2.7 billion and $8.3 million.

BISP

The BISP utilised Rs133.3 billion during the fiscal year 2019-20 and 13.1 million beneficiaries were paid.

The audit observed Rs6.6 billion payments to relatively better-off 484,402 beneficiaries due to the absence of any clear policy which needs to be addressed before making any related future payments.

There were irregular payments of cash transfers to government servants including pensioners and their spouses to the tune of Rs1.84 billion. Wrong profiling of beneficiaries resulted in the release of cash transfers to both spouses worth Rs1.6 billion.

Over Rs16 million payments of Covid-19 cash transfers were made to those beneficiaries who had filers’ status and were well-off. There was also a case of withdrawal of Covid-19 cash grants from both BISP and Zakat by the same beneficiaries worth Rs318.7 million.

The auditors pointed out irregular payment of cash transfers to beneficiaries that were excluded by NADRA during profiling checks but got away with Rs6.84 billion. The Rs1.8 billion irregular payment was made to beneficiaries having poverty scores higher than the approved eligibility thresholds by the cabinet.

The auditors unearthed a major discrepancy and found unauthentic withdrawals of Covid-19 cash transfers out of districts/provinces to the tune of Rs12.8 billion.

The auditors observed that in categories I to IV, withdrawals of emergency cash transfers were shown from out of province/districts by 2,048 agents who operated in Quetta, Lasbela, Thatta, Jamshoro, Hyderabad and Khanewal. “This needs proper investigation,” the AGP recommended.

Through the fake biometrics, Rs1.7 million were withdrawn.

Other departments

The audit observed that the procurements of nine items had been made at higher rates causing a loss of Rs7 million. There were also cases of non-delivery of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) by UNICEF having the value of Rs1.3 billion. The Rs10 million discrepancy was found in cases of transportation and food items for passengers returning from abroad, handled by deputy commissioner Islamabad.

There was also the irregular operation of bank account by a single signatory. The case of non-reconciliation of bank account and irregular payments of cash money instead of crossed cheques to the firms were also unearthed.


USC

The AGP pointed out Rs1.4 billion loss due to irregular and ill-planned procurement of sugar. Another loss of Rs1.6 billion was caused due to irregular procurement of ghee/cooking oil and non-availability of fitness certificates of ghee/oils worth over Rs1.4 billion.

The USC caused a loss of Rs100 million due to the purchase of sugar at higher rates than the prevailing market wholesale rates. There was a case of irregular procurement of atta from flour mills worth Rs95.3 million.

The Rs323 million loss was caused due to non-observance of prescribed flour specifications and another expense of Rs1.7 billion incurred without laboratory test reports. The USC also made excess claim subsidies by increasing the profit ratio on account of the purchase of sugar.


Defence

The auditors pointed out Rs1.9 billion worth of non-reconciliation of allocation and expenditure relating to Covid-19 in two different cases.

The Rs200 million Covid-19 funds were diverted towards the clearance of liabilities and procurement of normal cardiac medicines. During an audit of Combined Military Hospital Rawalpindi, it was observed from the record that PPE items of the same specifications were purchased at higher rates by ignoring the lowest rates available in the comparative statement of tenders.

The Rs235 million irregular payment was made to Pakistan International Airlines without fulfilling the required formalities against shipment of exactly the same commodity required to be transported through the armed forces’ service aircraft.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2331287/rs40b-irregularities-detected-in-pms-covid-package
 
My my my :)))

Not only is PTI the most incompetent government in Pakistan history, it is also the most corrupt.

PTI’s foundation was built on black money of the mafia, and all these people who have invested in Imran have been given a free shot to recoup the investment.

Imran himself has failed to justify the embezzlement in SKMH and has been running away from the foreign funding case for 6 years. His sister has also failed to provide money trail for her estate in NYC.

If these irregularities would have emerged in another government and Imran would have been in the opposition, he would be on top of a container now and would have claimed that the PM should resign because he unless he does, there cannot be a proper investigation.

Imran is a con-artist and PTI is the biggest scam this country has ever seen.
 
My my my :)))

Not only is PTI the most incompetent government in Pakistan history, it is also the most corrupt.

PTI’s foundation was built on black money of the mafia, and all these people who have invested in Imran have been given a free shot to recoup the investment.

Imran himself has failed to justify the embezzlement in SKMH and has been running away from the foreign funding case for 6 years. His sister has also failed to provide money trail for her estate in NYC.

