Showing posts with label USAID. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USAID. Show all posts

Monday, August 29, 2011

Same contractor who was under investigation 4 years ago for ties with al-shaabab is continuing to distribute Aid in Somalia on behalf of USAID and WFP

Somalia famine aid stolen, UN investigating

click here for story @ http://www.stuff.co.nz/

Sacks of grain, peanut butter snacks and other food staples meant for starving Somalis are being stolen and sold in markets, an investigation has found, raising concerns that thieving businessmen are undermining international famine relief efforts in this nearly lawless country.

The UN's World Food Program acknowledged for the first time that it has been investigating food theft in Somalia for two months. The WFP strongly condemned any diversion of "even the smallest amount of food from starving and vulnerable Somalis."

Underscoring the perilous security throughout the food distribution chain, donated food is not even safe once it has been given to the hungry in the makeshift camps popping up around the capital of Mogadishu. Families at the large, government-run Badbado camp, where several aid groups distribute food, said they were often forced to hand back aid after journalists had taken photos of them with it.

"They tell us they will keep it for us and force us to give them our food," said refugee Halima Sheikh Abdi. "We can't refuse to co-operate because if we do, they will force us out of the camp, and then you don't know what to do and eat. It's happened to many people already."

The UN says more than 3.2 million Somalis - nearly half the population - need food aid after a severe drought that has been complicated by Somalia's long-running war. More than 450,000 Somalis live in famine zones controlled by al Qaeda-linked militants, where aid is difficult to deliver. The US says 29,000 Somali children under age five already have died.

International officials have long expected some of the food aid pouring into Somalia to disappear. But the sheer scale of the theft calls into question the aid groups' ability to reach the starving. It also raises concerns about the ability of aid agencies and the Somali government to fight corruption, and whether diverted aid is fueling Somalia's 20-year civil war.

"While helping starving people, you are also feeding the power groups that make a business out of the disaster," said Joakim Gundel, who heads Katuni Consult, a Nairobi-based company often asked to evaluate international aid efforts in Somalia. "You're saving people's lives today so they can die tomorrow."

For the past two weeks, planeloads of aid from the UN, Iran, Turkey, Kuwait and other countries have been roaring into Mogadishu almost daily. Boatloads more are on the way. There is no doubt that much of it is saving lives: the AP saw hungry families lining up for hot meals at feeding centers, and famished children eating free food while crouched among makeshift homes of ragged scraps of plastic.

WFP Somalia country director Stefano Porretti said the agency's system of independent, third-party monitors uncovered allegations of possible food diversion. But he underscored how dangerous the work is: WFP has had 14 employees killed in Somalia since 2008.

"Monitoring food assistance in Somalia is a particularly dangerous process," Porretti said.

In Mogadishu markets, vast piles of food are for sale with stamps on them from the WFP, the US government aid arm USAID, the Japanese government and the Kuwaiti government. The AP found eight sites where thousands of sacks of food aid were being sold in bulk. Other food aid was also for sale in numerous smaller stores. Among the items being sold were Kuwaiti dates and biscuits, corn, grain, and Plumpy'nut - a fortified peanut butter designed for starving children.

An official in Mogadishu with extensive knowledge of the food trade said he believes a massive amount of aid is being stolen - perhaps up to half of recent aid deliveries. The percentage had been lower, he said, but in recent weeks the flood of aid into the capital with little or no controls has created a bonanza for businessmen.

The official, like the businessmen interviewed for this story, spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid reprisals.

The AP could not verify the official's claims. WFP said that it rejected the scale of diversions alleged by the official.

At one of the sites for stolen food aid - the former water agency building at a location called "Kilometer Five" - about a dozen corrugated iron sheds are stacked with sacks of food aid. Outside, women sell food from open 50-kilogram sacks, and traders load the food onto carts or vehicles under the indifferent eyes of local officials.

Stolen food aid is the main reason the US military become involved in the country's 1992 famine, an intervention that ended shortly after the military battle known as Black Hawk Down. There are no indications the military plans to get involved in this year's famine relief efforts.

The WFP emphasized that it has "strong controls ... in place" in Somalia, where it cited risks in delivering food in a "dangerous, lawless, and conflict-ridden environment."

WFP said it was "confident the vast majority of humanitarian food is reaching starving people in Mogadishu," adding that AP reports of "thousands" of bags of stolen food would equal less than 1 percent of one month's distribution for Somalia.

Somali government spokesman Abdirahman Omar Osman said the government does not believe food aid is being stolen on a large scale, but if such reports come to light, the government "will do everything in our power" to bring action in a military court.

The AP investigation also found evidence that WFP is relying on a contractor blamed for diverting large amounts of food aid in a 2010 UN report.

Eight Somali businessmen said they bought food from the contractor, Abdulqadir Mohamed Nur, who is known as Enow. His wife heads Saacid, a powerful Somali aid agency that WFP uses to distribute hot food. The official with extensive knowledge of the food trade said at some Saacid sites, it appeared that less than half the amount of food supplied was being prepared.

Attempts to reach Enow or his wife for comment were not successful.

Businessmen said Enow had several warehouses around the city where he sold food from, including a site behind the Nasa Hablod hotel at a roundabout called "Kilometer Four."

Three businessman described buying food directly from the port and one said he paid directly into Enow's Dahabshiel account, a money transfer system widely used in Somalia. WFP has no foreign staff at the port to check on stock levels or which trucks are picking it up; it relies on Somali staff and an unidentified independent monitor to check on sites.

The men said they would buy in bulk for US$20 (NZ$24) per sack and sell at between US$23 and US$25 - a week's salary for a Somali policeman or soldier.

Until last week, there were daily battles in the capital between Islamic insurgents and government forces supported by African Union peacekeepers. Suicide bombers and snipers prowled the city.

WFP does not serve and prepare the food itself. After the deaths of 14 employees, WFP rarely allows its staff outside the AU's heavily fortified main base at the airport. It relies on a network of Somali aid agencies to distribute its food.

Gundel, the consultant, said aid agencies hadn't learned many lessons from the 1992 famine, when hundreds of thousands died and aid shipments were systematically looted, leading to the U.S. military intervention.

"People need to know the history here," he said. "They have to make sure the right infrastructure is in place before they start giving out aid. If you are bringing food into Somalia it will always be a bone of contention."

In the short term, he said, aid agencies should diversify their distribution networks, conduct frequent random spot checks on partners, and organize in communities where they work - but before an emergency occurs. "It's going to be very, very hard to do now," he added.

At the Badbado camp, Ali Said Nur said he was also a victim of food thefts. He said he twice received two sacks of maize, but each time was forced to give one to the camp leader.

"You don't have a choice. You have to simply give without an argument to be able to stay here," he said.

- AP

USAID $$ going to contractor linked to Al-Shaabab - Thousands of sacks of food aid for famine victims stolen, sold in Somali markets

Story @ GLOBEandMail

Thousands of sacks of food aid meant for Somalia's famine victims have been stolen and are being sold at markets in the same neighbourhoods where skeletal children in filthy refugee camps can't find enough to eat, an Associated Press investigation has found.

The UN’s World Food Program for the first time acknowledged it has been investigating food theft in Somalia for two months. The WFP said that the “scale and intensity” of the famine crisis does not allow for a suspension of assistance, saying that doing so would lead to “many unnecessary deaths.”

And the aid is not even safe once it has been distributed to families huddled in the makeshift camps popping up around the capital. Families at the large, government-run Badbado camp, where several aid groups have been distributing food, said they were often forced to hand back aid after journalists had taken photos of them with it.

Ali Said Nur said he received two sacks of maize twice, but each time was forced to give one to the camp leader.

“You don't have a choice. You have to simply give without an argument to be able to stay here,” he said.

The UN says more than 3.2 million Somalis — nearly half the population — need food aid after a severe drought that has been complicated by Somalia's long-running war. More than 450,000 Somalis live in famine zones controlled by al-Qaeda-linked militants, where aid is difficult to deliver. The U.S. says 29,000 Somali children under the age of 5 already have died.

