The Mail on Sunday

Meghan charity’s food for sex scam

Haiti quake survivors told: if you want aid pay... or sleep with us

- By Ian Birrell

Report confirmed ‘sexual and financial exploitati­on’

A BRITISH-funded charity supported by Meghan Markle has admitted its workers traded food and cash for sex with survivors of the devastatin­g 2010 earthquake on Haiti.

The confession by global charity World Vision will dismay supporters, including Prince Harry’s fiancée, the charity’s ambassador until last year.

Desperate survivors of the disaster were forced by paid employees of World Vision – which received £17 million from the UK Government last year – to have sex or pay money for World Food Programme aid.

The revelation­s – brought to the attention of the MoS by a former World Vision worker – will fuel concern over abuses by aid workers following the scandal over the use of prostitute­s by Oxfam officials, also in Haiti.

Last night, MPs demanded an investigat­ion into the aid industry and sug- gested World Vision – like Oxfam – might be stripped of bidding for fresh work with the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (Dfid).

‘It is astonishin­g people contracted to work on projects in Haiti could trade goods and cash for sex to some of the most vulnerable people on earth,’ said Tory MP Nigel Evans.

The sordid transactio­ns emerged after the Word Food Programme (WFP) – set up by the United Nations to distribute food in emergencie­s – ordered an outside evaluation of the cash and food for work projects run by its partners in September 2011.

Under these schemes, humanitari­an agencies handed people cash – about £ 2.20 a day – to clear rubble, dig ditches, sweep streets and clean toilets in camps amid the post-earthquake chaos.

The investigat­ion singled out criticism of World Vision projects, including ‘concerns about various forms of exploitati­on of beneficiar­ies, fraud, nepotism and inaccurate records’ according to one internal email. After meetings with WFP officials, the charity ordered a ‘Beneficiar­y Processes Evaluation’, completed in May 2012. This confirmed people receiving aid, selected by local community leaders, were ‘subject to a level of sexual and financial exploitati­on’.

The charity admits some of those leaders making selections were paid ‘temporaril­y’ but says none were formal employees.

Its annual Accountabi­lity Report admitted ‘camp residents were allegedly subject to both sexual and financial exploitati­on to be included on beneficiar­y lists. At the same time, corruption and manipulati­on of the lists for personal gain was a reported problem’.

A WFP spokeswoma­n confirmed they had discovered ‘worrying irregulari­ties’ and told World Vision to tighten controls.

World Vision said the allegation­s were taken ‘extremely seriously’, leading to strengthen­ing of their internal systems, and insisted Haiti an authoritie­s were informed where there was evidence of abuse.

‘In light of the current situation, we are reviewing historic data about incidents and how we reacted,’ a spokesman added. ‘We are committed to disclosing any new informatio­n to our regulators and partners.’

Last night it emerged Dfid had been told about ‘safeguardi­ng and other incidents’ only on Friday, after the MoS approached World Vision.

Dfid added there was no record of this case on its counter- fraud system and that World Vision was now writing to the Charity Commission with ‘an initial report’.

 ??  ?? AMBASSADOR: Meghan Markle working for World Vision in Rwanda
AMBASSADOR: Meghan Markle working for World Vision in Rwanda

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