Symon Lubanga
All councils up-to-date on financial statements-Banda
The National Local Government Finance Committee (NLGFC) has successfully ensured preparation and submission of 2017-18 and 2018-19 for all the 35 Local Councils Financial Statements to National Audit Office for audit.
The remarks were made by the Executive Director of NLGFC, Mr Alifeyo Banda during the quarterly NLGFC staff review meeting held on Monday, 16th March 2020 in Lilongwe.
Alifeyo Banda said the submission of the Financial Statements from all the thirty-five councils were an exceptional achievement as it was the first time this had happened.
In his remarks, Director of Finance for the NLGFC Kondwani Santhe said the ‘submissions are in line with the financial legal framework provisions of the Public Finance Management Act, (2003), the Public Audit Act, (2003), and Local Government Act, (1998)’. He said the financial legal framework provides that councils are to keep proper accounting records, which discloses with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the Council and ensures that the financial statements are prepared and submitted for audit at least within three months after end of the financial year.
The submissions come following increased focus by the NLGFC to enforce compliance by councils to the expected legal mandate following years in the past where other councils had not prepared financial statements, accruing between 1-5 years.
The Executive Director has since assured the Government, all Malawians and Development Partners that the NLGFC will ensure that all local councils in Malawi are audited regularly by the National Audit Office and that Controlling Officers and other officers in local councils found to be on the wrong side of the financial laws will be held to account and taken to task for any deviance.
The National Local Government Financial Committee is mandated by the Constitution (Sec. 149) to facilitate fiscal decentralisation, development, financial management and compliance through resource mobilisation, allocation, disbursement and accounting in Local Councils.
The National Audit Office confirmed in a separate interview receipt of the financial statements and had since commenced audits in the councils.
EPWP removes excessive burden from extension workers
Lilongwe district council agriculture office says the new enhanced public works program (EPWP) will no longer overburden extension workers from a single entity because the programme emphasizes on team work.
Land resources conservation officer for Lilongwe East, Oswald Mulenga said this in Mponela, Dowa where extension workers were trained in integrated catchment management (ICM) under EPW programme funded by World Bank.
“In this programme, an extension worker will not carry all the burden alone as we used to do in the past going into communities as single entities. Within the district council, all extension workers will be working as a team, those from fisheries, land resource, forestry, irrigation and community development among others,” explains Mulenga.
He says all players together with communities in their locations will identify priority problems and bring out solutions to address them whether related to land resource, forestry, fisheries or road network.
During a community mapping, problem and solution identification in Senior Group Village Headman Chikhutu in Traditional Authority M’bang’ombe, with extension workers guidance, over 200 villagers that participated prioritised issues such as soil erosion, loss of soil fertility, deforestation, gullies, poor road network .
Chikhutu said, community members under Chivundi catchment resolved to rehabilitate the area by planting trees, making and applying compost manure in their gardens, rehabilitate roads and fill the gullies with gravel and improve the drainage system of the roads.
“The project (climate smart PWP) and government should help us with tree seedlings and manure making skills to restore our environment,” says GVH Chikhutu.
Chifundo Chikolokoto, a community development officer in TA M’bang’ombe says,”There were appraisals that were made to identify the EPWP catchments. Communities and the council found that Kavunde catchment area especially in Chiweza 1 and Chikhutu are highly degraded, there is deforestation in the areas, there are low crop yields and lots of galleys.
On the support she will provide as extension worker Chikolokoto says, “We will help the community to properly plan, implement, monitor and report on the activities of the progamme. As extension workers we supervise implementation of all activities.
This programme will be guided by different sectors and extension workers who will provide technical expertise in the EPWP catchments.”
In this pilot phase of nine months (April to December, 2020), the progarmme is implemented in ten districts of Chitipa, Karonga, Kasungu, Dowa, Nkhota kota, Lilongwe, Balaka, Chiradzulu, Blantyre and Phalombe. If the pilot phase is successful, the programme will be rolled out to all 35 district councils in the country.