International officials have long expected some of the food aid pouring into Somalia to go missing. But the sheer scale of the theft taking place calls into question aid groups' ability to reach the starving. It also raises concerns about the willingness of aid agencies and the Somali government to fight corruption, and whether diverted aid is fueling Somalia's 20-year-civil war.

“While helping starving people, you are also feeding the power groups that make a business out of the disaster,” said Joakim Gundel, who heads Katuni Consult, a Nairobi-based company often asked to evaluate international aid efforts in Somalia. “You're saving people's lives today so they can die tomorrow.”

WFP Somalia country director Stefano Porretti said the agency's system of independent, third-party monitors uncovered allegations of possible food diversion. But he underscored how dangerous the work is: WFP has had 14 employees killed in Somalia since 2008.

“Monitoring food assistance in Somalia is a particularly dangerous process,” Mr. Porretti said.

In Mogadishu markets, vast piles of food sacks are for sale with stamps on them from the World Food Program, the U.S. government aid arm USAID and the Japanese government. The AP found eight sites where aid food was being sold in bulk and numerous smaller stores. Among the items being sold were corn, grain, and Plumpy'nut — a specially fortified peanut butter designed for starving children.

An official in Mogadishu with extensive knowledge of the food trade said he believes a massive amount of aid is being stolen — perhaps up to half of aid deliveries — by unscrupulous businessmen. The percentage had been lower, he said, but in recent weeks the flood of aid into the capital with little or no controls has created a bonanza for businessmen.

The official, like the businessmen interviewed for this story, spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid reprisals.

The AP could not verify the official's claims. WFP said that it rejected the scale of diversions alleged by the official.

At one of the sites for stolen food aid, about a dozen corrugated iron sheds are stacked with sacks. Outside, women sell food from open 110-pound (50-kilogram) sacks, and traders load the food onto carts or vehicles under the indifferent eyes of local officials.

Stolen food aid is not new in Somalia — it's the main reason the U.S. military become involved in Somalia during the country's 1992 famine, an intervention that ended shortly after the military battle known as Black Hawk Down. There are no indications the military plans to get involved in this year's famine relief efforts.

WFP said in a statement that it has put into place “strengthened and rigorous” monitoring and control in Somalia.

“However, given the lack of access to much of the territory due to security dangers and restrictions, humanitarian supply lines remain highly vulnerable to looting, attack and diversion by armed groups,” WFP told the AP.

Somali government spokesman Abdirahman Omar Osman said the government does not believe food aid is being stolen on a large scale but if such reports come to light, the government “will do everything in our power” to bring judicial action.

The AP investigation also found evidence that WFP is relying on a contractor blamed for diverting large amounts of food aid in a 2010 UN report

Eight Somali businessmen said they bought food from the contractor, Abdulqadir Mohamed Nur, who is known as Enow. His wife heads Saacid, a powerful Somali aid agency that WFP uses to distribute hot food. The official with extensive knowledge of the food trade said at some Saacid sites it appeared less than half the amount of food supplied was being prepared.

Attempts to reach Enow or his wife for comment were not successful.

Somalia: The Wealthy Group Thrives On Starving Population with USAID Aid

Click here for story on SUNATIMES

Mr. Abdulqadir Mohamed Nur-Enow is the wealthiest WFP contractor ever in East Africa

Mogadishu (Sunatimes) Eight Somali businessmen said they bought food from the Contractor - On August 16, 2011, Katherine Houreld of AP has uncovered how relief aid is stolen in big scale in Mogadishu, and perhaps being plundered as early as 1992.

The high lightened culprit is Engineer Abdulqadir Mohamed (Enow) and his affluent spouse, who runs Saacid, a powerful local food agency. However, we believe that Enow is not alone, as he is always pinned under the armpits of the top government officials.

Where faith of any religion and moral standing are in short supply, plundering relief aid is the easiest way of getting richer and richer after every single unloaded shipment. Like al-Shabab, this is a Somali curse.

"The WFP acknowledges that it had been investigating food theft/diversion for the first time in the past two months," reported Katherine Houreld. Why it took 20 years to uncover food diversions…?

No sane person can believe such version. In fact, the aid theft was happening in the past 20 years, and we do strongly believe that WFP regional and filed authorities are not immune of aid plunder in the past quarter of a century timeline.

In the other hand, the majority of Somalis do believe that whatever total relief food shipments donated to the famishing recipients in the past twenty years, only half of it or less made to the plates of the hungry masses. Enow and his spouse could be the tip of the greatest WFP aid theft in the century, but we need to see the big guys lurking behind the UN mantle on the hot seat, as well.

The genuine Somali populations are earnestly asking the Secretary General of the UN to make good the missed portion of food aid and be forwarded within the famine season. There’s another question. How can we trust WFP service if the aid thieves are not apprehended and brought to justice?

Mr. Abdulqadir Mohamed Nur-Enow is the wealthiest WFP contractor ever in East Africa, let alone Somalia. He is under WFP contract since 1992 and has been reported to have extensive warehouses around Mogadishu where his sales aid foods to business retailers.

One of his extensive warehouses is located behind Hotel Nasahablood, by the roundabout of Kilometer Four in Mogadishu. All Foods in his stores are relief aid that bears the stamps of USAID, the Kuwait Government, the Japanese government, the WFP, and perhaps so, will be other aid food on the way to the southern and central regions of Somalia.

The AP found 8 major sites where thousands of aid foods bags are being sold in the open market; as well as many smaller stores where aid foods were being sold in North Mogadishu.

Certain aid foods have a good demand in the market, such as: Kuwait dates, biscuits, corn, plump’s nut and peanut butter designed for starving children. Officials in Mogadishu with extensive knowledge of food trade said a massive amount of aid food is being stolen for long-perhaps to half of recent aid deliveries, admitted the AP reporter.

"While helping starving people, you are also feeding of groups that make a business out of the disaster," remarked Joakin Gundel who heads Katun, a consultant company based in Nairobi often asked to evaluate International aid efforts in Somalia.

Another official with extensive knowledge of the aid food trade said at some Saacid kitchen sites, "It appeared less than half of the food delivered for feeding."

A Badbaado camp in Mogadishu run by the TFG tells an appealing account of how the starving people are deprived of food aid delivered to them. "As usual food is delivered to the camp and journalists take pictures and leave," admit the plundered recipients.

The government servicing staff force the people to give back the food, and the starving people complain about it, and say: "They tell us they will keep it for us and force us to give them our food," said a refugee Halima Sheikh Abdi.

She continued and added, "We cannot refuse to cooperate because if we do, they will force us out of the camp, and then you don’t know what to do and eat. It happened to many people already." The AP reporter said, "WFP officials have long expected some of the aid food pouring into Somalia to disappear.

But the sheer scale of the theft calls into question the aid group’s ability to reach the starving masses. Paradoxically, it took WFP 20 odd years to confirm for the first time the grand aid theft in the century…!

Here is another source of information about aid diversion. 3 businessmen described buying food directly from Mogadishu Port and paid into Enow Dahabshil account, a money transfer system in Somalia.

Many quarters, local and international believe that diverted food fuels Somalia’s 20-years of civil wars. The successive TFG officials covered up aid scam. It is big business with mutual interest for a privileged club.

The food scam starts from Mogadishu Port management, and includes: The shipment service unit in the port, the TFG aid supervisor and ultimately the contractor. On behalf of the top TFG officials, the contractor takes care of their interest and enjoys the impunity of the government scrutiny. Nominating a civil servant official to supervision position at Mogadishu Port is the most rewarding political position ever offered to one.

A spokesman for the TFG Mr. Abdurahman Omar Osman said, "The government does not believe food aid is being stolen on a larger scale, but if such report comes to light the government will do everything in its power to bring action in a military court."

Who can believe such hollow words? In fact, the government is a full partner of food theft. It never brought aid thieves to the court. The Government did no establish courts of justice in the first place. What the AP reporter had learned in 24 hours could not have remained in the darkness off the government radar for twenty long years.

If half of the aid food is stolen in the past 20 years, how many people died of hunger since then…? How much money was worthy the disappeared food…? As of late as of August 16, 2011, 29,000 children died of starvation.

Who embezzled their food and put them into an agonizing death…? Unlike Hitler, these opportunists did not gas their victims, but like Hitler, they starved to death, and they are equally accountable of the lives of those who died of hunger.

The WFP contractors are also responsible of the death of the 14 WFP employees killed since 2008. The contractors felt uncomfortable of vigilant WFP employees and contracted for their death, believe ¾ of Mogadishu residents.

Since Somalia falls under the mandate of the UN, the food contractors should be brought to justice and all their ill-gotten assets are frozen and refunded to the starving people.

By Siham Mohamud

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

UN sinks $$ into Haiti 'love boat'


The United Nations is spending more than $10 million to house some of its Haiti relief workers on a pair of chartered cruise ships -- one of which has been dubbed "the Love Boat" by UN staff.

And some of the funds are going to a company closely linked to the government of Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez, FOXNews.com reported yesterday.

National Review: The U.N. 'Love Boat'

captain's hat
EnlargeiStockphoto.com

The World Food Program has rented out two passenger ships to accommodate many U.N. staff members off the coast of Haiti. At $112,500 per day, how much of these costs are passed off onto the U.S., the largest contributor to WFP.

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April 13, 2010

In a story posted last week on Fox News's website, George Russell laid out one of the most outrageous examples of poor judgment and profligacy seen in recent years from a U.N. organization. As Russell reports, two passenger ships (the Ola Esmeralda and the Sea Voyager) have been rented by the World Food Program — a U.N. humanitarian-relief organization — for $112,500 per day for the purposes of "accommodation for many of the U.N.'s international staff" off the coast of Haiti. The ships are also available to NGO workers and dignitaries such as Brazilian president Luiz Inacio da Silva, who recently visited the impoverished and earthquake-ravaged island. The total cost of renting these ships is projected to be over $10 million for the first 90 days. U.N. staff call one of the ships the "Love Boat."

Sensing that the news might not be received well, WFP quickly pulled down its own article (complete with pictures) about the ships. Russell preserved the story, however, and does a wonderful job of exposing the many questions surrounding WFP's decision to rent these ships. Among the highlights:

WFP is being overcharged, because the projected expense is millions of dollars more than what the ships would have been likely to earn through normal operation.

The Ola Esmeralda is owned by a Venezuelan company with close ties to Pres. Hugo Chavez.

Also included in the story is a revealing insight into the U.N. mindset. Russell asked Edmond Mulet, special representative in Haiti of the U.N. secretary general and head of the U.N. peacekeeping mission (MINUSTAH) in the country, about the decision. Mulet's answer, spread through several quotes in the story, was shocking: "It is the least we could do for them. They are working 14, 16 hours a day. The place was pulverized. Living conditions are really appalling. . . . [When] oxygen masks come down in a falling plane, the first thing you do is put them on yourself. You have to be in good shape in order to help the Haitians."

Apparently, a visit to the Lido Deck is just the thing for staying in "good shape."

Russell reports that if the two boats are fully booked, the cost to WFP is $181.81 per passenger per day for the Sea Voyager and $154.25 per passenger per day for the Ola Esmeralda. But U.N. staffers get to stay on the ships for $40 per day, and those participating in the U.N. peacekeeping mission get to stay for $20 per day. So WFP, even if the ship is full, provides each U.N. "passenger" a direct subsidy of up to $161.81 per day. But WFP doesn't really pay for it, of course; the taxpayers in the countries who contribute to WFP do. In 2008, the U.S. gave over $2 billion to WFP — about 40 percent of its total budget.

And as if that weren't enough, American taxpayers pay roughly a quarter of the expense of U.N. operations and staff salaries — expenditures that include a Daily Subsistence Allowance for U.N. staff of $244 dollars. Reasonable people might wonder, given that their daily allowances would more than cover it, why WFP is not charging U.N. staff the full cost of staying on the ships rather than $40 or $20 per day. Such is the regard U.N. agencies have for our hard-earned tax dollars.

This is just the latest in a series of missteps by WFP. For instance, according to a March 2010 report by the U.N. Monitoring Group on Somalia, "up to half of the food aid intended for needy Somalis is routinely diverted," and WFP food-aid delivery was dominated by three individuals (and their families and associates) linked to "arms sales and insurgent connections." A February 2010 story, also by Russell, detailed how WFP's relief effort in Afghanistan was inflated, with some outside experts saying that “some of the costs are more than 100 percent higher than they need to be."

Since the U.S. is by far the largest contributor to the World Food Program, Congress should take a keen interest in its activities in Haiti and elsewhere.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Pastor finds Canadian aid for sale on Haiti’s black market

OTTAWA-A former Ottawa pastor trying to rebuild an orphanage for children who lost everything in the catastrophic Jan. 12 earthquake that levelled Port-au-Prince, Haiti says he is buying Canadian food aid on the black market that flourishes in the country.

Ismorin Noël, who operates Orphelinat de la Judée in the coastal city of Gonaives with his wife Louise, rushed to Port-au-Prince after the earthquake, hoping to rescue youngsters who have no homes or surviving families.

This week Ismorin plans to move 30 Port-au-Prince orphans from a collapsed children’s shelter to the orphanage in Gonaives, north of Port-au-Prince. The six-hour bus trip will cost about $100 Canadian.

Unfortunately the orphanage Ismorin and Louise founded in 2004 was heavily damaged by six hurricanes and tropical storms and suffered more damage during the earthquake.

The roof is partly collapsed, the kitchen is a shambles, many buildings in the city north of Port-au-Prince have been destroyed, malaria is a problem and there are open sewers everywhere.

The orphanage, which houses 28 children, faces food shortages and increasing building material costs. Louise, who hopes to return to Haiti from her home in Gatineau, said her husband buys the Canadian food aid before other black market vendors grabbed it for resale in the local market.

“They don’t have enough food, clothing or shoes,” Louise said. “Food is very hard to get now at the market.

“They have to buy rice donated by Canada because it is available only on the black market. When you see a helicopter dropping food, men fight over it and then sell it in the market.”

Louise said everything for sale in the market in Gonaives was first donated. She added a plan to give food aid to women, that is now under way in Port-au-Prince would deliver more food directly to families instead of the black market.

The Kiwanis Club, the Royal Canadian Legion and the French Café in Manotick are trying to raise $100,000 to rebuild the Noël’s orphanage near Ennery, a higher and safer location northeast of Gonaives.

Other supporters of the orphanage include the Ottawa charity Re-Imagine United, a church in Austin, Texas and École élémentaire publique Michaëlle-Jean on Claridge Drive in Barrhaven which donated 100 boxes of clothing, shoes and school materials.

Louise, a health care worker at Montfort Hospital, who came to Canada in 1992 from France, and now lives in Gatineau, established the orphanage because she wanted to rescue abandoned children. She is originally from Haiti.

“When I was growing up I saw a lot of poverty,” Louise said. “Girls would get pregnant during carnival, abort themselves later and leave the babies in plastic bags on the ground. I always wanted to save those babies.

“There are now 28 children there now. Fifty orphans needed a home after the collapse of the orphanage in Port-au-Prince, but Ismorin could take only 30.”

Haitian officials didn’t object to the move but Ismorin has had trouble with child traffickers, Louise said. One man demanded $50 for one supposed orphan and another asked $3,000 for “plenty of children.”

Ismorin refused to pay and moved on.

Lucie Demers, a spokeswoman for Re-Imagine United, said all the children who go to the Gonaives orphanage will remain in Haiti and won’t be available for adoption.

The new orphanage is designed for 65 children but may have to accommodate up to 100 temporarily. Demers said the charity isn’t yet registered with Canada Revenue Agency but all donations are used for the orphanage and nothing is spent on administration.

Orphanage supporters have raised $20,000 of the $100,000 construction cost but within a few weeks they hope to find volunteers who will design and build a new home for the children.

People can contribute online to Orphelinat de la Judée at www.reimagineunited.org.

