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When Billions Go Missing, Accountability Cannot Be Optional

Admin by Admin
June 27, 2026
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By Mark DaCosta- Amid ongoing revelations of financial mismanagement in our country’s government sectors, the last Auditor General’s Report has reignited long-standing concerns that have persisted for over half a decade. Published on June 20, 2026, by the seasoned journalist Adam Harris, this comprehensive analysis sheds light on over G$1 billion in overpayments to contractors and glaring lapses that allow public funds to slip through huge cracks. The report, by the Auditor General, according to Harris, underscores a serious issue: an acute failure of accountability within ministries and regional administrations.

Harris’ investigative work rigorously reveals the chaotic state of financial oversight in our nation. The Auditor General’s office has found that governments have consistently overpaid contractors, paid for pharmaceuticals never delivered, and failed to return a staggering G$5 billion in cheques to the Consolidated Fund. The report raises critical questions regarding whether these exorbitant sums truly serve their intended purposes or if they merely signify gross negligence.

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Over a staggering 86 contracts, the audit reported overpayments exceeding G$1 billion, with additional scrutiny revealing alarming discrepancies. It was reported that thousands of cheques — 3,241 in total, amounting to G$5 billion — remain unreturned from the government’s coffers. Furthermore, an inability to access 120 payment vouchers, totalling G$877 million, underscores a troubling trend of document mismanagement primarily linked to the Ministry of Human Services and Social Security. Harris, writing with keen observation, noted, “It could not be ascertained whether value was received for the sums involved, and whether or not the funds were used for the purposes intended.”

The issue doesn’t merely stop with missing vouchers. The Auditor General has also pointed fingers at the Ministry of Health, which dispatched G$10 billion worth of medical supplies without proper reconciliation, leaving gaping holes in accountability. Remaining drug delivery amounts as of September 2025 alone totalled G$3.6 billion. Harris emphasised the waste, highlighting that G$1.1 billion worth of expired drugs were disposed of by the Ministry of Health — an avoidable squandering of taxpayer money.

The negligence extends to the Ministry of Amerindian Affairs, which has failed to produce financial statements for an alarming G$480 million received in 2024, reminiscent of similar oversights involving G$240 million in 2023. Such systematic failures echo throughout the Auditor General’s report, which represents just a fraction of the financial picture — an estimated 20 percent of the total financial transactions ripe for scrutiny.

Despite the Auditor General’s critical role as a constitutional safeguard aimed at ensuring transparency and accountability in public expenditure, Harris laments the office’s limitations. Constrained by a shortage of staff and an overwhelming volume of contracts needing examination, the Auditor General was unable to assess all government accounts, leaving public scrutiny yearning for more. As Harris pointed out, “Even this limited audit exposes a frightening waste of public funds.”

Beyond mere financial mismanagement, the report pinpoints a culture of corruption embedded within contractor operations. It indicates a distressing trend where payments are approved without physical inspections, leading to contractors receiving money for incomplete work. “This aberration simply means that the contractor submits his bill of work and payment is made without inspection,” Harris indicated. He further details how some contractors have ended up paying off engineers to approve their work, citing fear of victimisation as a barrier to ethical practices.

The response from the government to these findings has often been lacklustre. While some instances may prompt legal threats towards contractors, the consequences rarely extend beyond public ridicule or threats of blacklisting, only for those contractors to procure contracts with other ministries unscathed. Harris mentioned the Public Accounts Committee (PAC), which has recommended police investigations based on audits, but little has resulted from their inquiries.

The government’s handling of pharmaceutical contracts has long been a source of concern. Reports have highlighted massive irregularities in drug supply, with many drugs severely overpriced yet consistently paid for without accountability or verification. This toxic combination of inefficiency and corruption creates a perfect storm that undermines the integrity of our public financial system. As Harris notes, “Some media houses don’t have the financial wherewithal to challenge a lawsuit they often shun investigative reporting,” allowing unaccountable practices to persist unhindered, an unwelcome echo of malpractice.

The report further highlights profound deficiencies in the quality of projects executed. An absence of legal safeguards in contracts, including deadlines and penalty clauses, leaves the government vulnerable to prolonged project delays and financial losses. Crucially, more than 70 percent of prior audit recommendations aimed at curbing procurement fraud were disregarded, resulting in a revolving door of the same fiscal shortcomings.

It is evident that our nation’s financial landscape is riddled with deep-rooted issues as long as the current government fails to acknowledge and remedy these systemic vulnerabilities. Harris starkly concludes, “Billions of dollars would have disappeared. Some people would be filthy rich while there is no money to pay the lowly workers.” This sobering reality underscores a dire need for robust reforms and decisive action to restore integrity to our government’s financial practices.

As the voices of the political opposition call for dramatic cuts to wasteful spending, it becomes evident that holding the government accountable is paramount in securing a brighter future for all citizens of our country, ensuring that public funds serve the best interests of the people they are intended to benefit. If these issues persist unchecked, the cycle of mismanagement will continue to plague our nation.

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