From the CBC:
“Donors pledge $398.7M in aid
after Beirut blast but Lebanon corruption concerns persist”
Hospitals and schools, then
shattered and bent water pipes, then the crater that once was Lebanon's port. The
rebuilding needs of Lebanon are immense, but so is the question of how to
ensure the hundreds of millions of dollars promised in international aid are
not diverted in a country notorious for missing money, invisible infrastructure
projects and its refusal to open the books. And the port — the epicentre of the
explosion that shattered Beirut on Aug. 4, the centre of Lebanon's import-based
economy and a source of graft so lucrative that Lebanon's political factions
were willing to divide its control so everyone could get a piece — sits at the
heart of the fears. Sunday's international donor teleconference raised a total
of 252.7 million euros ($398.7 million Cdn) in emergency aid, organizers said. The
conference was hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron, who was mobbed last
week by tearful victims of the Beirut ammonium nitrate explosion begging him to
ensure the corruption they blame for the blast that devastated the capital does
not profit from its destruction. The French presidency said France contributed
30 million euros ($47 million Cdn). The head of the International Monetary
Fund, which wants an audit of the national bank before handing over any money,
was clear: No money without changes to ensure ordinary Lebanese aren't crushed
by debt whose benefits they never see. "Current and future generations of
Lebanese must not be saddled with more debts than they can ever repay,"
IMF head Kristalina Georgieva said during the conference. "Commitment to
these reforms will unlock billions of dollars for the benefit of the Lebanese
people." International leaders, government officials and international
organization participated Sunday in the teleconference co-organized by France
and the United Nations to bring emergency aid to Lebanon, including President
Donald Trump. International diplomacy usually calls for careful language.
Rigged votes are "irregular." The response to furious protests should
be "measured." Disappearing funds require "transparency." But
Macron's response to the crowd in Beirut and in a later speech there was
unusually blunt: The aid "will not fall into corrupt hands" and
Lebanon's discredited government must change.
'Absolutely not going to the
government' In the short-term, the
aid streaming into Lebanon is purely for humanitarian emergencies and
relatively easy to monitor. The U.S., France, Britain, Canada and Australia,
among others, have been clear that it is going directly to trusted local aid
groups like the Lebanese Red Cross or UN agencies. "Our aid is absolutely
not going to the government. Our aid is going to the people of Lebanon,"
said John Barsa of USAID. But actual rebuilding requires massive imports of
supplies and equipment. The contracts and subcontracts have given Lebanon's ruling
elite its wealth and power, while leaving the country with crumbling roads,
regular electricity cuts, trash that piles on the streets and intermittent
water supplies. "The level of infrastructure in Lebanon is directly linked
today to the level of corruption," said Neemat Frem, a prominent Lebanese
businessman and independent member of parliament. "We badly need more
dollars but I understand that the Lebanese state and its agencies are not
competent." Lebanon has an accumulated debt of about $100 billion US, for
a population of just under 7 million people — 5 million Lebanese and 2 million
Syrians and Palestinians, most of them refugees. Its electricity company,
controlled like the port by multiple factions, posts losses of $1.5 billion US
a year, although Frem said most factories pay for their own generators because
power is off more than it's on. "There's grand theft Lebanon and there's
petty theft Lebanon. Petty theft Lebanon exists but that's not what got the
country in the hole we're in," said Nadim Houry, executive director of the
Arab Reform Initiative. Prior aid, Houry said, ended up as a tool in the hands
of the political leaders, who kept their slice and doled out jobs and money to
supporters.
'Public is going to be
incredibly distrustful' Protesters,
tired of the small indignities they endure to get through a day — 37 per cent
of people report needing to pay bribes, compared with 4 per cent in
neighbouring Jordan, according to Transparency International — and the larger
issue of a collapsing state, are going after both. "The public is going to
be incredibly distrustful of the way this is done, and I think rightly
so," said Frank Vogl, a co-founder of Transparency International and
chairman for the Partnership for transparency Fund. On Saturday, they seized
offices of the Economy Ministry, hauling away files they said would show
corruption around the sale and distribution of wheat. Lebanon's wheat
stockpile, stored next to the warehouse filled with ammonium nitrate, was
destroyed in the explosion. "We restored the economy ministry to the
Lebanese people," one man called out as they rifled through the desks. Julien
Courson, head of the Lebanon Transparency Association, said the country's
non-profits are forming a coalition to monitor how relief and aid money is
spent. He estimated Lebanon loses $2 billion US to corruption each year. "The
decision-makers and the public servants who are in charge of these files are
still in their positions. Until now, we didn't see any solution to the
problem," he said. A first step
would be an online clearinghouse for every contract linked to reconstruction,
Courson said. And the first project has to be highly visible and spread the
benefits widely, said Christiaan Poortman, board chairman of Infrastructure
Transparency Initiative. "That will help keeping some of the political
stuff at a distance," Poortman said. "Donors will have to be on top
of this. The issue of procurement is always where lots of corruption takes
place ... it needs to be done quickly, and there is always the temptation to
not follow the rules and go ahead and do something where a lot of people are
going to make a lot of money." Speaking at a news conference in which he
conspicuously did not appear alongside Lebanese President Michel Aoun, Macron
said he was approaching Lebanon with "the requirements of a friend who
rushes to help, when times are hard, but not to give a blank check to systems
that no longer have the trust of their people."
^ I’m glad to see so much money been given by so many countries to help Beirut. I’m also glad to see that there are different safeguards to make sure the money is used for rebuilding and not taken through corruption. By the way: $398.7 Million Canadian Dollars is $297,691,302 American Dollars. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/beirut-explosion-aid-donrs-1.5679851
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