Corruption biting the hand that feeds: food aid industry facing tough questions

The food aid industry is facing a number of scandals and criticisms that are providing fresh evidence that not only does food aid hurt Third World farmers, it is also a revenue source for corrupt politicians and terrorists.

In Haiti, as the relief efforts continue to percolate through the country, President Rene Preval is urging international food aid donors to scale back their contributions, saying now that the “first phase of the emergency is over” Haitians need to be weaned off some of the food aid so they can begin to develop the necessary means to meet their own needs.

“If food and water continues to be sent from abroad, that will undermine Haitian national production and Haitian trade,” he said.

His plea comes after decades of food aid have already undermined Haiti’s agricultural sector, according to a number of analysts. Haiti relies on the outside world for much of its sustenance—with the most recent statistics showing that 51 percent of the food consumed in the country is imported, including 80 percent of all rice eaten. In the 1970s agricultural production accounted for almost half of the GDP, but has since fallen to less than a third.

Jean Andre Victor, a Haitian agronomist, agrees with the president, saying the country needs to implement drastic agricultural reforms, not increase its shipments of food aid.

"There's a long history in Haiti of groups like USAID flooding the market with rice and other imports," he told the Associated Press. "This is not what we need. We need real help and that means completely changing the agricultural system."

But food aid, while being criticized for creating dependency in the country it is supposed to be helping, also often falls under the political control of corrupt government officials and criminal elements. Haiti is no exception.

Haitian National Assembly deputy Steven Benoit says that gangs are intercepting aid convoys with the help of information from corrupt government officials, selling the food on the black market, and lining their pockets.

"They (government officials) have their little gangs on the side and those gangs are operating with immunity because they know they are covered by high-ranking officials,” he said.

Other workers on the ground are also noticing that food aid is increasingly feeding the country’s black market. One Canadian pastor and his wife, working in Haiti to rebuild an orphanage destroyed in January’s earthquake, say they have to buy food aid from the black market.

“They [residents] have to buy rice donated by Canada because it is available only on the black market. When you see a helicopter dropping food, men fight over it and then sell it in the market,” says Louise Noel, the pastor’s wife. She added that everything for sale in the local market was first donated.

Somalia too

The problems in Haiti are just the tip of the iceberg facing the global food aid industry. A recent internal report from the United Nations Security Council says that as much as half of the food aid to Somalia is lining the pockets of corrupt contractors, radical Islamic militants and local United Nations Staff. The report writes that the World Food Program—currently the largest aid agency in the country—is particularly problematic.

“Some humanitarian resources, notably food aid, have been diverted to military uses,” the report said. “A handful of Somali contractors for aid agencies have formed a cartel and have become important power brokers—some of whom channel their profits, or the aid itself, directly to armed opposition groups.”

While the allegations of problems of food aid diversions first surfaced last year, the World Food Program denied the allegations and stated that its own internal audit found no widespread abuse. But the authors of the recent damning report have, according to the New York Times, questioned how independent the internal audit was and are now calling for a new outside investigation of the United Nations agency.

Food aid in Somalia is big business. Transport contracts alone are worth $200-million and are the most important source of revenue in Somalia—with 80 percent of those contracts going to three Somali businessmen who are suspected of connections to Islamist insurgents. These three contractors have dominated the transportation of food aid in the country for the past 12 years.

“On account of their contracts with WFP, these men have become some of the wealthiest in Somalia,” the report was quoted as saying.

The investigation concludes that, in the end, only about half of the food it ships to the country actually makes it to starving Somalis.

Food aid from days gone by is also facing tough allegations after the BBC reported that millions of dollars of international aid for victims of the mid-1980s famine in Ethiopia was used by rebels to buy weapons. Using CIA documents and interviews with former rebels, the BBC says militant leaders posed as merchants when they met with aid groups that poured into the country after the Live Aid charity concert in 1985.

"The aid workers were fooled," said the former commander of the rebel group Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), Aregawi Berhe.

Patricia Adams, the executive director of Probe International, who has monitored the aid industry since the 1980s and written books about the problems of foreign aid, says the recent revelations prove that state-sponsored foreign aid is perhaps the most corruptible of all government handouts and should be phased out.

Further Reading: