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Over 20 Mozambique civil servants detained over $6.4m ghost payments

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Jonathan Offei-Ansah
Jonathan Offei-Ansah
Jonathan has done news analysis and commentaries on Africa for BBC News (Radio and TV), Sky TV News, Al Jazeera and VOA's Straight Talk Africa. I am also a regular contributor on Africa Today, a current affairs programme on Press TV in the UK, and Africa Wrap, also a current affairs programme on Arise News in the UK. Between 1994 and 2000, he was the editor of the then highly-respected and authoritative business publication, Africa Economic Digest (AED). He was also Business Editor, Deputy Editor and Editor of NewsAfrica, the London-based pan-African news magazine between January 2004 and January 2014. He is currently the founder and publisher of Africabriefing.org

MOZAMBICAN authorities have arrested twenty-two government workers – mainly traffic police officers for their involvement in a ghost payment scandal that has cost the country over $6.4 million.

According to the anti-graft body, the Mozambican Central Office for the Fight Against Corruption, the fraud took place over a three-month period – from July to September 2017.

The BBC reports that the body’s spokesman Cristovao Mondlane confirmed that 18 of the 22 detainees were caught in the act.

‘These state workers retrieve the money claiming to be paying for services provided by ghost companies – set up by them or relatives.

‘These relatives do not even meet the prerequisites to be awarded bids. And even without providing any service to the state they are paid. Sometimes, the money is stolen through over-invoicing.’

The southern African country has placed low in corruption reports whiles its laws on anti-corruption are also not fully enforced. The judiciary, police and public services are seen as places where corruption is very rife.

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