The Mail on Sunday

YOUR millions still f lowing to ‘corrupt’ Kenya health chiefs

... even though America has cancelled all its donations over ‘integrity issues’

- By Barbara Jones

BRITAIN is still pumping millions of pounds of foreign aid i nto Kenya’s health service – despite the US pulling its support because of concerns over corruption.

US ambassador Robert Godec announced last week that America was cancelling its £16 million a year payments to the African country’s Ministry of Health due to ‘ongoing corruption and integrity issues’.

Despite t he move, Britain’s Department f or I nternation­al Developmen­t (DFID) is pushing ahead with an eight-year project costing taxpayers £106 million.

The US did not take its decision lightly as the massive cut will affect seven critical programmes and result in many job losses.

However, Mr Godec insisted no funding will be reinstated until accounting weaknesses are resolved. He said: ‘The US taxpayers want to see their money is spent appropriat­ely and goes to the right causes.’

Kenya’s Medical Practition­ers And Dentists Union leader Ouma Oluga publicly welcomed the dramatic move and said he was ‘not surprised because the ministry is riddled with accounting issues’.

Worryingly, the hugely expensive DFID programme operates in the very areas which have caused alarm to US officials. An investigat­ion by USAID found that salaries and travel expenses were not properly accounted for.

Britain’s continuing financial support is all the more astonishin­g as some of its funds go towards pro- viding free maternity care. Yet a probe by the Kenyan government’s own anti-corruption unit last year exposed a scandal in which £6.7 million, some of it intended for free maternity care, was diverted to private healthcare companies. The country has long been plagued by serious political problems. President Uhuru Kenyatta was indicted by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court for inciting post-election violence in 2013 and the government’s Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission is itself under investigat­ion over allegation­s of bribe-taking. The commission’s chairman, Philip Kinisu, resigned last August when it emerged that a company he owned had been awarded contracts worth £266,766 for supplying equipment to another government department, which is also being investigat­ed for suspicious contracts it received from the Ministry of Health.

A DFID spokesman said it was unable to comment because of the forthcomin­g General Election.

The Mail on Sunday has been leading the campaign to overhaul Britain’s commitment to spend 0.7 per cent of national income – more than £12 billion a year – on aid.

 ??  ?? INDICTED: President Uhuru Kenyatta, left, was accused of inciting violence
INDICTED: President Uhuru Kenyatta, left, was accused of inciting violence

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