Contracts-chasing legislators in town!
Parliamentarians and
senators are once more in Yaounde for the end of year session to be dominated
by deliberations on the 2015 state budget. Apart from passing the finance
bills, often with minor “editing”, they tell their constituents who care to
ask, that they also “control government actions.”
By controlling
government actions the understanding, and rightly so, is by correcting
unreasonable state policy. They are also obliged to “control” through
investigations, questions, recommendations for prosecutions and legislative
enquiry into reported scandals.
But do they do that?
It’s an unequivocal no. How would they when many are pseudo contractors
competing unduly for jobs with struggling business people whose sole source of
income comes from contracts?
When the session
opened last Wednesday, House speaker, Cavaye Djibril who unlike a leopard is
gradually changing his spot, rattled articulate observers when he indicted the
executive for a miserable 37 per cent execution rate of this year’s investment
allocations.
It is a dismal failure.
Those in charge of ensuring that the projects budgeted in various ministries
and localities are realised include ministers, vote holders and members of the
various tender boards. Just less than 11 months ago, President Biya asked why
the investment allocations were not being fully used.
The presidential agony
would have frightened and spurred those concerned to sit up. But the result as
released by the House speaker is far off from satisfaction.
Previously, the ready-made
excuse for lagging in the execution of the investment budget was that the
financial year start in July and contracts awarded in the peak of the rains
which made it difficult to work especially in the road sector.
The
financial year was re-arranged to begin in January and the next excuse was the
delay in the contract awarding procedure. The functions of the “big contract”
awarding authority were then placed under the portfolio of a new ministry of
public contracts which is not only responsible for “big contracts” but
overwhelmed with small ones down to five million francs.
The
ministry then created its numerous tender boards with chairpersons earning 100. 000FCFA
while members got 75.000CFA per session, instead of a monthly salary. The
management snag is that to earn more money, a board can decide to sit ten
times a month to award contracts they would have effectively used just two
sessions to do.
That significantly delays the process and creates room for corruption. Why do
the boards often drag its feet to a week before announcing the winner after
their deliberation? Isn’t that done deliberately to give room for contractors
to “buy” the jobs behind closed doors? Why, with the decentralisation process
shouldn’t each council be allowed to create its own tender board knowing that
“many hands do light work” and faster?
The
new excuse for the delay in giving out contracts is the introduction of
the “programmed budgeting” system. But were there not so many seminars held
before the system was introduced? Is the executive incapable of curbing the
manifold ways in which the execution of contracts to build classrooms, health
centres, provide good drinking water and roads continues to be deplorable?
The bottom
line is that the executive has failed in its 2014 development initiative. If
the trend is not arrested, attaining the 2035 objectives to emerge could be a
pipe dream. But the trend could be halted if parliamentarians and senators
assert their freedom and authority by wriggling out of the grip of the
executive realm and “party discipline”.
As
“controllers of government actions”, it falls on the shoulders of legislators
to get the executive give an explanation, not only on the poor execution of
contracts but on the various scandals that have rocked the nations while they
were on “recess”.
If
they should be reminded, wouldn’t the honourables ask the minister of
territorial administration and decentralization who is supervisory authority of
councils what action has been taken when it was found out that: two
caterpillars where supplied in two councils in Lebialem for 30MFCFA a piece and
the “contractor” paid 600MFCFA from the public investment budget, when a jalopy
vehicle was supplied in Alou council and paid for as a new one with the tax
payer’s money? What of the situation in Muyuka where money was paid for a water
project that the out gone executive lied that the service was rendered?
Wouldn’t the
legislators ask the prime minister to brief them publicly if the land illegally
grabbed by administrators in Fako has been confiscated and distributed to those
who deserve it? Why would the Mezam SDO suspend a commission set up to find out
why 26MFCFA was used to transfer office equipment to a distance of less than a
kilometre in Tubah?
Those
are probing questions The Guardian Post urges senators and
parliamentarians to find answers from the executive who should be preparing for
replies so as not to parry the questions in the House when the time comes.
To have the
courage and honour to ask such probing questions, legislators cannot go to
equity with dirty hands. Many senators and parliamentarians are contractors.
They put unnecessary pressure on contract board chairpersons to give them
contracts which they either sell or do not execute them well. One of the
divisional delegates of the ministry of public contract has overtly made that
complaint against them.
There is no
law that prohibits legislators from being contractors. But if a legislator really
wants to do his work in controlling government actions, it would be
incompatible to combine the functions of a senator or parliamentarian with that
of a contractor. Such a legislators cum contractor will also not have the moral
clout to scrutinise a minister to whom he knows he has to fall back to beg for
favours. Can’t the legislators in their internal rules bar their colleagues
from combining the two functions?
We at The Guardian Post are also of the candid view that it is time the
senate and parliament set up their own commissions of enquiry so as to be able
to investigate some of the scandals independently and make recommendations to
the executive. That, we believe, is controlling government actions and making
the executive accountable to the people as is the case in real democratic societies.
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