Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Auditor-general Reports Fuel Abuse Involving Government Vehicles

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 19 (Bernama) -- At 12.14pm on Dec 14 last year, a government-owned Proton Perdana vehicle filled up fuel for RM113 at a petrol kiosk in Raub, Pahang, and a minute later the same vehicle filled up for RM112 at the same kiosk, according to the Auditor-General's Report of 2008.
The same vehicle filled up fuel at the same kiosk at 6.35pm and 6.36pm on Dec 19, for a total of RM225, the report says, adding that the same thing was repeated on Dec 23, 24, 26 and 31, for a total fuel cost of RM1,349.95.
The report cites the case as abuse of the indent card for procurement of fuel for government vehicles, and says an audit check revealed 24 cases of filling up of fuel in a period of less than five minutes involving five vehicles of the Pahang state secretariat.
The report says no action was taken against the authorities in the matter and, as a consequence, the state secretariat had to bear the high consumption cost of fuel.
It says the state secretariat informed that the matter would be resolved with the cooperation of the Pahang branch of the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Ministry by inspecting the system of fuel procurement applied by suppliers.
The audit department also found the maintenance cost of four Proton Perdana V6 Executive of the state secretariat to be excessive compared to the procurement cost of the vehicles.
For example, one of the vehicles, bought for RM117,062, had run up a maintenance cost of RM171,888 between 2005 and 2008 while another had a bill for RM192,743 between 2004 and 2008, the report says.
It says the feedback from the state secretariat was that the vehicles were used by state executive councillors and the maintenance cost was high due to faulty gear box and accidents.
The report says the maintenance cost of government vehicles in Perak was high because they were not sent to specified service centres, with a sample payment voucher showing the maintenance cost between 2004 and 2008 of RM262,256 for a Proton Perdana at a service centre compared to only RM15,197 at EON Service Sdn Bhd.
It says the state secretariat cited the need for speedy maintenance of the vehicles used by the state executive councillors.
The report cites abuse in the purchase of fuel as well as unreasonably frequent replacement of tyres of government vehicles in Penang, adding that the replacement of tyres in three to 34 months and for use between 1,700km and 21,900km for three vehicles was questionable.
Following this, the state secretariat requires replacement of tyres to have the approval of the principal assistant secretary (finance), it says.

tunku : this is only small "wonder things" that happens in government agencies.there are hundred of more abuse cases involving with payment. for me the person to be blamed for all these of course is the staff who directly involved in those transaction and also the head department.i learned that some government agencies are buying a ream of A4 paper for RM16 where the most expensive one are sold in the market for RM11-12. the department head should know that there is something fishy going on or may be he is getting his "part" too. just imagine how many millions of tax payer money goes to these people in a year. i think the country can cut its deficits by 10% if these things don't happen.we hope the administration of the country will look into this serious matter.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The Auditor General is working with one hand tied behind his back.As I said you must refine the reading of what goes around in the name of the government.There are wider issues involved. To my mind we need commitment to the rule of law and not commitment to rule this country by law.The Auditor General has been making his findings known ever since 1957. But the prosecutors have done very little. It may not sound big now although by my book the sums involved are large. At this evaporation of state funds you guess is as good as mine as to when we will join the ranks of the Third World.

When it comes to financial management political ideology and loyalty are good umbrellas to cover up but in the long term they are poor roofs for the nation. Our demands are infinite but money is finite in the long run as GDP growth cannot keep up with poulation growth. So the time is now for prudent financial mangement.Although if you ask me it should have started yeaterday. Ramalx