The Auditor-General DID report on NFCorp, and investigated it coincident to the "Fidlot" audit
by Ganesh Sahathevan
The Auditor-General Malaysia DID report on NFCorp, and investigated it coincident to the "Fidlot" audit. The 25 October 2011 report from Malaysian Insider titled
"Audit finds minister’s family made mess of national cattle farming project"; is a reasonably accurate translation of the Auditor-General's report, which mentions National Feedlot Corporation and NFCorp in at least 30 instances
The Malaysian Insider report states:
“An audit check found production in 2010 was only at 3,289 heads of cattle or 41.1 per cent,” the report said.
The audit was conducted between January and March this year.
Among the reasons cited were the NFC corporation’s poor management including its failure to train 130 farmers for the project, the 5,000-acre farmland in Gemas being overgrown with thorny acacia shrubs, and poor use and maintenance of its facilities.
The audit report also found NFCorp did not finalise the standard operating procedure or implementation agreement in 2010.
It noted NFCorp claimed it could not do so because the government has yet to build an abattoir capable of slaughtering 350 heads of cattle a day.
The audit report said the Treasury completed a study on the slaughterhouse on April 5 this year to be presented to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak.
The audit report noted that two factories related to the project have yet to be built, namely the livestock feed factory that was part of the pilot project under the entrepreneur development programme, and a bio-gas factory to process waste from the abattoir and the feedlot into fuel for the farm.
The report stressed infrastructure upkeep as the most important factor for the project’s success and recommended the MoA devise a “Blue Ocean” strategy to boost its cattle breeding production to meet the original 60,000 target by 2015.
END
The Auditor-General Malaysia DID report on NFCorp, and investigated it coincident to the "Fidlot" audit. The 25 October 2011 report from Malaysian Insider titled
"Audit finds minister’s family made mess of national cattle farming project"; is a reasonably accurate translation of the Auditor-General's report, which mentions National Feedlot Corporation and NFCorp in at least 30 instances
The Malaysian Insider report states:
“An audit check found production in 2010 was only at 3,289 heads of cattle or 41.1 per cent,” the report said.
The audit was conducted between January and March this year.
Among the reasons cited were the NFC corporation’s poor management including its failure to train 130 farmers for the project, the 5,000-acre farmland in Gemas being overgrown with thorny acacia shrubs, and poor use and maintenance of its facilities.
The audit report also found NFCorp did not finalise the standard operating procedure or implementation agreement in 2010.
It noted NFCorp claimed it could not do so because the government has yet to build an abattoir capable of slaughtering 350 heads of cattle a day.
The audit report said the Treasury completed a study on the slaughterhouse on April 5 this year to be presented to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak.
The audit report noted that two factories related to the project have yet to be built, namely the livestock feed factory that was part of the pilot project under the entrepreneur development programme, and a bio-gas factory to process waste from the abattoir and the feedlot into fuel for the farm.
The report stressed infrastructure upkeep as the most important factor for the project’s success and recommended the MoA devise a “Blue Ocean” strategy to boost its cattle breeding production to meet the original 60,000 target by 2015.
END
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