If these irregularities would have emerged in another government and Imran would have been in the opposition, he would be on top of a container now and would have claimed that the PM should resign because he unless he does, there cannot be a proper investigation.

Imran is a con-artist and PTI is the biggest scam this country has ever seen.

Its nice to see you so happy, maybe i have missed something but can you actually show me where the corruption is? Maybe give a quote or one? Maybe you can show us where IK has benefitted from this corruption or even a Minister. What this report shows is weak controls and that is a problem and big problem. That is more to do with a poor uneducated bureaucracy that is a law unto itself.


As far as IKS corruption is concerned- show me his mansions or the offshore bank accounts that he has built or anything else. You are being humiliated each week and you come back each weak for a canning. Your GODFATHER Sethi has asked for violence, well show some guts and do it for him and come on the roads.
 
My my my :)))

Not only is PTI the most incompetent government in Pakistan history, it is also the most corrupt.

PTI’s foundation was built on black money of the mafia, and all these people who have invested in Imran have been given a free shot to recoup the investment.

Imran himself has failed to justify the embezzlement in SKMH and has been running away from the foreign funding case for 6 years. His sister has also failed to provide money trail for her estate in NYC.

If these irregularities would have emerged in another government and Imran would have been in the opposition, he would be on top of a container now and would have claimed that the PM should resign because he unless he does, there cannot be a proper investigation.

Imran is a con-artist and PTI is the biggest scam this country has ever seen.


Look what i found from Dawn a newspaper paid for by the Nooras with taxpayers money. :broad:broad:broad:broad:broad:broad
Lest we forget those days when you argued that corruption wasnt a problem in PK. But dont feel too humiliated, its your lot.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1506251
 
Its nice to see you so happy, maybe i have missed something but can you actually show me where the corruption is? Maybe give a quote or one? Maybe you can show us where IK has benefitted from this corruption or even a Minister. What this report shows is weak controls and that is a problem and big problem. That is more to do with a poor uneducated bureaucracy that is a law unto itself.


As far as IKS corruption is concerned- show me his mansions or the offshore bank accounts that he has built or anything else. You are being humiliated each week and you come back each weak for a canning. Your GODFATHER Sethi has asked for violence, well show some guts and do it for him and come on the roads.

No doubt there has been corruption in Covid package but trust usual suspects to twist the facts. Irregularities mentioned in report are not exclusively termed as financial corruption. Irregularities are like not taking NOCs from bla bla bureaucrat, fast tracking and bypassing lenghty paper work SOPs during a Pandemic.

As a matter of fact, Cash Payments of PKR 1.7 Million was questionable due to no previous and matching data of those recipients.
 
No doubt there has been corruption in Covid package but trust usual suspects to twist the facts. Irregularities mentioned in report are not exclusively termed as financial corruption. Irregularities are like not taking NOCs from bla bla bureaucrat, fast tracking and bypassing lenghty paper work SOPs during a Pandemic.

As a matter of fact, Cash Payments of PKR 1.7 Million was questionable due to no previous and matching data of those recipients.

I would love to believe that IK can stop corruption but after years of govts by the mafia, it will take years. We know IK isn't corrupt and wont leave office with flats in London or Palaces in Surrey and most of his Ministers will also be clean but not all. Kaptaan must create audit systems that prevent this but it takes resources( both money and people) and lots of hard work.
BTW
Did you see how quickly [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] disappeared?
 
ISLAMABAD: The Auditor General of Pakistan (AGP) has vowed to unmask the culprits found guilty of committing irregularities detected in the expenditures incurred on the Covid-19 relief programme, expressing the resolve that those who have undermined the legal procedure will not be spared.

“The law was not followed in the Ehsaas programme as its transparency was questioned in a report submitted to the president,” Muhammad Ajmal Gondal said in an informal conversation with the media after attending a function on self-accountability and public service at the AGPR on Saturday.

The top auditor said more details about the irregularities would be unveiled in the Public Accounts Committee (PAC), saying that it was deplorable that legal requirements were undermined in the carrying out of the relief programme.

“The findings in the report by the Ministry of Finance have raised serious questions about the level of transparency in carrying out the programme's operations,” the top auditor noted.

“Those involved in the irregularities will not be spared,” he maintained, regretting that Covid-19 infection could not be completely eliminated.

On Friday, Pakistan gave in to the International Monetary Fund’s pressure as it released the audit report of expenditures incurred on Covid-19 after holding on to it for six months. Irregularities worth Rs40 billion were detected in the operations.

The findings of the AGP showed misprocurement, payments to ineligible beneficiaries, cash withdrawal through fake biometrics and procurements of substandard goods by Utility Stores Corporation (USC) for consumption.

The release of the report by the Ministry of Finance is one of the five prior actions that the IMF has asked Pakistan to implement if it wants to get the $1 billion loan tranche by January next year.

The auditors attempted to scrutinise Rs354.3 billion expenses but did not get all the records, the report showed. From the record of expenses and procurements available, the auditors have unearthed Rs40 billion irregularities.

The maximum irregularities of over Rs25 billion were found against Rs133 billion spent under the banner of the Benazir Income Support Programme, which was equal to 19% of its spending. The USC spent Rs10 billion but the auditors raised questions on Rs5.2 billion or 52% of its spending.

The National Disaster Management Authority’s spending was Rs22.8 billion and the auditors raised a red flag on Rs4.8 billion or around 21% of the spending.

The defence ministry also had doubtful and irregular spending to the tune of Rs3.2 billion while other government departments had dubious expenses to the tune of Rs1.5 billion, showed the report.

BISP clarification

Meanwhile, BISP in a statement issued on Sunday clarified that the contents of the Audit Report were misconstrued. “Total disbursement made under Ehsaas Emergency Cash (EEC) was Rs179.4 billion instead of indicated amount of Rs133 billion. It is further clarified that audit observations/recommendations related to EEC were of mainly of a technical and advisory nature. Despite its massive operations both in terms of coverage and fiscal quantum in a context of strict lockdowns, there were audit recommendations of a technical nature relating to Ehsaas amounted to Rs4 billion out of Rs179.4 billion disbursements which is equal to only 2.23% instead of reported 19%.”

Rebutting the "recent negative media reports", BISP said that it holds the office of the Auditor General of Pakistan in high esteem and takes their recommendations in a positive sense to further refine and strengthen systems. The BISP authorities reiterated that no irregularity was committed during disbursements, besides there were no allegations from Audit of mis-procurement, no violation of rules, no financial mismanagement, no loss to the exchequer, no wasteful expenditure, no overpayments, no unauthorised retention and no allegations of corruption.
 
ISLAMABAD: The Auditor General of Pakistan (AGP) has vowed to unmask the culprits found guilty of committing irregularities detected in the expenditures incurred on the Covid-19 relief programme, expressing the resolve that those who have undermined the legal procedure will not be spared.

“The law was not followed in the Ehsaas programme as its transparency was questioned in a report submitted to the president,” Muhammad Ajmal Gondal said in an informal conversation with the media after attending a function on self-accountability and public service at the AGPR on Saturday.

The top auditor said more details about the irregularities would be unveiled in the Public Accounts Committee (PAC), saying that it was deplorable that legal requirements were undermined in the carrying out of the relief programme.

“The findings in the report by the Ministry of Finance have raised serious questions about the level of transparency in carrying out the programme's operations,” the top auditor noted.

“Those involved in the irregularities will not be spared,” he maintained, regretting that Covid-19 infection could not be completely eliminated.

On Friday, Pakistan gave in to the International Monetary Fund’s pressure as it released the audit report of expenditures incurred on Covid-19 after holding on to it for six months. Irregularities worth Rs40 billion were detected in the operations.

The findings of the AGP showed misprocurement, payments to ineligible beneficiaries, cash withdrawal through fake biometrics and procurements of substandard goods by Utility Stores Corporation (USC) for consumption.

The release of the report by the Ministry of Finance is one of the five prior actions that the IMF has asked Pakistan to implement if it wants to get the $1 billion loan tranche by January next year.

The auditors attempted to scrutinise Rs354.3 billion expenses but did not get all the records, the report showed. From the record of expenses and procurements available, the auditors have unearthed Rs40 billion irregularities.

The maximum irregularities of over Rs25 billion were found against Rs133 billion spent under the banner of the Benazir Income Support Programme, which was equal to 19% of its spending. The USC spent Rs10 billion but the auditors raised questions on Rs5.2 billion or 52% of its spending.

The National Disaster Management Authority’s spending was Rs22.8 billion and the auditors raised a red flag on Rs4.8 billion or around 21% of the spending.

The defence ministry also had doubtful and irregular spending to the tune of Rs3.2 billion while other government departments had dubious expenses to the tune of Rs1.5 billion, showed the report.

BISP clarification

Meanwhile, BISP in a statement issued on Sunday clarified that the contents of the Audit Report were misconstrued. “Total disbursement made under Ehsaas Emergency Cash (EEC) was Rs179.4 billion instead of indicated amount of Rs133 billion. It is further clarified that audit observations/recommendations related to EEC were of mainly of a technical and advisory nature. Despite its massive operations both in terms of coverage and fiscal quantum in a context of strict lockdowns, there were audit recommendations of a technical nature relating to Ehsaas amounted to Rs4 billion out of Rs179.4 billion disbursements which is equal to only 2.23% instead of reported 19%.”

Rebutting the "recent negative media reports", BISP said that it holds the office of the Auditor General of Pakistan in high esteem and takes their recommendations in a positive sense to further refine and strengthen systems. The BISP authorities reiterated that no irregularity was committed during disbursements, besides there were no allegations from Audit of mis-procurement, no violation of rules, no financial mismanagement, no loss to the exchequer, no wasteful expenditure, no overpayments, no unauthorised retention and no allegations of corruption.

If we are to move forward then the AGP needs to have some real teeth and find corruption and prosecute people. We need to confiscate all assets of the corrupt and people jailed for life.
 
I think this just highlights how much filth the entire system, machinery is filled with where even the best intentions of the man at the top can't completely eradicate all these problems fast enough. There has to be a mass danda driven dictatorial type one man rule clean up which is the only system which works in Pakistan
 
An audit report on Covid-19 expenditures has pointed out irregularities of up to Rs5.24 billion in purchases of sugar, ghee and wheat flour by the Utility Stores Corporation (USC), including procurement of unfit ghee and edible oil worth Rs1.40bn.

The report on “expenditures incurred on Covid-19 by federal government” released by the finance ministry has pointed out irregularities in government interventions to ensure availability of five essential items — sugar, wheat flour, oil and ghee, pulses and rice — in Utility Stores at subsidised rates.

The audit report has highlighted that apart from financial misappropriations and irregularities, the relevant officers at the USC procured spurious food items that have been graded unfit for human consumption by the Punjab Food Authority and other quality standard authorities.

Apart from financial misappropriations, USC officials procured food items unfit for human consumption

Following the outbreak of Covid-19 in the country, the government had launched the Prime Minister’s Relief Package in 2020 and Rs10bn was released to the USC in March that year to provide food items at subsidised rates to the vulnerable section of society. Earlier, the government had also released Rs21bn between December 2019 and March 2020 for procurement of five essential items through 3,989 outlets of retail utility stores.

The audit report has highlighted irregular procurement of ghee and cooking oil worth Rs1.60bn, as it was completed without competitive tendering process and obtaining competitive rates. Besides, it added, ghee and oil worth Rs1.40bn placed at the shelves of USC retail outlets had been declared unfit for human consumption by the Punjab Food Authority.

The audit report stated that except for the Sukkur region where food items from 11 out of 15 vendors were tested from any laboratory, the USC management neither itself tested the quality of the commodities purchased nor were the quality and safety parameters ensured from the venders. “Additionally, as per USC manual, no product can be placed in shelf at any outlet unless provision of PSQCA (Pakistan Standards and Quality Control Authority) certificate and ISO certificate by the manufacturer concerned,” it added.

The audit report has recommended that the matter may be investigated to fix responsibility for violation of PPRA (Public Procurement Regulatory Authority) rules as well as purchase and sale of substandard ghee/oil without fitness certificates.

Similarly, it said, the USC had failed to obtain lab test reports resulting in doubtful payments against substandard wheat flour and excess payments. “The regional managers, USC, accepted atta (wheat flour) and made payment amounting Rs1.67bn during 2019-20 to flour mills without ensuring the prescribed specification of atta.”

The report highlighted that the USC regional mangers failed to get lab reports from the Punjab Food Laboratory and any other laboratory, which was a violation of government’s instructions. Other violations included procurement of 119,110 bags (20kg) of wheat flour valuing Rs95.28 million from January to August 2020, without conducting the bidding process.

According to the report, the USC faced a loss of Rs322.80m due to non-observance of prescribed flour specifications as its officials ignored the standard for maximum moisture contents in flour from 12 per cent and raised it to 14pc, while the ash contents ratio was increased from 2pc to 2.5pc.

The USC also made Rs77.12m irregular business contracts with blacklisted flour mills and allocated excess wheat quota to the flour mills of choice, leading to a financial loss of Rs60.30m.

