PRESIDENT'S
OFFICE
-
No. 882 14
June 1995 -
- NO. 12 OF 1995:
AUDITOR-GENERAL ACT, 1995.
-
- It is hereby notified that
the President has assented to the following Act which is hereby
published for general information:-
-
ACT
-
- In view of the provisions
of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,
-
1993, to provide for the
conditions of service and additional functions of the
AuditorGeneral; and for the auditing of certain
accounts and the
submission of audit reports to legislative institutions; and to
provide for matters connected therewith.
-
- (English text signed
by the President.) (Assented to 8 June 1995.)
-
- BE IT ENACTED by the
Parliament of the Republic of South Africa, as follows:-
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- Definitions
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- 1. In this Act, unless the
context otherwise indicates-
-
- (i) "accounting
officer" means a person referred to in section 15 of the
Exchequer Act, or the corresponding provisions
of a provincial
Exchequer Act, or in a law in respect of a statutory body; (xiv)
-
- (ii) "Audit
Arrangements Act" means the Audit Arrangements Act, 1992 (Act
No. 122 of 1992); (xi)
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- (iii) "Audit
Commission" means the Audit Commission established by section
12 of the Audit Arrangements Act; (x)
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- (iv) "Auditor-General"
means the person who in terms of section
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244(1)(a) of the
Constitution continues in the office of
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Auditor-General or is
appointed as such in terms of section 191 of the Constitution;
(ix)
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- (v) "Commission"
means the Public Service Commission established by section 209(1)
of the Constitution; (vii)
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(vi)
"Constitution" means the Constitution of the Republic of
South
-
Africa, 1993 (Act No. 200 of
1993); (v)
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- (vii) "Deputy
Auditor-General" means the person appointed in terms of
section 27 of the Audit Arrangements Act;
(i)
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(viii)
"Exchequer Act" means the Exchequer Act, 1975 (Act No. 66
of
1975), and includes a
provincial Exchequer Act; (xvi)
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- (ix) "fund or
account concerned" means a vote, fund or account from which
the current or capital expenses, as the
case may be, of a
department of State or any statutory body are defrayed; (ii)
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- (x) "local
government" means an institution or body referred to in
section 174 of the Constitution; (xii)
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- (xi) "money"
means-
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(a) all revenue; and
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- (b) all other money
received or held by an accounting officer or other person in the
service of the State or a statutory
body or any company or other
legal entity controlled by a
-
statutory body, as the case
may be, for or on account of the
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State or a statutory body;
(iv)
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- (xii) "Office"
means the Office of the Auditor-General established by section 3
of the Audit Arrangements Act; (vi)
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- (xiii) "property"
means any movable or immovable goods of the State or a statutory
body; (iii)
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- (xiv) "province"
means a province established by section 124 of the
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Constitution; (xiii)
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- (xv) "public
service" means the public service referred to in section 8 of
the Public Service Act; (xviii)
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- (xvi) "Public
Service Act" means the Public Service Act, 1994 (Proclamation
No. 103 of 1994); (xix)
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- (xvii) "security"
means any stock or bond certificate, promissory note, debenture,
treasury bill, or a document
issued as evidence of the borrowing
of money or any other form of financing in terms of any Act of
Parliament or of a provincial
legislature and signed by
-
a pers on authorised thereto;
(xv) (xviii) "State" includes a province; (xvii)
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(xix) "statutory body"
means an institution referred to in section
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193(2) of the Constitution;
(xx)
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- (xx) "Treasury"
means the Treasury as defined in section 1(1) of the Exchequer
Act, and includes a provincial treasury
existing in an executive
department of a province,; (xxi)
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- (xxi) "trust money"
means money kept by an accounting officer or other person in the
service of the State or a statutory
body, as the case may be, on
behalf of a person or institution, which money does not belong to
the State or a statutory body,
as the case may be; (xxiii)
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- (xxii) "trust
property" means goods kept by an accounting officer or other
person in the service of the State or
a statutory body, as the
case may be, on behalf of a person or institution, which goods do
not belong to the State or a statutory
body, as the case may be;
(xxii)
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- (xxiii) "unauthorised
expenditure" means expenditure referred to in section 33 of
the Exchequer Act, or the corresponding
provisions of a provincial
Exchequer Act. (viii)
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- Conditions of service of
Auditor-General
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- 2. (1) If an officer or
employee in the public service or in the Office, or a member of the
Commission who immediately prior to
his or her appointment as such a
member, was such an officer or employee, is appointed in terms of
section 191(2) of the Constitution,
or acts as Auditor-General in
terms of section 191(5) of the Constitution, the period of his or
her service as
-
Auditor-General shall for the
purposes of leave and pension be reckoned as part of and continuous
with his or her employment in
the public service or in the Office,
as the case may be, and in the case of a member of the Commission,
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of that service which in terms
of section 3(4) (a) of the Commission for Administration Act, 1984
(Act No. 65 of 1984), is reckoned
as part of and continuous with his
or her employment in the public service, and the provisions of any
pensions Act applicable
to him or her as such officer or employee
or, in the event of his or her death, to his or her dependants, and
which are not inconsistent
with this section, shall mutatis mutandis
continue so to apply.
