The 2020 Auditor-General’s report has cited the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC) for breaching the Public Procurement Law.
According to the report, GNPC signed and awarded five international business contracts between 2015 to 2018 without the necessary Parliamentary approval.
In contrast to Article 181(5) of the 1992 Constitution, the report said that GNPC signed and awarded five international business contracts totalling $34,165,235.15 and £464,963.13 to five foreign suppliers or contractors using the Single-Source method in four of those transactions.
According to the report, the Corporation used the Restricted Tendering method without seeking the necessary Parliamentary approvals in one instance.
The report, therefore, recommended that the Management of GNPC should be sanctioned in accordance with Section 92 of the Public Procurement Act, 2003 (Act 663) as amended for breaching the Public Procurement Law.
According to the report, contrary to Section 42 (1b) of the Public Procurement Act, 2003 (Act 663) as amended, the GNPC used the Request For Quotation (RFQ) method in procurements of goods with contract values that exceeded the threshold for RFQ.
Thus, it urged Management always to observe the tenets of the Public Procurement Law and further called for the sanctioning of the officials (the Chief executive, Head of Finance and the Head of Procurement) who sanctioned the transactions in accordance with Section 92 of Act 663 as amended.
“GNPC in May 2015 procured Desktop Computers, Laptop Computers, Geo-Workstations, UPS, and Monitors for Workstations from Perfect Business Systems through Single Source arrangement without obtaining the requisite approvals from the Board of the Public Procurement Authority and that of the Ministerial Tender Review Board (MTRB),” the report revealed.
Hence, it recommended for the appropriate sanctions in accordance with Section 92 of the Public Procurement Act, 2003 (Act 663) as amended to be meted to the Management of GNPC for breach of the procurement law.
According to the Auditor-General, in disregard for Clause 2 & 3 of Article 187 of the 1992 Constitution as well as Section 33 (1) of the Audit Service Act, 2000 (Act 584), its request to review some procurement-related records and documents were not met by Management of GNPC.
“We advised Management to retrieve the document involved and forward them for our audit review. Failure of which, sanctions should be invoked against Management in accordance with Section 98 of the PFM Act 2016, for financial indiscipline,” the Auditor-General warned.
Latest Stories
-
Boeing strike ends as workers accept new contract
42 mins -
GAF will not relent in its quest to counter external threats – GOC Southern Command
46 mins -
Election 2024: Bawumia reiterates commitment to promote sustainable mining practices
47 mins -
Ensign Global College promotes health and community well-being at Ngmayem Festival 2024
49 mins -
Bobrisky reveals reason for leaving Nigeria
1 hour -
Tiwa Savage discloses ‘craziest thing I’ve ever done for love’
1 hour -
US states worried about election unrest take security precautions
2 hours -
Modi condemns violence after Canada temple incident
2 hours -
Barcelona hit by new flood as rescuers search Valencia basement car park
2 hours -
Labadi Beach Hotel pays over GH¢16m as dividend to SSNIT
2 hours -
Elon Musk can keep giving $1m to voters, judge rules
3 hours -
Election must not divide us, government will protect each citizen – Akufo Addo
3 hours -
Novel way to beat dengue: Deaf mosquitoes stop having sex
3 hours -
Trial begins over beheading of teacher who showed Prophet Muhammed cartoon
3 hours -
‘See you soon’ – Bobrisky jets out of Nigeria
3 hours