NAB is fully justified in asking for the same because Punjab has at least three key agencies — the Water and Sanitation Agency, the Faisalabad Development Authority, the Multan Development Authority — as well as other government departments that are responsible for the supply of safe and clean drinking water to citizens. The provincial administration has so far failed to explain to NAB and others why it created the Saaf Pani Company — which has a fairly large workforce and is seen as a drain on taxpayers’ wallets.
The current standoff has enveloped the Anti-Corruption Establishment (ACE) as well, sucking the provincial graft body into the wider conflict. For its part, ACE sees the actions of NAB as being overly intrusive and trespassing some of its own authority. It also claims that it has already punished Saaf Pani company representatives for graft and other indiscretions. Though more than Rs150 billion have been spent on these entities, the province has not yet carried out an audit on them. All this calls for stringent measures to stop irregularities, recruitment in violation of procurement rules and merit, nepotism, as well as failure to finish certain projects on time. We watch further developments with interest.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 13th, 2018.
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