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- (2) (a) The basis of
remuneration and other conditions of service of the
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Auditor-General shall be
determined by the Audit Commission.
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- (b) A determination by the
Audit Commission in terms of paragraph (a) shall
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be made on the basis of
consensus, but if consensus cannot be reached the matter shall be
decided by resolution of a majority
of at least two thirds of all
the members of the Audit Commission.
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- (3)(a) The President may
allow the Auditor-General at his or her written request, to vacate
his or her office-
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- (i) on account of
continued ill-health; or
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- (ii) for any other reason
which the President deems sufficient. (b) If the Auditor-General is
allowed to vacate his or her office-
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(i) in terms of paragraph
(a) (i), he or she shall be entitled to such pension as he or she
would have been entitled to under
the pensions Act applicable to
him or her if his or her services had been terminated on the
ground of continued ill-health
occasioned without his or her being
instrumental thereto; or
-
(ii) in
terms of paragraph (a) (ii), he or she shall be entitled to such
pension as he or she would have been entitled to
under the
pensions Act applicable to him or her had he or she been compelled
to retire owing to the abolition of his or her
post.
-
- (4) If the
Auditor-General's term of office expires, he or she shall be deemed
to have retired on the date of such expiration
and he or she shall
be entitled to such pension as he or she would have been entitled to
under the pensions Act applicable to
him or her had he or she been
compelled to retire from the service of the Office owing to the
abolition of his or her post.
-
- (5) The conditions of
service applicable to the person who immediately prior to the date
of commencement of this Act occupied
the post of Auditor-General,
shall not be altered to his or her detriment, and no such condition
of service shall at any time
be construed or applied in a manner
which is less
-
favourable to the person
concerned than the manner in which it was construed or applied
immediately prior to the said date.
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- Functions of
Auditor-General
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- 3. (1) The Auditor-General
shall, in addition to the powers and functions conferred upon or
entrusted to him or her in terms of
section 193 of the Constitution,
have the powers and perform the duties specified in this Act.
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- (2) Notwithstanding the
provisions of any other law but subject to the provisions of the
Constitution, the Auditor-General shall
perform the functions vested
in him or her by virtue of any other law, in accordance with the
provisions of this Act in relation
to
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- (a) the accounts which
shall be audited;
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- (b) the procedure
according to which auditing shall be done; and
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(c) the steps to be taken by
the Auditor-General as a result of an audit.
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- (3) The Auditor-General
may at his or her discretion determine the nature and 25 extent of
the audit to be carried out and request
the details and statements
of account which he or she considers necessary: Provided that he or
she may, notwithstanding the provisions
of any other law, also
determine the format in which and the date on which such details,
statements of account and financial
statements shall be submitted to
him or her.
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- (4) The Auditor-General
shall reasonably satisfy himself or herself that
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- (a) reasonable
precautions have been taken to safeguard the proper collection of
money to which an audit in terms of this
Act relates, and that the
laws and instructions relating thereto have been duly observed;
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- (b) reasonable
precautions have been taken in connection with the receipt,
custody and issue of, and accounting for, property,
money, stamps,
securities, equipment, stores, trust money, trust property and
other assets;
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- (c) receipts, payments
and other transactions are made in accordance with the applicable
laws and instructions and are supported
by adequate vouchers; and
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- (d) satisfactory
management measures have been taken to ensure that resources are
procured economically and utilised efficiently
and effectively.
