Pakistan Today (Lahore)

UN aid going to Assad-linked companies: report

-

United Nations aid contracts worth tens of millions of dollars have gone to people closely associated with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad despite US and EU sanctions, the Guardian reported on Tuesday. The newspaper’s analysis of hundreds of UN contracts granted since the Syrian conflict began in 2011 showed many awarded “to companies run by or linked to individual­s under sanctions” from the EU and US. The Guardian found that two UN agencies had partnered up with the Syria Trust charity, an organisati­on started and chaired by Assad’s wife Asma, spending a total of $8.5 million (7.6 million euros). It also said the UN had given money to the state-owned fuel supplier, which is under EU sanctions, and to Syria’s national blood bank, which is controlled by Assad’s defence ministry. Money also went to the Al-Bustan Associatio­n, owned and run by Assad’s billionair­e cousin Rami Makhlouf, who is Syria’s most notorious and powerful tycoon. The UN’s Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on had given $13.3 million to the Syrian agricultur­e ministry, which is on the EU sanctions list, the Guardian said. “These contracts show how the UN operation has quietly secured deals with individual­s and companies that have been designated off-limits by Europe and the US,” the Guardian said. Reinoud Leenders, an expert in war studies at King’s College London, wrote in the Guardian that the “UN’s alleged pragmatism has long given way to troubling proximity to the regime”. But a UN spokesman defended the contracts. “Operating in Syria, with the conflict now entering its sixth year, forces humanitari­ans to make difficult choices,” the spokesman told the paper.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan