Tuesday, May 4, 2010

It is wrong for Prof. Bukenya to fail to realise his mistakes


Prof. Gilbert Balibaseka Bukenya 'slaughtered' journalists when he turned up to the Parliamentary Accounts Committee (PAC) to defend his role in CHOGM deals. It is however unfortunate that the Vice President while there looked down on journalists saying he has a reputation to safe guard and that many of the journalists did not even have an eighth of his qualifications! However, the Vice President forgets that he is senior in a cabinet where many people with connections are believed to be corrupt,hence making the NRM Government to have made a record as the most corrupt in Uganda's history.What the good Professor would do is to ensure that the Government and all who do Government deals do the work with clean hands and those who mess up are handled not with kid gloves. The Vice President may not know that there are somewell qualified Ugandans who cannot seek employment in government given the level of corruption which would lead them to get their repute soiled. If he defends the Government where he is the Vice president, he must be ready to share in the blames of the regime as collective responsibility can not leave him out.Many people have said that the NRM Government is very poor at implementing plans however good they may be. It is a fact that CHOGM was not just imposed on Uganda; for the Vice President to come and tell the committee that they were time barred really defeats anygood understanding.
William Kituuka

Bukenya lied to Museveni - MPs
IN HIS DEFENCE: Prof Bukenya appearing before the PAC yesterday. PHOTO BY GEOFFREY SSERUYANGE
By Yasiin Mugerwa
Posted Tuesday, May 4 2010 at 00:00
Vice President Gilbert Bukenya and other ministers on the Chogm Cabinet sub-committee “deceived” President Museveni in the controversial decision to lease cars for the summit, MPs said yesterday.
Prof. Bukenya told MPs on the Public Accounts Committee that he was “obsessed” with leasing, rather than buying, cars to transport delegates during the November 2007 Commonwealth Summit (Chogm).
Hiring Vs purchase
“I was obsessed with outright leasing of the Chogm vehicles,” Prof Bukenya said. “We stopped international bidding process because there was no money and I got a big warning that outright purchase would [have] taken us eight months to deliver the cars here yet time was running out.”
However, MPs, led by PAC chairman Nandala Mafabi, said the country had lost money by leasing cars at Euros 4.17 million (about Shs10.2 billion) for a couple of days instead of buying cars at Euros 6.19 million (about Shs15.2 billion).
The tender to buy 204 executive cars was initially awarded to Spear Motors Ltd but later reversed and a tender to lease 144 cars awarded to Europcar/Motorcare (U), a consortium in which Foreign Affairs minister Sam Kutesa had previously held shares.
MPs accused Prof Bukenya, Foreign Affairs minister Sam Kutesa and Works minister John Nasasira, of “hoodwinking” the President on the procurement of Chogm cars.
MPs say although the President, in a February 12, 2007 meeting, directed the committee to source the cars locally, they did not inform him that the Chogm Cabinet sub-committee had, in a December 4, 2006 meeting chaired by Prof Bukenya, already decided to single-source the cars and asked Mr Nasasira and Mr Kutesa to work out the modalities. The deal was then tailor-made for Europcar/Motorcare, MPs said.
“They deceived the President because there was a plan from the start to favour one company and Prof Bukenya and other ministers unfairly disqualified Spear Motors Ltd,” Mr Mafabi said. “Taxpayers paid 74 per cent of the cost for the BMWs for only four days instead of buying these vehicles and in the process there was no value for money and the country lost.”
The committee heard that Chogm transport evaluation committee had on May 8, 2007 selected Spear Motors Ltd, but later the decision was reversed after Prof. Bukenya insisted that the cars should be leased.
A subsequent audit found that one of the companies in the winning consortium did not have a valid trading license as required by the procurement law.
However, Prof Bukenya said the committee’s role was restricted to policy and that, “It was the business of the technical people [to] have eliminated Europcar/Motorcare (U) Ltd if it had no valid trading license.”
The Vice President added: “I may not have been informed that there was leasing in the international bidding. We halted because we thought there was only outright purchase.”
Asked about the cost of leasing compared to outright purchase, Prof Bukenya said: “I never negotiated and I don’t know the 74 per cent, the vehicles stayed here for about a month and not four days.”
According to the PPDA rules, it is irregular for ministers or government officials to interfere with any procurement process. Vice President Bukenya had earlier refused to appear before the PAC MPs, a position supported by the Attorney General Khiddu Makubuya in a legal opinion to Cabinet. Last week President Museveni met the MPs and asked them to meet the vice president in his office and not insist on him going to them. Yesterday’s meeting was held in the Parliament’s conference hall, where other witnesses initially appeared, and the Vice President said he was defying cabinet in meeting the MPs but wanted to do so to clear his name. During the three-hour appearance, the Vice President denied hiding behind the presidency, denied any wrongdoing and described journalists as “fools” for their coverage of the inquiry.
On the Shs13.9 billion the government invested in Munyonyo Commonwealth Resort without any documentation, Prof Bukenya denied any wrongdoing and blamed the Attorney General Prof Khiddu Makubuya and other officials.
“I was not part of the negotiations; mine was policy and those who drafted the joint venture agreement should be responsible.”
Denials
Prof Bukenya also denied influencing Works Minister John Nasasira to divert public money to work on Garuga Road leading to his private mansion in the area. Accusing the committee of being picky, Bukenya said: “My home is in Katoomi and is off Kitala-Gerenge road by 2km. Garuga road goes up to Ngamba Islands and is worked on every 2 years and I didn’t ask anybody to do this road.”
A draft report from PAC on the Chogm inquiry has recommended prosecution for several officials, including the Vice President. Prof Bukenya yesterday lost his cool after Aruu MP Odonga Otto reminded him that he could face up to two years in jail if found guilty of interfering with the procurement process.
“I am going there with you,” he told the MP. “We did a lot of consultations on all these issues and for insubordination you can forget. If I tell you jump into the lake, do you want to tell me that you can go ahead and jump?”

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