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THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA REPORT OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL ON THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF THE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT FOR THE FINANCIAL YEAR ENDED 30 TH JUNE 2016 OFFICE OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL UGANDA

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Page 1: REPORT OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL ON THE FINANCIAL …...REPORT OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL ON THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF ... In my opinion, the financial statements of the Office of the President

THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA

REPORT OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL ON THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF

THE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT

FOR THE FINANCIAL YEAR ENDED 30TH JUNE 2016

OFFICE OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL

UGANDA

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

LIST OF ACROYNMS ............................................................................................................................ iii

1.0 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................ 1

2.0 BACKGROUND INFORMATION................................................................................................ 1

3.0 ENTITY FINANCING ................................................................................................................. 1

4.0 OBJECTIVES OF THE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDNT ............................................................... 1

5.0 AUDIT SCOPE ............................................................................................................................ 2

6.0 AUDIT PROCEDURES PERFORMED ........................................................................................ 2

7.0 CATEGORIZATION AND SUMMARY OF FINDINGS .............................................................. 3

7.1 Categorization of findings ........................................................................................................ 3

7.2 Summary of Findings ............................................................................................................... 3

8.0 DETAILED FINDINGS ............................................................................................................... 4

8.1 Statement of financial performance ....................................................................................... 4

8.2 Papal closed and open cars ..................................................................................................... 4

8.3 High motor vehicle maintenance costs .................................................................................. 5

8.4 Boarded off vehicles not sold .................................................................................................. 6

8.5 Office of the President - Land issues ..................................................................................... 6

8.6 Staffing gaps ............................................................................................................................. 7

8.7 Outstanding arrears.................................................................................................................. 8

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LIST OF ACROYNMS

RDCs Resident District Commissioner’s

ICT Information Communication Technology

MoFPED Ministry of Finance Planning and Economic Development

UGX Uganda Shillings

BOU Bank of Uganda

LC Letter of Credit

NSSF National Social Security Fund

TAI Treasury Accounting Instruction

VAT Value Added Tax

UPE Universal Primary Education

USE Universal Secondary Education

PFMA Public Finance Management Act, 2015

ULC Uganda Land Commission

MPS Ministerial Policy Statement

OP Office of the President

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REPORT OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL ON THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF

THE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30TH JUNE, 2016

THE RT. HON. SPEAKER OF PARLIAMENT

I have audited the financial statements of the Office of the President for the year ended 30th

June 2016. These financial statements comprise of the statement of financial position, the

statement of financial performance, and cash flow statement together with other

accompanying statements, notes and accounting policies.

Management Responsibility

Under Article 164 of the Constitution of the Republic of Uganda, 1995 (as amended) and

Section 45 of the Public Finance Management Act, 2015, the Accounting Officer is

accountable to Parliament for the funds and resources of the Office of the President. The

Accounting Officer is also responsible for the preparation of financial statements in

accordance with the requirements of the Public Finance Management Act 2015, and the

Financial Reporting Guide, 2008, and for such internal control as management determines is

necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material

misstatement whether due to fraud or error.

Auditor’s Responsibility

My responsibility as required by Article 163 of the Constitution of the Republic of Uganda,

1995 (as amended) and Sections 13 and 19 of the National Audit Act, 2008 is to audit and

express an opinion on these statements based on my audit. I conducted the audit in

accordance with International Standards on Auditing. Those standards require that I comply

with the ethical requirements and plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable

assurance whether the financial statements are free from material misstatement.

An audit involves performing audit procedures to obtain evidence about the amounts and

disclosures in the financial statements as well as evidence supporting compliance with

relevant laws and regulations. The procedures selected depend on the Auditor’s judgment

including the assessment of risks of material misstatement of financial statements whether

due to fraud or error. In making those risk assessments, the Auditor considers internal

control relevant to the entity’s preparation and fair presentation of financial statements in

order to design audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances but not for

purposes of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the entity’s internal control. An

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audit also includes evaluating the appropriateness of accounting policies used and the

reasonableness of accounting estimates made by management as well as evaluating the

overall presentation of the financial statements. I believe that the audit evidence I have

obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for my audit opinion.

Part “A” of this report sets out my opinion on the financial statements. Part “B” which forms

an integral part of this report presents in detail all the significant audit findings made during

the audit which have been brought to the attention of management and form part of my

Annual Report to Parliament.

PART “A”

Opinion

In my opinion, the financial statements of the Office of the President for the year ended 30th

June, 2016 were prepared, in all material respects in accordance with Section 51 of the

Public Finance Management Act, 2015 and the Financial Reporting Guide, 2008.

Emphasis of Matter

Without qualifying my opinion, I draw attention to the following matter;

Outstanding Domestic Arrears-UGX. 37,144,575,107

The Office had outstanding commitments to the tune of UGX.37,144,575,107 contrary to the

established commitment control system that requires management to commit the Ministry

only when funding was appropriated and has been confirmed.

John F.S. Muwanga

AUDITOR GENERAL

KAMPALA

14th December, 2016

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REPORT OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL AND SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

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PART "B"

DETAILED REPORT OF THE AUDITOR GENERALON THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

OF THE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30TH JUNE 2016

This Section outlines the detailed introduction, backgroud information, entity financing, audit

findings, management responses, and my recommendations in respect thereof.

1.0 INTRODUCTION

In accordance with Article 163(3) of the Constitution of the Republic of Uganda, 1995

(as amended), I am required to audit and report on the public accounts of Uganda

that is to say, all public offices including the courts, the central and the local

government administrations, universities and public institutions of the like nature and

any public corporation or other bodies or organizations established by an Act of

Parliament. Accordingly, I carried out the audit of the Office of the President to

enable me report to Parliament.

2.0 BACKGROUND INFORMATION

The vote of the Office of the President is 001. The Office is located on Sir Apollo

Kaggwa Road behind the Parliamentary Building. The OP’s Vision is “A secure, well

Governed and developed Nation” and the Mission is “To provide leadership in public

policy management and good governance for National Development”.

3.0 ENTITY FINANCING

The Office of the President was financed by releases from Central Government

totaling to UGX.134,957,387,728. The total revenue of UGX.134,957,387,728

constituted 99% of its approved budget estimates of UGX.135,765,437,440, of which

UGX.134,957,387,728 was total expenditure.

4.0 OBJECTIVES OF THE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDNT

The following are the objectives of the Office of the President:-

(a) To provide support to Cabinet in the discharge of its Constitutional Mandate of

formulating, determining and implementing Government Policy.

(b) To provide support to Government Business Coordination Committee and

Permanent Secretaries, meeting and implementation roles respectively.

(c) To provide support to the policy development capacity in Government.

(d) Strengthening offices of the Resident District Commissioners (RDCs) to monitor

the implementation of Government priority programs like Universal Primary

Education (UPE), Universal Secondary Education (USE), Primary Health Care,

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Rural Water and Sanitation, Conservation of National Resources and

Environment, Disaster Management, Dissemination of Marketing Information

and overall monitoring of the “Prosperity for All.”

5.0 AUDIT SCOPE

The audit was carried out in accordance with International Standards on Auditing and

accordingly included a review of the accounting records and agreed procedures as

was considered necessary. In conducting my reviews, special attention was paid to

establish whether:-

a. The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with consistently

applied Accounting Policies and fairly present the revenues and expenditures

for the period and of the financial position as at the end of the period.

b. All the Office funds were utilized with due attention to economy and

efficiency and only for the purposes for which the funds were provided.

c. Goods and services financed have been procured in accordance with the

Government of Uganda procurement regulations.

d. To evaluate and obtain a sufficient understanding of the internal control

structure of the Office, assess control risk and identify reportable conditions,

including material internal control weaknesses.

e. The Office management was in compliance with the Government of Uganda

financial regulations.

f. All necessary supporting documents, records and accounts have been kept in

respect of all Office, and are in agreement with the financial statements

presented.

6.0 AUDIT PROCEDURES PERFORMED

The following audit procedures were undertaken:-

a. Revenue

Obtained all schedules of all revenues collected and reconciled the amounts to

the Office of the President’s cashbooks and bank statements.

b. Expenditure

The Office of the President payments vouchers were examined for proper

authorization, eligibility and budgetary provision, accountability and support

documentation. It was established that all Office of the President funds were

utilized for the intended purposes.

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c. Internal Control System

Reviewed the internal control system and its operations to establish whether

sound controls were applied throughout the period audited.

d. Procurement

Reviewed the procurement of goods and services under the Office of the

President during the period under review and reconciled with the approved

procurement plan.

e. Fixed Assets Management

Reviewed the use and management of the assets of the Office of the

President during the period audited.

f. Office of the President’s Financial Statements

Examined, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures

in the financial statements; assessed the accounting principles used and

significant estimates made by management; as well as evaluating the overall

financial statement presentation.

