The Comptroller & Auditor General of India today assumed
office as Member of the United Nations Board of Auditors for a six year term
upto June 2020. Shri Shashi Kant Sharma took over the charge of this
prestigious position from Mr. Liu Jiayi, the Auditor General of the People’s
Republic of China at the United Nations Headquarters at New York today. Shri
Sharma was elected to this position defeating Philippines by a convincing
margin of 62 votes in November 2013.
United Nations Board of Auditors
The
United Nations General Assembly established the United Nations Board of
Auditors to audit the accounts of the United Nations Organization and its funds
and programmes and to report its findings and recommendations to the UN General
Assembly. For this, the Assembly appoints three members, each of whom must be
the Auditor-General of a Member State. Other two members of the Board are Mr.
Amyas Morse, Comptroller and Auditor General, United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Northern Ireland and Mr. Ludovick Utouh, Controller and Auditor-General of
United Republic of Tanzania.
CAG’s international audit experience
The CAG of India has been the external auditor of various
international organizations. Presently, besides
being a Member of the UN Board of Auditors, he is the external auditor of
the World Food Programme, World Intellectual Property Organization,
International Atomic Energy Agency, UN World Tourism Organization and the
International Organization for Migration. In recent past, he has
been the external auditor of major UN Agencies like the World Health
Organization, Food and Agricultural Organization, International Maritime
Organization, Organization for Prohibition of Chemical Weapons etc.
Benefits for India
The UN Board of Auditors is one of the key oversight organs of the
United Nations and its importance has grown in recent years, especially in view
of the resource crunch being faced by all Member Nations in the wake of
economic crisis. The reports of the Board form a key input in
policy-making within the UN system. The election of the Comptroller
and Auditor General of India to the UN Board of Auditors is a matter of
prestige for the country and would greatly enhance the visibility of India
within the UN system.
Unlike most elections in the UN and its Agencies, this election
was a rare case where an institution was involved. With the election
of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India as a member of the UN Board of
Auditors, one of the most prestigious institutions of Indian democracy got its
due recognition at the international stage and image of the country has
enhanced in terms of its democratic traditions.
CAG of India will now get access for audit of UN Organizations,
the prominent one being the UN Headquarters itself. By auditing international
organizations of the UN system, not only would the Comptroller and Auditor
General of India add value to the operations of UN, but its own officers would
also be further exposed to the best international auditing and accounting
practices leading to enhancement of their professional
skills. Deploying of such professionals in India would translate
into high quality of auditing and accounting and would promote accountability,
transparency and good governance in India.
Benefits for United Nations
With their wide experience in the audit of UN and its Agencies and
other International Organizations, the auditors of the CAG of India would
assist the UN in bringing about greater efficiency, economy and effectiveness
in its operations by focussing their audit thrust on key risk areas within the
UN.
Presently, the United Nations is in the process of business
process transformation by way of migrating to International Public Sector
Accounting Standards (IPSAS) for financial reporting and introduction of a SAP
based Enterprise Resource Planning solution. C&AG of India has a pool of
audit professionals specialising in IPSAS, who have assisted World Health
Organization (WHO), International Maritime Organization (IMO) and International
Organization for Migration (IOM) in their on-going migration to an IPSAS
compliant financial accounting system. Similarly, C&AG of India is known
for its expertise in the audit of IT systems. India’s twin strengths in IPSAS
and auditing ERP systems would bring immense value to the United Nations in its
ongoing migration to IPSAS and implementation of its SAP system, UMOJA.
Comptroller and Auditor General’s Credentials
The Institution of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India
has a history of over one hundred and fifty years and is regarded as
one of the key pillars of India’s democratic
polity. It is one of the largest Supreme Audit
Institutions in the world, with a large human resource pool which is
professionally qualified in diverse fields.
Highly
regarded in the international community of Supreme Audit
Institutions, the CAG of India chairs the Knowledge Sharing Committee
- one of the four major Committees of International Organization of
Supreme Audit Institutions (INTOSAI) besides being a member of a number of
other standards setting committees/sub-committees. He is on the Governing Board
of INTOSAI. He is member of the UN Panel of External
Auditors. The CAG also chairs the Asian Organization of Supreme Audit
Institutions (ASOSAI). By virtue of his active participation in these international
forums, the CAG is closely associated with activities in establishing
standards, best practices and guidance in different areas of audit for use by
the SAI community at large.
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MJPS/rs