Sri Lanka has world’s lowest paid Auditor General - Eran

By Zacki Jabbar-July 15, 2013, 9:57 pm

The AG audited salaries of public servants who drew between 600,000 and Rs.200, 000 and exposed fraud and corruption. Even COPE acted on his reports, but the holder of such an important office was being paid a pittance. Such anomalies had arisen due to improper referencing of the AG to non-Constitutional officials, the MP observed.
The single most important office through which Parliament exercised control over finance was the AG. As such, it had a duty to safeguard his independence, MP Wickremaratne said, adding that Article 153 recognised the constitutional position of the AG and defined his duties and functions.
Wickremeratne noted that since Article 148 had given Parliament full control over public finances, it should determine the AG’s Salary.
The government had undermined the AG’s independence through the abolition of the 17th Amendment. Due to Parliament abdicating its responsibility in proposing salary revisions to the Auditor General, the Executive’s dominance over the legislature would increase further, the MP pointed out.