The difference between a Chartered
Accountant and an Auditor is that whereas the former looks for Cash in Hand the
latter looks for Hand in Cash. And this precisely is what makes the Auditor the
bane of every DDO (Drawing and Disbursing Officer, poor sod) in the
government. Every once in a while an Audit party descends on government offices
like a biblical plague, armed with annual targets of audit paras and a tunnel
vision that would do a mole proud. Your typical auditor is adept at looking
through key holes, but as all of us who have done our share of peeping through
key holes during our college days would testify, this kind of opticism (to
coin a word) suffers from a loss of perspective and context: it may help one to
focus on a particular part of the female anatomy but it loses the larger picture. Audit parties also
like to be well looked after and it is acknowledged in official circles that a
well turned tandoori chicken is worth at least a dozen “dropped” audit paras.
However, if the said avian has flown the coop this is taken stern note of by
the mole, and the resultant observations can be quite remarkable.
Sometime in the 1940's a British forester arrived at a remote forest rest house in upper Shimla
district at the fag end of a severe winter. He noticed obvious signs of a bear
(the area abounds in Himalayan black bears) which had spent the winter in the
deserted rest house and, as the anecdotal and precise British are wont to do,
recorded the following in the register: “It appears that Mr. Bruno has been
staying here these winter months as there are signs of his presence all over
the verandah and the grounds.” When the accounts of the rest house were audited
the Audit party noted that the Department had been extremely lax in allowing one Mr. Bruno to stay in the rest house without paying the room rent, and directed
that the rent for the entire winter months be recovered from him, and in future
no one should be permitted to stay there without obtaining a permit ! The HP
Forest Deptt. is still looking for the errant Mr. Bruno to settle the para.
On a more recent
occasion an Audit party was auditing the accounts of a small Municipal
Committee (MC) in Chamba district. To lighten its onerous burden it desired that
some refreshments be provided (at the expense of the Committee, of course).
Since the lamb which is being led to the slaughter has very few choices, some
gulab jamuns were duly served (the mandatory chicken was missing, which did not escape the eagle vision of the Audit party).
When this particular bill came up for scrutiny Audit pounced on it with a
vengeance and demanded to know the reasons for this “wasteful”
expenditure. The Secretary of the MC, however, was equal to the task: he
replied that the gulab jamuns had been purchased to feed to stray dogs in order
to poison them (this was before Mrs. Maneka Gandhi discovered her true passion
in life). Now, auditors are a resilient sub-set of homo sapiens and, though
initially taken aback by this impertinent reply, they quickly bounced back with
this counter punch: “How many dogs were killed ? Please furnish documentary
proof in support thereof.” The
Secretary, an experienced pugilist himself, delivered the TKO with this upper
cut: “No dog appears to have died as
it is reported that they have become immune to such gulab jamuns !” Ouch!!
My own favourite anecdote
was related to me many years ago by the then Director of the Delhi Zoo. Now,
this Zoo has a large number of peacocks and at one point of time their numbers
grew to more than what it could handle. The Director, quite sensibly in any
one’s opinion but that of Audit, decided to sell the surplus birds. The process
involved some minor expenditure which was duly reflected under the heading “Retailing of peacocks.” When Audit saw this entry all its members emitted a
collective Hallelujah, for their tunnel vision had detected the mother of all
audit paras. And what a para it was: "Why was the retailing of peacocks
necessary ? What happened to their original tails? Has responsibility been
fixed for the loss of the original tails ? Has the quantum of loss been
estimated? Were tenders invited for fixing (retailing) new tails on them? Is
the quality of the new tails similar to the original tails?”
The Director sought
an immediate transfer, thankful for his narrow escape- he confessed to me that
he could not even imagine what would have happened if he had retailed a lion or
a tiger !
Acquiring the
peculiar mentality of an auditor is no child’s play: it requires years of
arcane training at the Yarrows Academy in Shimla and many more years asking
probing questions. Rome was not built in a day, nor was Mr. Vinod Rai’s Coal
scam report prepared overnight; it was preceded by years of probing questions
by him on government functioning: Why were three biscuits served at the meeting
when the rules permitted only two ? Why were tenders in newspapers (costing
Rs. 20000) not published before purchasing pens (costing Rs. 2000)? Why was expenditure on flavoured condoms (for
birth control) booked under the Family Planning Programme head and not under
Food for Work ? Indeed, the Auditor is a prime example of reverse evolution and
even the Gods do not tangle with him as the following parable indicates:
Two auditors died and arrived at the pearly gates. Just ahead
of them were two clergymen but St. Peter motioned them aside and admitted the
auditors into heaven at once. The clergymen protested: “Why them ahead of us ?
Haven’t we done everything possible to spread the word of the Lord?”
“ Yes”, said St. Peter, “but these two guys have scared the
hell out of more people than you ever did !’
Amen to that.
Re Peacocks. Another query was .. "Why the peacocks could not be re-tailed in the zoo itself" ...
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