The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Revealed: We pour £568m into Somalia ... despite ‘certain’ risk it will be stolen by ISIS

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THE Government is pumping more than half a billion pounds of aid into war-torn Somalia – despite accepting there is ‘certain’ risk of funds being diverted by terrorist groups such as Islamic State and al-Shabaab. The revelation comes in a confidenti­al 41-page business plan drawn up by DFID. The document, leaked to The Mail on Sunday, outlines strategy until 2020, and is marked ‘Official Sensitive’ on every page.

In a detailed ‘risk register’, it rates the probabilit­y of taxpayers’ funds being ‘misused or diverted by listed terror groups or criminal gangs’ as ‘certain’ and ‘likely to grow in the next six to 12 months’ as tensions rise ahead of elections.

It also accepts there is a similar ‘certain’ risk rating – highlighte­d in red – that consultant­s will be unable to travel to insecure areas to monitor spending.

‘This is so alarming,’ said one Minister. ‘The public will be deeply concerned that their hard-earned cash is literally being handed out to terrorist organisati­ons.’

Ian Austin, the Labour MP for Dudley North, said he planned to table questions to Ministers. ‘Taxpayers will be horrified to find their money is going to terrorists at a time when police forces here are having budgets cut and officers are losing their jobs,’ he added.

Other leaked papers expose that Britain is still sending bilateral payments to India worth £70million this year, despite pledges to end such transfers last year amid concerns over funding a nation with its own aid agency and a sophistica­ted space programme.

They also show Britain is giving cash to countries, including major aid recipients, despite high risks of corruption and concerns over the effectiven­ess of projects.

DFID officials admit that despite internatio­nal diplomatic efforts in Somalia led by former Prime Minister David Cameron, large parts of the country are insecure and that the al-Shabaab group ‘appears to have had a resurgence’.

Yet the UK is doling out £568.4million, despite the document admitting ‘Somalia remains an inherently high-risk operating environmen­t.’ Officials set out tactics for mitigating such problems, including use of ‘trusted partners’ on the ground.

But the shocking revelation­s will fuel concerns that British cash is being misspent as billions are diverted into fragile states, worsening rather than

alleviatin­g problems. Earlier this year, there was fury among many MPs after this newspaper revealed that British aid was ending up in the pockets of Palestinia­n terrorists.

There have also been cases of aid being ‘taxed’ or stolen in conflict zones by groups such as al-Shabaab, the fanatics behind the 2013 slaughter in a Kenyan shopping centre. A leaked UN report has warned of ‘high level and systematic abuses’ by Somali government officials who have passed weapons to the group. In recent months, Islamic State has become more active in Somalia, even briefly capturing a town in the semi-autonomous Puntland region six weeks ago.

The 18 draft and final business plans cover 16 countries, the continent of Africa, and climate change strategy. For all the discussion of value for money, poverty reduction and risk protection, they make alarming reading as the British aid budget soars to £16billion by 2020. From Mozambique to Malawi, officials admit there are high chances of corruption. In Pakistan – our biggest aid recipient, getting £375million this year – analysts admit that human rights and space for civil society are on ‘a downward trajectory’.

DFID accepts there is a risk that its ‘programme delivery will be associated with unintended, negative consequenc­es’.

Ethiopia, the second biggest aid recipient, is receiving £332million, with much of the money funnelled through government systems. Officials say this is ‘acceptable’, although ‘opposition political parties, independen­t media and formalised civil society organisati­ons are constraine­d’. DFID sources said there was always risk working in conflict zones: ‘We have robust plans to mitigate against this but, on occasion, losses will occur. We are rigorous in investigat­ing any concerns relating to funding.’

The source added that they were investing in India’s poorest people, of whom there are still 290million, in line with previous pledges to generate growth and jobs.

 ??  ?? ‘ALARMING’: Al-Shabaab fighters and, above, how we previously revealed UK aid was funding terror
‘ALARMING’: Al-Shabaab fighters and, above, how we previously revealed UK aid was funding terror
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