1 / 24

Presentation to Portfolio Committee on Justice & Constitutional Development 20 February 2008

Presentation to Portfolio Committee on Justice & Constitutional Development 20 February 2008. Summary. Threats to Departments Integrated forensic solutions About the SIU SIU mandate and legal scope Budget growth Project profile Major project successes Performance review

Télécharger la présentation

Presentation to Portfolio Committee on Justice & Constitutional Development 20 February 2008

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Presentation to Portfolio Committee on Justice & Constitutional Development 20 February 2008

  2. Summary • Threats to Departments • Integrated forensic solutions • About the SIU • SIU mandate and legal scope • Budget growth • Project profile • Major project successes • Performance review • Project successes • Key success drivers • Building capacity • Challenges

  3. Threats to Departments • Departments facing combined threats of fraud, corruption and maladministration • Also challenge to protect integrity of systems and processes, eg social grants, service delivery, issuing drivers’ licences, procurement, tax collection • Both opportunistic and more organised exploitation of system gaps • Maladministration as much of a challenge as purposeful fraud / corruption • Major problem of legislative compliance often resulting in loss and weak delivery, eg PFMA, MFMA compliance • According to AG, 30% of Departments had expenditure-related qualifications

  4. Integrated forensic solutions • Initial detection of fraud, corruption and maladministration as a result of escalating loss • Dealing effectively with the problem requires interface between key agencies and Departments eg AG, SARS, DGs, SCOPA, Law Enforcement Agencies (LEA) • Critical part of cleaning up problem is a complete forensic solution: • Forensic audit and investigations • Remedial legal action: civil, criminal and disciplinary • Systemic improvements • Traditionally forensic solution primarily provided by private accounting firms • Result in outsourcing of forensic services by Departments at great cost – not effective • In recent years, SIU able to provide complete forensic solution to State Institutions – major counter to private sector

  5. About the SIU • Started out: Heath Commission 1995 • Early years: primarily criminal investigators and lawyers – strong LEA culture • Last 5 years: developed multi-disciplinary forensic capability: • Forensic investigators, lawyers, forensic accountants, cyber forensics experts, data analysts and project management professionals • Guided by a vision, mission, strategic objectives and key organisational values • Definite focus on corruption, fraud, maladministration, misconduct causing losses to State • Success defined through statistical and systemic impact

  6. SIU mandate & legal scope • Major functions of the SIU: • investigate corruption and maladministration • institute civil legal action to correct any wrongdoing • Primary purpose of SIU: enable state to recover money lost as a result of unlawful or corrupt action • SIU also able to: use civil law to prevent huge losses and facilitate systemic improvements eg set aside contracts • Special powers: subpoena, search, seizure and interrogate witnesses under oath – NOT power of arrest • Cooperation: SAPS, DSO and NPA when encounter criminal conduct • Provide: complete forensic service and facilitate criminal legal action to Departments

  7. Budgetincreases

  8. Govt grant vs project Income

  9. Funding growth • Over past 4 years, client Departments’ contributions have funded most of SIU’s growth (from 1% to over 61% in 06/07) • SIU able to build good track record of performance and delivery through partnership funding • Now also a four fold increase in treasury allocation from R37.2 to R158.4 over 6 years • NT investment indicates SIU’s emerging role as forensic investigation service provider of choice for the state. • Proposed amendments to PFMA • Also reverses accounting firms’ hold on public sector

  10. Project profile

  11. Major project successes April – December 2007 • DOT – audited 317 221 licences and found 32 066 non-compliant • DSD – saved R298 million; R3.1 billion in preventative savings; R38 million in recoveries; facilitated 3 386 prosecutions and 2 861 convictions • DCS –recovery of R5.6 million in 1 matter; 10 systemic recommendations • DOH – identified over 31 259 Govt officials irregularly receiving subsidy • SPF – completing audit of 13 343 beneficiaries

  12. Procurement • 36 procurement investigations referred to SIU nationally by • National Departments • Provincial government – EC, MP, LI, KZN, WC • Parastatals – ie MEGA • Local Government • Range of investigations • Fraud – cover-quoting, BEE fronting, other fraudulent misrepresentations made by service providers • Breach of contract • Corruption • Challenges • Procurement investigations complex and time consuming • Building sufficient capacity to deal with volume of investigations referred

  13. Provincial matters • SIU offices in 7 Provinces • 12 regionally based investigations • Local government investigations in 4 provinces • Key achievements • Mpumalanga: MEEC / MEGA • KZN: Irregular investment of Municipal funds; DOT cost centres; WPU safe houses; Housing Subsidy Scheme Fraud; Procurement irregularities and ghost workers in Health; Stationery / textbook procurement irregularities in Education. • Free State: 5 new Proclamations – provincial and local govt • Eastern Cape: OngoingDepartment of Local Government investigation and 17 provincial department referrals

  14. SIU achievementsENE targets and achievements for 06/07

  15. ENE targets & achievements

  16. Key success drivers • Innovation in delivering services, eg • Focus on widespread small to medium corruption • Delivering a integrated service to departments • Obtaining funding from Depts. for investigations • Excellent relations with other law enforcement agencies • An effective national presence • Project management approach to drive excellent delivery • HR Development through innovative programmes • Tough internal integrity program – ‘clean’ staff • Emphasis on good governance – clean audit report

  17. Building capacity • Key challenge is building sufficient capacity without overburdening support structures • Attracting experts from private sector and reverse public sector ‘brain drain’ • Setting benchmark for new type of forensic investigator who can tackle complex investigations in multi-disciplinary organisation • Implementation of Organisational Development (OD) • Establishing Centres of Expertise in legal, accounting and computer forensics • Training and development – model is being looked at for possible wider roll-out in future

  18. Investigative capacity

  19. Employment equity

  20. Cooperation SIU provides range of forensic servicesbut: • fight against corruption is not preserve of a single entity • works with other law enforcement agencies, leverages legal capacity and reaches targets as part of a wider team • also maintains partnerships with Provincial and National Departments, SAPS, NPA, AG, DSO and SARS

  21. Overall challenges • Rapid growth • Some key investigations present unique challenges • Lack of movement on proposed legislative changes • Proclamation process cumbersome

  22. Conclusion • SIU – excellent year in demanding circumstances • delivered outstanding results on existing projects – savings of R 374 million; systemic improvements in key departments • effective implementation of ambitious new projects • OD process caters for future growth – foundation for bigger and more effective organisation • Partnership collaborations key to successful SIU profile • Return on investmentsupports greater govt investment through increased budget • Negotiate legal hurdles through legislative amendments • Vital to proliferate success of SIU model

  23. Thank you

More Related