Malawi Ministry
of Justice and Constitution Affairs has finally presented to the Media through
Ministry of Information the Baker Tilly audit report which contains full names
of the suspected cashgate looters.
Minister
of Justice and Constitution Affairs Samuel Tembenu has finally submitted the
Baker Tilly Cashgate report containing names of suspected individuals and
companies who looted public coffers on Thursday evening in Lilongwe
through the Minister of Information Kondwani Nankhumwa.
The
Justice Minister said, this report has full names of companies and
individuals involved in cashgate and is "still intact in a PDF file
format" as it was received, therefore nobody has manipulated any
information from it.
He also indicated that the report has aided government recently in the investigations and identification of cashgate suspects but the report in itself does not set guilty of the people named therein and urged people to treat the document as "information of the result of Baker Tilly Investigation."
The minister
further assured Malawians that more investigations into cashgate are underway
with the support of the information from the report.
Tembenu
also mentioned that audit investigations are underway on K92 Billion interim
report and will cover period of 2009 to March 2013
He said
government has contracted a local independent audit firm Price Waterhouse
Coopers to investigate all government ministries and departments that remained
unaudited during the previous audits.
Deputy
Auditor General Sam Gomani on the K92 billion audit said, the K92 Billion
should be treated as "Suspected Looting" because the truth from this
report shall be known when results are out.
He added
that the work into the audit is in progress and there is no interference and
together with the contracted firm the auditor general's office is operating
independently and the work is being done as planned by the office according to
their ethics.
Upon
receipt of the report the Minister of information Kondwani Nankhumwa said the
report is now in the public domain as requested by many Malawians.
He
committed that his office shall ensure that the document is made available.
The
Minister however warned members of press that this document must be used as a public
information and not for media prosecution.
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