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- (5) When exercising his or
her powers and performing his or her duties under
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45 this Act(a) the
Auditor-General may in writing require any person in the employment
of an institution whose accounts are being
audited by him or her to
appear before him or her at a time and place mentioned in the
request and to produce to him or her all
such records, books,
vouchers and documents in the possession or under the control of
such person as the Auditor-General may
deem necessary for the
exercise of his or her powers or the performance of his or her
duties;
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- (b) the Auditor-General
and any person referred to in section 6 shall have
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(i) the
right, without payment, to investigate and to make
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extracts from any record,
book, document and other information of an institution whose
accounts are being audited by him or
her;
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- (ii) the right to
investigate whether any property, money, stamps, securities,
equipment, stores, trust money, trust property
and other assets of
an institution whose accounts are being audited
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by him or her have been
obtained in an economical manner, and are
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being applied efficiently
and effectively;
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- (iii) the right to
investigate and to enquire into any matter,
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including the efficiency and
effectiveness of internal control and management measures,
relating to expenditure by and the
revenue of an institution whose
accounts are being audited by him or her;
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- (c) the Auditor-General
or any person referred to in section 6 may administer an oath to
or accept an affirmation from and
interrogate under oath or upon
affirmation any person whom he or she thinks fit to interrogate,
in connection with the receipt,
custody, payment or issue of
property, money, stamps, securities, equipment, stores, trust
money, trust property and other
assets to which the provisions of
this Act and the Constitution apply, and in connection with any
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other matter in so far as it
may be necessary for the due performance
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and exercise of the powers
and duties conferred or imposed upon the Auditor-General by this
Act: Provided that notwithstanding
any provisions to the contrary
contained in any other law, the
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Auditor-General shall
not be required to reveal the identity of the
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person referred to in this
paragraph; and
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- (d) the Auditor-General
may require the department of State, provincial department or
statutory body concerned, to make available
free of charge, while
the audit is being carried out, suitable office accommodation,
other facilities and logistical support
reasonably required for
the proper carrying out of the audit.
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- (6) The Auditor-General
may on such conditions as he or she may determine
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co-operate with persons,
institutions and associations in the Republic and in
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other countries, and take such
steps as he or she may deem necessary in
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order to promote or develop
his or her functions and government auditing in the
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Republic or elsewhere.
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- (7) Subject to section 10
of the Powers and Privileges of Parliament Act,
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1963 (Act No. 91 of 1963), or
any corresponding provision of a provincial Act, the
Auditor-General, any person referred to in
section 6 or any person
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acting under the authority of
the Auditor-General, shall not be liable in his or her personal
capacity in any civil or criminal
proceedings in respect of anything
done in good faith-
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- (a) in the performance of
any duty or the exercise
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of any power imposed or
conferred upon him or her in terms of this Act or any other law;
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- (b) in giving evidence or
an explanation or producing any document before a committee of
Parliament or of a provincial legislature
in connection with a
report of the Auditor-General.
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- Reports of Auditor-General
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- 4. (1) Notwithstanding the
provisions of any other law but subject to the provisions of the
Constitution and subsection (3) and
(5), the Auditor-General shall
submit a report to the provincial legislature concerned on the
auditing of the accounts of an
accounting officer on provincial
government level, and a statutory body established or constituted by
or under any law on provincial
government level or is under control
of a province and whose accounts shall
-
be audited by the
Auditor-General.
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- (2) The Auditor-General
shall, not less than seven days before the date on which he or she
submits a report referred to in subsection
(1) and section
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193(7) of the Constitution to
Parliament or a provincial legislature, transmit a copy thereof to
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- (a) each Minister;
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- (b) the Member of the
Executive Council of a province who is entrusted with the financial
matters of such province;
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- (c) the chairperson of the
council or board of a statutory body; and
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- (d) the accounting
officer, concerned.
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- (3) (a) Notwithstanding
the provisions of any other law but subject to subsection (5), a
report referred to in section 193(2)
of the Constitution in respect
of the accounts of a local government shall be transmitted by the
Auditor-General to the chairperson
of the council of the local
government concerned.
