The Mail on Sunday

The £300,000 Chinese takeaway YOU pay for

Ludicrous! UK aid bankrolls this rich fixer to make profits for Chinese businesses in Africa

- By Ian Birrell

BRITAIN is handing aid to an organisati­on headed by a wealthy Chinese-born businesswo­man who seeks to help Chinese manufactur­ers move their factories to Africa in order to exploit lower labour costs.

The revelation, based on documents leaked to The Mail on Sunday by a whistleblo­wer, is the latest astonishin­g example of profligacy by the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DFID) as it spends its bloated £13 billion budget.

It also raises fresh concern over government dealings with aid contractor­s after this paper’s series of stories disclosing dirty tricks, tax avoidance and dodgy profiteeri­ng by fat-cat poverty barons.

The controvers­ial deal – worth £297,020 initially with proposals for subsequent multi-million-pound projects to lure Chinese firms to Africa – was signed off in June.

The cash went through another contractor to Made in Africa, a UK-registered company. Its most prominent figure is Helen Hai, a businesswo­man and UN goodwill ambassador. Three months before e

‘It’s a simply bonkers use of tax revenue’

winning the work, she registered Made in Africa Initiative as a limited company in Hong Kong.

One outraged source close to the e scheme said it was a ‘simply bonkers’ use of tax revenue. ‘ British aid money meant for developmen­t t in poor countries is going to friends of the Chinese government to help with China’s trade in Africa.’

China is one of the biggest investors in Africa, doubling foreign investment there last year, while Briti s h commercial s pending declined sharply amid uncertaint­y y over Brexit. There has been fury over millions in UK aid spent in such a wealthy nation.

‘This should be stopped immediatel­y,’ said Tory MP Nigel Evans, a member of the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Committee.

‘British taxpayers’ money should not be used to support Chinese businesses and one of the world’s fastest-growing economies.

‘ China has its own aid budget, which is colossal and used for its own self-interest.’

The spending i s part of the £ 100 million Invest Africa programme pushed by Priti Patel, who was Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary until she was forced to resign last month. The scheme is intended to generate business and jobs.

Hai argues that the continent can benefit from Chinese firms moving production abroad to slash rising labour costs. She set up the Made in Africa Initiative to ‘exploit this window of opportunit­y’.

The organisati­on told DFID its role was to bring together British and Chinese expertise to facilitate investment­s in Africa.

One ‘draft two-year activity plan’ for Uganda, written for DFID in September, proposes focusing on ‘targeted sales missions’ to China, with three trips there compared with just one to the UK and two more to other Asian or European nations. It even urged British taxpayers to fund a bilingual ChineseEng­lish ‘ guidebook’ for foreign investors. An ‘ indicative’ work schedule planned 1,500 days of consultanc­y work, i ncluding a study visit to China, and £125,000 for sales mission expenses.

An experience­d aid industry contractor who examined the report for The Mail on Sunday estimated the total cost to DFID would be about £2 million. DFID sources said the plans have been rejected although they may be resubmitte­d.

The organisati­on submitted a similar report for DFID-funded work in Rwanda. ‘The timing is excellent to help Rwanda benefit from the opportunit­y to attract some of the massive expected outflow of Chinese manufactur­ing investment­s to Africa,’ it said. It again suggested ‘inward’ and ‘outreach’ sales missions to target countries with a total of six five-day events for China, four for India but just three for the UK – plus videos and online promotiona­l materials translated into Chinese.

Yet Ministers have defended their lavish aid spending by arguing it boosts Britain. ‘There is a whole raft of opportunit­ies for us to use that money in our national interest, global Britain’s interest,’ Ms Patel told MPs before her dismissal.

Hai, who is married to a successful Chinese financier and used to run a shoe factory in Ethiopia, has bragged in interviews about her wealth. ‘If I stop working, I don’t need to worry about money,’ she told the state-run China Daily.

Documents seen by this paper appear to show her firm, working with colleagues at the Centre for New Structural Economics at Peking University, charges up to £ 3,000 a day for senior staff in Africa. An invoice from Made in Africa Initiative for a two-day trip last month by Hai and a colleague t ot al l ed £ 101, 70. 71, i ncluding £3,474.04 for her flight, £962.77 for her hotel room and £2,700 on fees.

Hai declined to discuss if this was for DFID-funded work as one source suggested. DFID said it had not received the invoice.

Despite such high costs, a report into Ugandan business zones was criticised for its ‘limited findings’ after being reviewed by DFID officials. cia ‘We found it particular­ly light on content, evidence and analysis,’ one told Hai two months ago.

This is the latest furore over DFID’s spending as it seeks to hit the UN target of giving away 0.7 per cent of national income in a aid. Adam Smith Internatio­nal, th the biggest specialist aid contracto tor, cleared out its top staff this year y after the MoS exposed its use us of dirty tricks to win contracts and an dupe MPs investigat­ing profiteeri­ng ee in the poverty industry. Two weeks ago the Government halted one of the firm’s multimilli­on-pound projects amid allegation­s that money was ending up in the pockets of jihadi groups.

Hai said her organisati­on’s mission statement was ‘ to support African countries to achieve sustainabl­e inclusive growth’.

She insisted there was no preferenti­al treatment in her strategy towards Chinese firms, pointing to an advisory board for her Hong Kong organisati­on with members from 14 different countries.

A DFID spokesman said developing nations needed sustainabl­e economic growth and investment to defeat poverty.

‘China has its own colossal aid budget’

 ??  ?? WEALTH BOASTS: Helen Hai at her shoe factory in Ethiopia. Right: One of our explosive reports about how the UK aid budget has been wasted
WEALTH BOASTS: Helen Hai at her shoe factory in Ethiopia. Right: One of our explosive reports about how the UK aid budget has been wasted
 ??  ?? PUSHING THE PROGRAMME: Former Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary Priti Patel
PUSHING THE PROGRAMME: Former Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary Priti Patel
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