The police will not probe the financial irregularities uncovered at the state broadcaster NCN, since they have not received a request to do so.
When contacted yesterday, acting Commissioner of Police Leroy Brumell briefly said that he has not received a request to have an investigation done into NCN. It was previously explained to Stabroek News that the police cannot mount an investigation unless they have been invited to do so.
The opposition political parties, APNU and AFC, have called for police to probe the state-controlled entity, after an investigation uncovered several irregular practices.
On Tuesday, APNU’s Dr. Rupert Roopnaraine said that the coalition will be approaching the Auditor-General regarding the breaches uncovered by an accounting firm during a probe of NCN and said that they also believe that the police should be called in to investigate.
The board of NCN launched an investigation in June into suspected financial irregularities at the network. A report was done by Parmesar Chartered Accountants and this uncovered several breaches at NCN and revealed that former Chief Executive Officer Mohammed Sattaur and Programme Manager Martin Goolsarran allegedly attempted to cover-up financial irregularities by pressuring staff to prepare backdated invoices, among other issues.
Sattaur has since resigned while Goolsarran was suspended for eight weeks without pay. Sattaur has declined to respond to questions from Stabroek News on the findings in the report.
Questions have arisen as to why police have not been called in to investigate and AFC leader Khemraj Ramjattan has said that Sattaur and Goolsarran should face charges in the courts. On Tuesday, Chairman of the NCN Board Prem Misir declined to comment on the matter.
A leaked copy of the Parmesar report, given to Stabroek News by Ramjattan, who said it was given to him by a high-ranking government official, said that Goolsarran, in the presence of Sattaur, in June, requested that the finance manager prepare an invoice to be dated January 2012 to cover production costs for the GT&T Jingle and Song competition for the period November 2011 to January 2012. The amount of the invoice was for $3.6 million but the employee refused to prepare the invoice “as no Job Order was given to her for these activities.” The employee told the investigators that Sattaur and Goolsarran made “a few requests” to her to prepare the invoice.
After the finance manager refused, the report said, Sattaur and Goolsarran instructed another employee to prepare a Job Order for the GT&T competition production services and forward it to the Finance Department for the preparation of an invoice. This employee also refused to carry out the instruction.
The report also said that Goolsarran admitted that he received on two occasions, amounts totalling $3,930,000 in December 2011 from GT&T for production services. “These amounts were deposited in his personal bank account. He claimed that the $3,930,000 was paid to HJTV on two occasions for their services,” the report said.
Among other things, the report said that a number of functions of other staff/ departments were usurped by Sattaur and Goolsarran. It said that that the two officers entered into arrangements with GT&T for the Jingle and Song Competition without a written agreement and further, this event was not referred to the ‘Rates and Special Events Committee,’ which has responsibility for such events. The two officials also executed a subcontract with HJTV without a written agreement.