The audit report has also highlighted a loss of Rs1.37bn due to irregular and ill-planned procurement of sugar. The procurement through tender was made at Rs65.90 per kg in November 2019, while the purchase was made in April 2020 at the rate of Rs78.32. The USC made payments worth Rs237.33m for transport of sugar without verifying toll tax and weighbridge receipts from the point of origin to the destination.

Other irregularities by the USC include non-replacement of expired and unsalable stocks worth Rs28.34m by the vendors and the irregular arrangement of local transport without advertisement amounting to Rs46.87m.

Published in Dawn, November 30th, 2021
https://www.dawn.com/news/1661000/audit-finds-massive-irregularities-in-covid-spending
 
A full investigation needs to be held and any money stolen needs to be recovered and people jailed. Its not IKs money, its the tax payers.
 
Jang newspaer in real pain that the AGP found no corruption in PM ehsaas programme. But as I said earlier we need to eliminate corruption because it steals from the poor and gives to the richest. IK must investigate the lapses in if money has been stolen then people need to be punished. [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] you must be happy that 172bn distributed without corruption.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/912913-ehsaas-comes-out-clean-in-covid-19-agp-audit
 
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Covid funds controversy

A COMPREHENSIVE and detailed report by the auditor general of Pakistan on the utilisation of Covid-19 funds by the government has raised grave concerns about misappropriations. It has been reported that it was only under IMF pressure that the government agreed to release the report. This suggests that without this pressure, the government was not willing to share with the citizens these serious allegations which must be probed on a priority basis.

According to the report, the Utility Stores Corporation has the most to answer for in terms of its procurements, quality controls and other violations of standard procedures. Various other government agencies, including the National Disaster Management Authority and the Ehsaas Programme also need to come clean about the objections raised by the AGP.

The PTI government had allocated a substantial budget for Covid relief and had claimed that this money would be utilised to help the financially weaker segments of society cope with the fallout of lockdowns and other Covid-related economic issues. However, it now turns out, as per the AGP report, that these very large sums of money were not managed very well. In fact, if the report is not refuted with evidence, it would suggest financial misappropriation and embezzlement on a very large scale. It would also raise very disturbing questions about the way that government organisations are being run and how the political oversight concerning them is weak and incompetent.

The federal government needs to come clean on all these matters and provide a detailed explanation on each of the red flags raised by the AGP’s report. At the same time, it also needs to inform the citizens why it was attempting to keep this damning report away from them and released it only under pressure from the IMF. The numbers involved are too high and the allegations levelled too serious to be ignored.


Read: Cabinet rejects audit report on Covid-19 spending

This is why it is rather strange that the NCOC is also silent on the matter. As the main coordinating body for all Covid-related activities, NCOC must ensure that the AGP report is explained to the satisfaction of citizens. The NCOC has performed well and is held up as an example of success where most countries have failed to tackle the Covid threat. However, the AGP report also casts a dark shadow on the NCOC because it was after all the umbrella that covered all activities linked to Covid-19 and the government’s policies.

If these serious and specific questions of misappropriations in the AGP report are not addressed by the NCOC, they can threaten to undo the good work that the NCOC has done over the past two years. It is hoped the government will move swiftly to address every single concern in the report and take stern action wherever a wrongdoing is proved. There is no time to waste.

Published in Dawn, December 1st, 2021
 
There are some rumors that a Lieutenant General (now retired) was involved in this scam.
 
A COMPREHENSIVE and detailed report by the auditor general of Pakistan on the utilisation of Covid-19 funds by the government has raised grave concerns about misappropriations. It has been reported that it was only under IMF pressure that the government agreed to release the report. This suggests that without this pressure, the government was not willing to share with the citizens these serious allegations which must be probed on a priority basis.

According to the report, the Utility Stores Corporation has the most to answer for in terms of its procurements, quality controls and other violations of standard procedures. Various other government agencies, including the National Disaster Management Authority and the Ehsaas Programme also need to come clean about the objections raised by the AGP.

The PTI government had allocated a substantial budget for Covid relief and had claimed that this money would be utilised to help the financially weaker segments of society cope with the fallout of lockdowns and other Covid-related economic issues. However, it now turns out, as per the AGP report, that these very large sums of money were not managed very well. In fact, if the report is not refuted with evidence, it would suggest financial misappropriation and embezzlement on a very large scale. It would also raise very disturbing questions about the way that government organisations are being run and how the political oversight concerning them is weak and incompetent.

The federal government needs to come clean on all these matters and provide a detailed explanation on each of the red flags raised by the AGP’s report. At the same time, it also needs to inform the citizens why it was attempting to keep this damning report away from them and released it only under pressure from the IMF. The numbers involved are too high and the allegations levelled too serious to be ignored.


Read: Cabinet rejects audit report on Covid-19 spending

This is why it is rather strange that the NCOC is also silent on the matter. As the main coordinating body for all Covid-related activities, NCOC must ensure that the AGP report is explained to the satisfaction of citizens. The NCOC has performed well and is held up as an example of success where most countries have failed to tackle the Covid threat. However, the AGP report also casts a dark shadow on the NCOC because it was after all the umbrella that covered all activities linked to Covid-19 and the government’s policies.

If these serious and specific questions of misappropriations in the AGP report are not addressed by the NCOC, they can threaten to undo the good work that the NCOC has done over the past two years. It is hoped the government will move swiftly to address every single concern in the report and take stern action wherever a wrongdoing is proved. There is no time to waste.

Published in Dawn, December 1st, 2021

I agree that any money stolen needs to be tracked down and those responsible prosecuted and jailed
and if people in the pti are involve, hang them. [MENTION=135038]Major[/MENTION] unless you have been asleep for the last 10 years this has happened on a massive scale. What was quite incredible is that no irregularities was found with the ehsaas programme. That is a big step forward but where was you when the BISP was systematically looted by the PPP? Have you suffered amnesia?

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2320138/rs163b-irregularities-unearthed-in-sindh
 
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"Dark clouds of corruption" are looming large over Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan's fourth year following the recent audit report on the country's COVID-19 expenditure that unveiled massive financial irregularities and distribution of food unfit for human consumption.

The report on "expenditures incurred on COVID-19 by the federal government" has shown irregularities in government interventions to ensure the availability of five essential items -- sugar, wheat flour, oil and ghee, pulses and rice -- in Utility Stores at subsidized rates.

A report published in Al Arabiya Post said this scandal, exposed by the government's own auditor general, is a clear case of stealing public money meant for helping the needy and medical staff struggling to deal with the aftereffects of a pandemic.

The stolen amount, worth billions of Pakistani rupees, could be several times bigger as the Imran Khan government has refused relevant papers to the government audit body. The report added that this was perhaps Pakistan PM's biggest scandal.

What makes the report even more damning is that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) pressured Imran Khan government to disclose expenditures on the COVID-19 relief package for audit.

This was released after six months of pressure from the International Monetary Fund. The report exposed misprocurement, payments to ineligible beneficiaries, cash withdrawal through fake biometrics and procurements of substandard goods for consumption.

This COVID scandal is another blow to Pakistan Prime Minister's anti-corruption image, according to the Al Arabiya Post. According to the Post, Imran Khan has been slowly but inevitably getting drawn into the corruption net as the Panama Papers leakage showed early this year.

https://www.business-standard.com/a...ar-amid-graft-accusations-121122500488_1.html
 
"Dark clouds of corruption" are looming large over Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan's fourth year following the recent audit report on the country's COVID-19 expenditure that unveiled massive financial irregularities and distribution of food unfit for human consumption.

The report on "expenditures incurred on COVID-19 by the federal government" has shown irregularities in government interventions to ensure the availability of five essential items -- sugar, wheat flour, oil and ghee, pulses and rice -- in Utility Stores at subsidized rates.

A report published in Al Arabiya Post said this scandal, exposed by the government's own auditor general, is a clear case of stealing public money meant for helping the needy and medical staff struggling to deal with the aftereffects of a pandemic.

The stolen amount, worth billions of Pakistani rupees, could be several times bigger as the Imran Khan government has refused relevant papers to the government audit body. The report added that this was perhaps Pakistan PM's biggest scandal.

What makes the report even more damning is that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) pressured Imran Khan government to disclose expenditures on the COVID-19 relief package for audit.

This was released after six months of pressure from the International Monetary Fund. The report exposed misprocurement, payments to ineligible beneficiaries, cash withdrawal through fake biometrics and procurements of substandard goods for consumption.

This COVID scandal is another blow to Pakistan Prime Minister's anti-corruption image, according to the Al Arabiya Post. According to the Post, Imran Khan has been slowly but inevitably getting drawn into the corruption net as the Panama Papers leakage showed early this year.

https://www.business-standard.com/a...ar-amid-graft-accusations-121122500488_1.html

One month gone and same lines repeated again and again, without any further details, that too in 2021 and with a hostile opposition. This makes it look like a geopolitical point rather than financial transparency.

Whoever be the culprit, Public deserves more details.
 
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