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- (b) When the
Auditor-General transmits a report referred to in paragraph (a)
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to the chairperson of the
council, the Auditor-General shall also transmit a copy thereof to
the accounting officer of the local
government concerned and if
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5necessary to the provincial
Director-General concerned.
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- (c) The chairperson of the
council shall after receipt of a report from the Auditor-General
submit that report not later than
at the second succeeding ordinary
meeting of the local government, which shall not take place behind
closed doors, for discussion
and to decide what corrective steps (if
any) are to be taken: Provided that the Auditor-General or his or
her representative
-
may elucidate such meeting if
he or she deems it to be in the public interest.
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- (d) Within 30 days after
the date of the meeting referred to in paragraph (c), the
chairperson of the council shall submit a copy
of the minutes of
that meeting containing the comments of the local government in
regard to the report and indicating what steps
were taken or are to
be taken in connection with
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any matter revealed by the
report, to the Auditor-General, and to the provincial
DirectorGeneral concerned.
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- (e) For the purposes of
this subsection a reference to "chairperson" means the
chairperson or mayor, as the case may
be, of the local government.
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- (4) Subject to the
provisions of this section, the Auditor-General may also cause to be
included a report on the auditing of the
accounts and financial
statements which he or she is in terms of this Act or any other law
required to audit, and which is signed
by him or her or a person in
the Office designated by him or her, in the annual report of the
institution concerned.
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- (5) Notwithstanding the
provisions of any other law
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- (a) a report referred to
in section 193(2) of the Constitution in respect of the accounts-
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- (i) of a local
government shall not be submitted to the provincial legislature
concerned or a body of such legislature concerned
or a body of
such legislature designated for this purpose;
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- (ii) of a local
government, and of any statutory body established or constituted
by or under any law on provincial government
level or is under
control of a province, shall not be submitted to Parliament in
terms of section 193(7) of the Constitution,
-
- except where the
Auditor-General deems it to be in the public interest, in which
case he or she may submit such report, to
the provincial
legislature or to Parliament, as the case may be, or to a body of
such legislature or of Parliament designated
for such purpose.
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- (b) the Auditor-General
may, whenever he or she deems it to be in the public interest,
report on any matter concerning the powers
vested
-
in him or her and submit such
report to Parliament or the provincial legislature concerned or a
body of Parliament or a provincial
legislature designated for this
purpose.
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- (6) The Auditor-General
shall report on accounts established by-
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- (a) the Security Services
Special Account Act, 1969 (Act No. 81 of 1969); (b) the Defence
Special Account Act, 1974 (Act No. 6
of 1974);
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(c) the Secret Services
Act, 1978 (Act No. 56 of 1978),
-
- with due regard to the
special nature of the accounts, and shall limit such report to the
extent which he or she, after consultation
with the President, the
Minister of Finance and the responsible Minister, may determine:
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Provided that the reporting on
any unauthorised expenditure or other irregularity shall not be so
limited, except in respect of
the disclosure of facts which will be
to the detriment of the national interest.
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- Additional directives to
Auditor-General in connection with report on accounts
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- 5. When reporting on any
accounts as required by section 4, the
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Auditor General shall
draw attention to material cases-
-
- (a) where in his or her
opinion a grant has been exceeded or has been utilised for a
service or for a purpose other than that
for which it was intended;
-
- (b) where the utilisation
of resources for a service is in his or her opinion uneconomical,
inefficient or ineffective or not
conducive to the best interests
of the State or the statutory body concerned;
-
- (c) where the use or
custody of property, money, stamps, securities, equipment, stores,
trust money, trust property or other
assets occurs in a manner
which is or may be to the detriment of the State or the statutory
body concerned;
-
- (d) of unauthorised
expenditure which in the course of the exercise of his or her
powers or the performance of his or her duties
comes to his
-
or her attention: Provided
that the Auditor-General shall list all unauthorised expenditure
which has so come to his or her
attention;
-
- (e) where in his or her
opinion the applicable internal control and management measures are
inefficient or ineffective; and
with regard to any other matter
which in his or her opinion should in the public interest be
brought to the notice of Parliament
or the provincial
-
legislature concerned, or a
local government or statutory body, as the circumstances may
require.
