Residents of Harare have condemned the city council for what they
describe as gross negligence, following the Auditor General's 2023
annual report, which revealed that the local authority failed to act on
27 of 28 audit recommendations.
The Harare Residents Association
(HRA) said the council had made little to no progress in addressing
longstanding governance and financial irregularities highlighted in the
audit. The only recommendation implemented was the preparation of
inflation-adjusted financial statements, in line with requirements under
Financial Reporting in Hyper-Inflationary Economies.
Other
critical issues, including poor record-keeping, missing documentation,
and violations of accounting standards, remain unresolved. The audit
noted that the council continues to rely on an Excel-based asset
register for property, plant, and equipment, and key supporting
documents for land sales, such as agreements, were missing.
The
city's financial statements were also unsupported by underlying
accounting records, with subsidiaries not consolidated into the
accounts. Furthermore, the council failed to provide a list of creditors
accounting for the outstanding balance of ZWL$1.88 billion. Disclosures
on employee benefit obligations, employment costs, and related party
transactions were entirely omitted.
The report exposed systemic
weaknesses, including non-compliance with the Public Finance Management
Act and the absence of a disaster recovery system and business
continuity plan.
"The council's inaction underscores a culture of
impunity that has long undermined service delivery in the capital,"
said the HRA.
Residents warn that the continued neglect of audit
recommendations will intensify calls for urgent reforms at the City of
Harare, which has faced years of corruption allegations, deteriorating
infrastructure, and financial mismanagement.
- online
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