Civil society expresses its deep concern about the fact that the Center for Centralized Public Procurement in Healthcare (CAPCS) has decided to receive offers for tenders by e-mail. This applies to procurements in the field of health care, which have nothing to do with the fight against COVID-19. Prior to this, offers were accepted in sealed envelopes. The corresponding letter number Rg02-1416, April 7, 2020, was sent to suppliers by acting CAPCS Director Alina Russu.
Even though the submission of offers in envelopes has a high level of corruption risks and is clearly a relic of the Stone Age, this procedure still contained at least some minimal guarantees of transparency and impartiality: suppliers could attend the opening of envelopes and, thus, minimize the control of the procurement process.
When submitting offers by e-mail, the minimum guarantees of transparency of procurements and impartiality to suppliers are actually compromised. Email submissions actually blindfold the public, taking medical purchases into the shadows. As a result, the risks of inefficient use of public funds and deterioration of the protection of public health are increased: for more money - less supplies and medical equipment can be purchased. This is unacceptable in a modern democratic society, and particularly in a state of emergency caused by the spread of COVID-19.
Given the increased risk of corruption in the Republic of Moldova, [1] e-mail offers are easy to manipulate and abuse:
• the e-mail is easy to delete or it can get “accidentally” in the spam folder;
• important information from the offers can be reported to competitors;
• one can advise “privileged” suppliers to make changes and invisibly send an offer with updated data, etc.
We are concerned that for more than a year now no decisions have been made to finalize the functionality of the electronic procurement system (today it is SIA RSAP MTender) for medical purchases. In this regard, in the current emergency situation, CAPCS does not use this transparent system.
In connection with the foregoing, we urge that:
• CAPCS immediately refuses to the practice of accepting offers by e-mail;
• The Government and the Commission for Emergency Situations ensure a transparent use of public funds in the field of medical procurement, particularly by:
1. Publishing detailed lists, specifications, the number of planned purchases and concluded contracts for the purchase of medicines, medical devices and medical equipment, specifying specifications, quantities and prices, data on supplies;
2. Obliging the Ministry of Finance to urgently finalize the necessary functionality of the electronic procurement system (currently SIA RSAP MTender) for medical purchases.
The entire call can be read here: Open call of civil society organisations to the authorities on critical deterioration of transparency in public procurement by the Center for Centralized Public Procurement in Health care