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- Personnel of
Auditor-General
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- 6. The Auditor-General
shall perform the functions assigned to him or her by this Act or
any other law with the assistance of
persons appointed in the Office
in terms of the Audit Arrangements Act, and such other persons as he
or she may appoint at his
or her discretion against payment of such
remuneration
-
as may be agreed upon with
such other persons and subject to such directives as the
Auditor-General may deem expedient.
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- Deputy Auditor-General
shall carry out certain instructions
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- 7. The Deputy
Auditor-General shall subject to his or her duties as accounting
officer and Head of the Office in terms of the
Audit Arrangements
Act, with regard to matters referred to in sections 3, 4 and 5,
carry out the instructions given to him or
her from time to time by
the Auditor-General.
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- Cost of auditing
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8. (1) The
cost of auditing, as determined by the Auditor-General, in respect
ofall the accounts audited by him or her in terms
of this Act or any
other law, shall, subject to subsections (3) and (4), be defrayed
from the fund or account
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35concerned, as the case may
be, within 90 days after the receipt of an account:
-
- Provided that the Treasury
may in any case where it deems it expedient, direct that another
account or fund may be charged with
such expenditure: Provided
further that, notwithstanding the provisions of any other law, the
basis according to which audit
costs are determined, shall be
determined by the Auditor-General in consultation with the Audit
Commission.
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(2) The cost referred to in
subsection (1) may, in respect of audits contemplated in section
193(2) and (4) of the Constitution,
include interest on outstanding
accounts at a rate prescribed in terms of section 1(2) of the
Prescribed Rate of Interest Act,
1975 (Act No. 55 of 1975).
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(3) If
circumstances in his or her opinion justify it, the Auditor-General
may recover an amount less than the cost of auditing,
or no cost or
interest charges at all, from the fund or account concerned.
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- (4) If the cost of
auditing referred to in subsection (1) in respect of the auditing of
a statutory body for any financial year
concerned exceeds one per
cent of the total current and capital expenditure of such body for
that financial year as the Auditor-General
may determine, such cost
shall, to the extent to which it exceeds one per cent, as the
Auditor-General may determine, be defrayed
from a vote designated by
the Director-General: State Expenditure.
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- Delegation of powers
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- 9. The Auditor-General
may, subject to such conditions as he or she may determine, delegate
or assign any power or duty conferred
or imposed upon him
-
or her by or under this Act,
except the power conferred upon him or her by this section to a
person referred to in section 6.
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- Transitional provision
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- 10. The Auditor-General
may also submit a report prepared in respect of
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(a) a
provincial administration, self-governing territory as defined
-
in section 38(1) of the
Self-governing Territories Constitution Act,
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1971 (Act No. 21 of 1971),
statutory body or any other institution as it existed before the
commencement of the Constitution;
and
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- (b) the former Republics
of Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Venda and Ciskei, or an institution
the auditing of which was assigned
to the AuditorGeneral concerned
of such a Republic, which report has been or is to be submitted to
Parliament after the commencement
of the Constitution, to the
provincial legislature of each province referred to in section 124
of the Constitution to which
the report may relate.
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- Repeal and amendment of
laws, and savings
-
- 11. (1) Subject to
subsection (2) the laws mentioned in the Schedule are hereby
repealed or amended to the extent set out in the
third column of the
Schedule. (2) Anything done under a provision of any law repealed or
amended bysubsection (1) and which could
have been done under a
provision of this Act, shall be deemed to have been done under the
latter provision.
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- Short title
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- 12.
This Act shall be called the Auditor-General Act, 1995.
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SCHEDULE
-
LAWS
REPEALED OR AMENDED (SECTION 11)
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- No. and year of law Short
title Extent of repeal or amendment
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Act No. 52 of 1989 Auditor-General Act, 1989 The
repeal of the
whole.
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Act No. 66 of
1990 Auditor-General Amendment The repeal of the whole.
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Act, 1990
-
Act No. 123 of
1992 Auditor-General Amendment The repeal of the whole.
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Act, 1992
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Act No. 142 of 1992 Secret
Services Account The amendment of the
-
Amendment Act,
1992 Schedule by the deletion of
-
the
amendment pertaining to
-
the Auditor-General
Act, 1989.
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