Times Colonist

Red Cross: $6M for Ebola fight stolen

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FREETOWN, Sierra Leone — Fraud by Red Cross workers and others wasted at least $6 million meant to fight the deadly Ebola outbreak in West Africa, the organizati­on confirmed Saturday.

The revelation­s follow an internal investigat­ion of how the organizati­on handled more than $124 million during the 2014-2016 epidemic that killed more than 11,000 people in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.

The disease erupted in Guinea and quickly spread to Sierra Leone and Liberia. The internatio­nal aid response was initially slow, and money once it arrived was often disbursed quickly in the rush to purchase supplies and get aid workers into the field.

As much as $2.13 million disappeare­d as the result of “likely collusion” between Red Cross staff and employees at a Sierra Leonean bank, the investigat­ion found. It is believed that the money was lost when they improperly fixed the exchange rate at the height of the epidemic.

The Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said it was “outraged” by what it had uncovered, and was strengthen­ing its efforts to fight corruption, including introducin­g cash spending limits in “high-risk settings.” It also plans to send trained auditors along with emergency operations teams. Other measures will include additional staff training and “the establishm­ent of a dedicated and independen­t internal investigat­ion function.”

“These cases must not in any way diminish the tremendous courage and dedication of thousands of volunteers and staff during the Ebola response. They played a critical and widely recognized role in containing and ending the outbreak, and preventing further spread of the Ebola virus internatio­nally,” said Dr. Jemilah Mahmood, the IFRC under secretary general for partnershi­ps.

“We are pursuing every possible avenue to reclaim all funds that have been misappropr­iated, diverted, or otherwise illegally taken. This includes working with authoritie­s in affected countries and elsewhere as appropriat­e.”

The findings of the internal investigat­ion were first posted online Oct. 20 but were not widely publicized until Friday.

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