7.0 CATEGORIZATION AND SUMMARY OF FINDINGS

7.1 Categorization of findings

The following system of profiling of the audit findings has been adopted to better

prioritise the implementation of audit recommendations:

No

Category Description

1 High significance Has a significant/material impact, has a high likelihood of reoccurrence, and in the opinion of the Auditor General, it requires urgent remedial action. It is a matter of high risk or high stakeholder interest.

2 Moderate significance Has a moderate impact, has a likelihood of reoccurrence, and in the opinion of the Auditor General, it requires remedial action. It is a matter of medium risk or moderate stakeholder interest.

3 Low significance Has a low impact, has a remote likelihood of reoccurrence, and in the opinion of the Auditor General, may not require much attention, though its remediation may add value to the entity. It is a matter of low risk or low stakeholder interest.

7.2 Summary of Findings

No Finding Significance

8.1 Statement of financial position Moderate

8.2 Papal closed and open cars Moderate

8.3 High motor vehicle maintenance costs High

8.4 Office of the President- Land issues High

8.5 Staffing gaps Moderate

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8.6 Boarded off vehicles not sold Moderate

8.7 Outstanding arrears High

8.0 DETAILED FINDINGS

8.1 Statement of financial performance

The Statement of Financial Performance on page 9 and note (7) disclosed a sum of

UGX.18,050,000 as Non-tax revenue. This amount relates to a sale of documents

amounting to UGX.2,050,000 and Rent of UGX.16,000,000. I reviewed the tenancy

agreement and established that rent payable was UGX.2,000,000 per month which

would translate into Non-tax revenue of UGX 24,000,000 a year. Management did

not provide adequate information and explanation as to why only UGX.16,000,000

was disclosed. I have brought this understatement of revenue to the attention of

management for action.

Management explained that the NTR receipts from sale of Bid documents and rental

fees had not been provided by URA and the canteen to enable a reconciliation.

Management action on the matter is awaited.

8.2 Papal closed and open cars

It was established that UGX.322,200,000 was transferred to the Ministry of Works for

the procurement of Papal in November 2015. A review of the available documents

indicated that Office of the President entered into a memorandum of understanding

with Ministry of Works and Transport on 22nd October 2015 in which the latter was to

procure two cars to be used by the Pope during his visit to Uganda. According to the

Memorandum of Understanding, Ministry of Works & Transport was required to

furnish reports to the coordinating Ministry (Office of the President) regarding the

expenditures made out of the funds released for the procurement of the said

vehicles. However, there was no such report availed for review which is an indication

that Ministry of Works may have failed on its part.

A review of the Ministry Assets Register did not have the said cars which is an

indication that Office of the President does not own the said vehicles. I was not able

to physically inspect the said vehicles to confirm their existence.

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In response, the Accounting Officer explained that the Office had requested Ministry

of Works and Transport to submit a report on the particulars of the two vehicles and

arrangements were being made to have the two vehicles handed over to his Office.

I await the outcome of this arrangement.

8.3 High motor vehicle maintenance costs

It was noted that Resident District Commissioners and their deputies are required to

oversee security and monitor implementation of government programs in the various

Districts across the country. For their effective and efficient operations, they are

required to be facilitated with mechanically sound vehicles. However it was observed

that out of 175 vehicles provided to the commissioners, only 31 (18%) are below the

recommended five years official use, while 144 (82%) have been used for over five

years. This has led to frequent breakdowns due to age and rough terrains,

translating into high maintenance costs. During the year under review, a sum of

UGX.1.722bn was spent on maintenance of the entity vehicles with the RDCs vehicles

taking a big part of it.

During the financial year 2015/2016 Office of the President procured only 10 double

cabin pickups out of 144 due for replacement. I observed that this is low and require

revisiting. The table below shows the number of vehicles that have been in use for

over 5 years.

Years covered Number of vehicles %

Above- 8 years 11 7.7%

Above -7 years 26 18.3%

Above 5 years 107 74.%

Total 144 100%

The Accounting officer attributed the high costs of vehicle maintenance to the aged

fleet used by RDCs and DRDCs in the rugged rural terrain. The Office had on several

occasions raised funding requests with the Ministry of Finance, Planning and

Economic Development but no positive response had been received.

I advised the Accounting Officer to continue engaging Ministry of Finance to allocate

more funds to replace the ageing fleet.

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8.4 Boarded off vehicles not sold

It was established from the Board of Survey Report for the year ended 30th June

2016 that several vehicles were recommended for boarding off in the previous years

but management had not taken any action to have them boarded off. Some were

found packed at different garages implying the likelihood of losing these assets was

high. Table showing vehicles recommended for boarding off.

No Type of Vehicle Reg. Number Location

1 Pajero UG 0958C Afrolite

2 Nissan UG 1809C Afrolite

3 Nissan UG 1880C Headquarter

4 Nissan UG1881C RDC Lira

5 Nissan UG1947C Singh Lira

6 Ford UG 1958C Headquarter

7 Toyota UAG- 561K Kampala

8 Nissan UG1801C Afrolite

9 Nissan UG 1882C Speedway

10 Nissan UG 2108C Afrolite

11 Nissan UG 1894C Afrolite

12 Toyota UG 1549C Afrolite

This action also contravenes Regulation 295(5) of the PPDA Regulation which

requires the procuring and disposing entity to periodically identify assets to be

boarded off within a specified time.

Management explained that a team was constituted to carry out the inspection and

valuation to determine reserve prices. The exercise was still on-going and a report

was expected soon.

I wait the outcome of this exercise.

8.5 Office of the President - Land issues

It was noted that the Office of the President has various properties across the

country. A review of the related correspondences categorised land into different

stages in as far as ownership is concerned, which requires a follow up with Uganda

Land Commission in the following categories;

Approximately 7.6 Hectares of Land in 6 districts had Deed Plans submitted to

Uganda Land Commission to process land titles yet no titles had been processed.

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Land in 36 districts where some survey exercise has been on-going for over the

years yet the exercise has not been concluded. I could not establish the size of

this land.

Land in 37 districts which is not surveyed and in some areas the size of the land

is not known, which might result in the office losing some of the pieces of this

land.

In 3 districts, the location of the Land is not known. Government is likely to lose

this land if no follow up is done.

14 districts had some properties developed with government buildings and are

accommodating Offices of RDCS yet these properties have no land titles.

If there is no vigilance in securing this land encroachers are likely to take advantage

and take over this land.

In response the Accounting Officer stated that they had only managed to secure land

titles for the offices of the Resident District Commissioners of Adjumani, Buhweju

and Gulu. He also stated that the Office had been regularly requesting the Ministry of

Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Uganda Land Commission and the District

Local Governments to expedite the process of finalising the remaining land titles.

I await the outcome of the efforts taken by the office.

8.6 Staffing gaps

It was noted that out of the approved posts totalling 643 staff, only 448 (69.67 %)

were filled resulting into a shortfall of 195 staff representing 30.3 %. It was observed

that the unfilled gaps include top management positions which raise doubt as to

whether the Ministry can achieve its mandate.

In response the Accounting Officer stated the except for the few top management

vacancies, bulk of the remaining vacancies included that of the Stenographer

Secretaries (54) and Office Typists (42) who were declared to Ministry of Public

Service to cause their recruitment and deployment.

I advised management to continue liaising with the relevant authorities and have the

gaps filled.

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8.7 Outstanding arrears - UGX. 37,144,575,107

The entity had a total outstanding arrears of UGX.37,144,575,107 relating to sundry

creditors and gratuity arrears as detailed in the table below. This is contrary to

paragraph 188 Part 1 of the TAIs that requires an officer authorised to incur

expenditure to ensure that no payments due in a financial year remain unpaid at the

end of the year. Staffs that were to receive their gratuity were denied the

entitlement.

S/N Particulars Amount

1 Sundry creditors 16,336,658,236

2 Gratuity 20,807,916,871

Total 37,144,575,107

Documents available indicate that the entity outstanding bills totalled

UGX.194,609,185 for electricity and UGX.54,064,676 for water. These outstanding

amounts were not included in the list of domestic arrears for the year and therefore

the total arrears position was understated.

I advised the Accounting Officer to ensure adherence to the commitment control

system to limit accumulation of domestic arrears and where arrears exist, there

should be a budgetary provisions to avoid diversion of funds. In the meantime

arrears that were not disclosed should be included in the 2016/2017 position.

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APPENDIX 1

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS