Revamping law on internal auditors risky, complicated
EXPERIENCED members of the auditing profession will be thinking hard on how far African governments can establish policies and laws that make internal auditors in public institutions freer, less interfered with by actual employers. This matter is likely to be a current of discussion in the profession and where the law may have grey areas, as to whether internal audits are either advised to work with their corporate superiors or have discretion on the matter. Whether indeed the government will have room to clarify on the issue is open to dispute, though.