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Chandra Jayaratne
25 October 2015
An Open Letter to;
1. The President and the Council of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka
2. The Chairpersons of the Chambers of Commerce and Industry
3. The Chair Person and the Council of the Sri Lanka Institute of Directors
4. The Chairman and Directors of Sri Lanka Banks Association
5. The Director, Financial Intelligence Unit of Sri Lanka
6. Chairman and Directors of the Sri Lanka Accounting and Auditing Standards Monitoring Board
7. The Registrar of Companies
8. The Chairman and the Board of the Securities Exchange Commission of Sri Lanka
9. The Chairman and the Board of the Colombo Stock Exchange
Essential reforms in pursuit of good governance – The need to enhance statutory compliance commitments of auditors, directors and bankers
This open letter is addressed to you, as leaders of public and professional institutions committed to promoting good governance and statutory compliance by Auditors, Directors and Bankers, with the intent of seeking your collective leadership strategic initiatives, in pursuit of such goals by addressing some critical areas of weakness observed in the current control and compliance environment.
‘Fit and proper persons’ declarations
It is recommended that all directors, officers and top management members of companies, as a part of their statutory compliance commitments be required to annually to declare and affirm by way of a sworn affidavit placed before the board of the company, that they have, individually and collectively, engaged throughout the year in managing the affairs of the entity and its resources, acting at all times in the interests of the all stakeholders of the entity, and that they individually and collectively
The report of the directors or the governance report forming a part of the annual report, to confirm due compliance with above requirement by the directors, officers and the top management of the entity.
Avoidance of conflicts of interests
It is recommended that following a collective review of the current governance environment , you take steps to eliminate any weaknesses in the control and compliance framework linked to potential conflicts of interests of directors, auditors and bankers, especially in regard to the following;
Independence, integrity and operation of audit committees
It is recommended that you collectively review, the current governance environment, independence and integrity of operations of audit committees and take such steps as to eliminate any weaknesses in these committees effectively discharging the role and accountability expected of them and especially examine whether;
1. The audit committees, without the presence of the executive directors and officers of the company, should be requested to inquire from the auditors, at least at the time of accepting the annual audit certificate and probe where necessary, whether
a.They have received all information and records deemed necessary for the purposes of the audit and whether any such records or information they have requested have been denied by the executive directors, officers and management?;
b.They have in the conduct of the audit or in the exercise of their judgment their independence and professional review processes have been impeded in any manner by the executive directors, officers and top management and / or whether they have during the conduct of the audit been under pressure or persuasion to avoid some areas of independent review or examination of any records or information?;
c. They have been under any pressure or persuasion by executive directors, officers and top management to avoid reporting or highlight any issues or opinions?;
d. They have any other opinions or any additional issues or reports they wish to place before the audit committee?;
e. They have in the conduct of the audit been in any manner in conflict of interests or have had any related party issues that may have in any manner affected or impaired their independence and judgment as external auditors?;
2. There are opportunities, ways and means by which executive directors, officers and top management and even audit committees can exercise pressure upon the external auditors to refrain from transparently reporting the true and fair view of the state of affairs of the entity, especially in regard to statutory compliance failures, going concern and solvency and in regard to requirements to comply with accounting and auditing standards
3. Audit Committees should obtain annual declarations from executive directors, officers and top management in the form of a compliance declaration ,stating that “We declare to the best of our knowledge and belief and the information and documentation available and accessed or seen by us during or after the year ending…, that we are unaware of, not been informed of or heard or seen, any direct or indirect evidence (including transactions carried out via trustees and third parties retaining beneficial ownership of with entitlements) connected to businesses, business operations, transactions, accounts, minutes, correspondence, emails and voice recordings, assets, liabilities, sources and uses of funds and network alliances connected with the entity, its directors, shareholder and their related parties or associated network alliance partners, which raise any suspicion, a doubt or even a legitimate question in our mind, as to such businesses, business operations and or transactions being connected in any manner with or tainted by any criminal activity or proceeds of crime including offences covered by or associated with any criminal acts covered by the
a. Criminal Procedure Code
b. Bribery and Corruption Act
c. Anti- Money Laundering Act
d. Terrorist Financing legislation and regulations
e. Anti Narcotics trading legislation and regulations
f. Fire Arms Ordinance and associated offences
g. Securities, Banking and Finance legislation and regulations
h.Exchange Control Regulations
i. Any other serious crimes punishable under Sri Lankan or International Law And if so have duly made full disclosure of all such information, suspicions and network connections to the Audit Committee”
Audit quality and compliance with accounting and auditing standards
It is recommended that you collectively review the current governance environment applicable in ensuring that auditors and directors uphold, interpret and apply accounting and auditing standards correctly, especially as regards avoiding the following unacceptable situations;
Statutory compliance linked to money laundering, bribery and corruption
It is recommended that you collectively review the current governance environment promoting auditors, bankers and directors to uphold statutory compliance and in preventing money laundering, bribery and corruption, with special emphasis in regard to the following;
In regard to acceptance and credit of large value inward remittances; ensuring that the source of funds, details of remitter identity, transaction details and justification are validated;
Oversight, ethics and professional conduct validations and enforcement
A collective review of the current oversight mechanisms of the auditors, directors and bankers is recommended, along with a review of the processes and systems in place to validate ethical and professional conduct and enforcements governing directors, auditors and bankers. This review must also assess the track record of such enforcement actions in the past as well as the fairness, effectiveness and the level of deterrence, if and when penal sanctions were imposed on errant directors, auditors and bankers in Sri Lanka. The efficiency and effectiveness and the capacity of the Accounting and Auditing Standards Monitoring board and the respective Ethical and professional Standards’ Committees of the oversight bodies must also be reviewed and reformed to meet current day needs.
The persons address and copied in this mail are kindly requested to duly recognise that the above recommendations have been made not as result of frivolous information , rumours or cocktail circuit comments; but as a consequence of actual experiences and as duly witnessed or duly reported incidents revealed in the recent months . The leaders addressed are urged to recognise that it is essential that reform initiatives are an imperative and accountability falling on their shoulders in pursuit of good governance in enhancing the statutory compliance of auditors, directors and bankers. These leaders must ensure that an effective enforcement mechanism are in place and also advocate that the Government enact as an urgent step a Proceeds of Crime Act, preferably based on the Australian Proceeds of Crime Act -https://www.comlaw.gov.au/Details/C2013C00113- which appears to be a benchmark model to base the Sri Lankan statutory framework.
Chandra Jayaratne
CC. PresidentSecretary to the TreasuryPrime MinisterGovernor Central BankFinance MinisterAttorney General Minister of Development Strategies and International TradeAuditor GeneralMinister of Justice and Law ReformsCommissioner General of Inland RevenueMinister of Industry and CommerceEditors of Financial Media