Office of the Auditor General (Botswana)

Office of the Auditor General is an independent office established to audit government bodies and report on their management of allocated funds. The current Auditor General is Pulane Letebele.[1]

Roles

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The role of the Auditor General is to:[2]

  • Within six months after the end of each financial year, the Auditor-General shall audit and report, in respect of that financial year, on:
  • Accounts of the national and local governments
  • Accounts of all funds and authorities of the national and county governments;
  • Accounts of all courts
  • Accounts of every commission and independent office established by the Constitution
  • the accounts of the National Assembly
  • The public debt
  • Accounts of any other entity that legislation requires the Auditor General to audit.
  • The Auditor General may audit and report on the accounts of any entity that is funded from public funds.

Reports

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The Auditor-General is mandated to do the following through the audit reports:

  • An audit report shall confirm whether or not public money has been applied lawfully and in an effective way.
  • Audit reports shall be submitted to Parliament or the relevant county assembly
  • Within three months after receiving an audit report, Parliament or the county assembly shall debate and consider the report and take appropriate action.

References

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  1. ^ Botswana (March 2017). National development plan 11 : April 2017-March 2023. Botswana. Ministry of Finance and Development Planning. [Gaborone]. ISBN 978-99968-465-2-6. OCLC 1045069850.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ "Annual Statements of Accounts (ASA) For the Financial Year Ended 31st March 2020" (PDF). Ministry of Finance and Economic Development. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
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