The audit of Zemen Bank, conducted by the Audit Services
Corporation (ASC), hired by the central bank, has brought the eight-month saga
that saw Ermiyas Amelga, CEO of Access Capital Services, banned from the board
chairmanship of the bank, to an end.
Finding inappropriate actions on Ermiyas, the audit report
fell short of citing "conflict of interest," the allegation that
prompted the National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE) to investigate him. According to
the bank's establishment audit report, some of the expenses incurred might be
in conflict of interest, NBE claimed in a letter to Ermiyas, dated March 15,
2011, banning his appointment as a board chairman of Zemen Bank in October.
It was the complaints of irregularities of voting during the
general assembly that month that started the whole thing.
Now that the investigation has been completed, the state
owned audit firm has reported that there were indeed irregularities in
accounting as well as inappropriate actions by Ermiyas while the bank was under
formation.
Ermiyas was the promoter of the bank and CEO of Access
Capital Services, which also promoted the bank. During the sale of shares,
Zemen's sale of shares, amounting to 7.9 million Br, was said to be erroneously
deposited in Access Capital's bank accounts.
There was a lack of entry in Zemen's records until September
30, 2008, when the receivable account was debited by 7.9 million Br while the
paid up capital was credited by the same amount, the report said.
This led to the bank's balance understatement, affecting the
liquidity of the bank, which took two years to recover from Access Capital's
account.
The paid up capital of the bank was 150 million Br upon its
establishment in 2008.
Although this irregularity has been rectified in subsequent
years, the funds should have been used only for the intended purposes, opined
the auditors' report.
This was not the only money that was recovered from the
accounts of Access Capital. According to the report, Zemen's recovery of 4.7
million Br commission on sale of shares, collected by Access Capital after more
than two years, indicated that the money was being used by Access instead of
the bank.
During the registration of shares at the Documents
Authentication & Registration Office, Ermiyas had registered 800,000 Br
worth of shares belonging to Ethio-Investment Plc and Dolphin Shipping and
Transit S.C, former shareholders of the bank, as his own while it was kept in a
blocked account, the report noted.
Ermiyas had reported his shares as worth 2.2 million Br while
he had contributed 1.4 million Br, according to the report.
"Treating ex-shareholders' contribution and overstating
the share capital registered at DARO does not appear to be appropriate,"
declared the auditors.'
The former shareholding companies, established by Abebaw
Desta and Menwuyelet Atenafu, had bought 400,000 Br worth of shares in Zemen
each. However, during their entanglement with the NBE, they had instructed the
names of the companies to be eliminated from the register of the bank.
These individuals have had business relationships on other
occasions as well.
Access Capital had bought shares in Meri Real Estate Plc,
originally formed by Star Business Group, and Mengistu Mekonnen, with a capital
of 2.4 million Br to secure a plot for Access Real Estate, a company it
promoted. Following Access Capital Services in joining the company, buying 70pc
of the shares, the shares were redistributed.
The plot where Access promised to build apartment blocks
within a year's time was as originally given to Tis Abay Plc, another
subsidiary company formed in the mid-1990s by shareholders of Star Business
Group (SBG), Abebaw Desta, and Menweyelet Atnafu, with a 50-year lease term by
the Addis Ababa City Administration, in 2006.
Ermiyas T. Amelga, is known for his daring initiatives. When
he came back from the United States in the mid-1990s, Ermiyas pushed the limits
to re-establish a share dealing group once operational during the Emperor's
time, but with little success. Although that has not panned out as he had
planned, he has today's Access Capital Services SC, which has led the birth of
embryonic share companies like Zemen.
Zemen was not without its faults as auditors found some
irregularities of accounting in the bank as well. Decryptions of goods and
services procured from Access Capital and other related parties at the time of
formation were not submitted to the NBE as required.
That was not the only requirement of the NBE auditors found
to have been breached. Auditors found that Ermiyas had been paid four million
Birr, approved by the board of directors, for the costs he had incurred while
promoting the bank without the approval of the general assembly of
shareholders, as the commercial code requires.
Solomon Desta, bank supervision director of the NBE,
declined to give comments on the issue until Zemen Bank comments on the report.
Ermiyas declined to comment for the same reason.
"We have found the special audit report to be in line
with the initial pre-establishment audit report that was prepared by external
auditors three years ago," a statement sent to Fortune by the management
of the bank read. "The bank is presenting clearly and transparently the
facts of the case to the NBE, and we expect NBE will review our comments on the
report and be in the position to give final closure to this issue very
shortly."
It is indeed up to the central bank to make a decision on
whether the report shows the conflict of interest that started the
investigation.
allafrica.com
allafrica.com
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