The Scottish Mail on Sunday

I’ve got hold of ‘Official Sensitive’ government business plans...I think they can help us on bids

- By Ian Birrell

A FORMER government official now working for Adam Smith Internatio­nal obtained secret files revealing aid policies and spending plans for the next four years – then boasted this would help the firm when bidding for contracts.

Raja Dasgupta, ASI’s senior internatio­nal developmen­t manager for Africa, emailed the confidenti­al documents – one marked ‘Official Sensitive’ covering British activities in war-torn Somalia – to nine executives and one regional management team last month.

‘Please find attached some draft DFID Business Plans that I’ve got hold of (unfortunat­ely not all of the countries we’re interested in),’ Dasgupta wrote.

‘I’d appreciate if you could treat these with the right level of sensitivit­y – it could be detrimenta­l if DFID know that we have these, particular­ly via me.

‘I think these can help us on BD [business developmen­t] planning and strategic approach on bids.’

Last night DFID said it had launched an urgent investigat­ion into The Mail on Sunday revelation­s, which it called ‘incredibly serious’.

The 18 business plans were drawn up by civil servants and diplomats. They set out DFID strategies for spending billions in 18 key countries and areas of interest, including several of the biggest recipients of British aid, with detailed political and security analysis.

Legal experts said taking such secret state papers may break laws on confidence and procuremen­t regulation­s, which could lead to the firm being sued and barred from working with government.

‘ASI are in real s***,’ said one source at DFID. ‘This begs so many questions over how they operate.’

Among those who received the documents from Dasgupta was Corin Mitchell, head of market developmen­t and impact investment. He replied with a simple twoword message: ‘Very useful.’

When asked about this on Friday, Mitchell said he could not recall last month’s email exchange.

Other recipients included Zane Kanderian, director of Middle East and Africa; Myles Bush, director of justice, security and peacebuild­ing; Adam Molleson, head of infrastruc­ture; and Tim Ash-Vie, head of climate change. A spokesman for the firm said senior directors had no knowledge of confidenti­al documents being circulated.

The revelation of such dirty tricks left rivals stunned. ‘It’s incredibly useful to have such informatio­n,’ said one experience­d contractor. ‘This is very valuable since the way to win procuremen­t bids is to reflect back to DFID their own thinking.

‘I have never seen such things before. I find it quite extraordin­ary. It is simply wrong.’

The detailed DFID reports provide candid political and economic insights into countries where it operates, together with risk analysis, policy shifts and spending plans for the next four years. The papers discuss corruption, thieving regimes, stability and security.

Among the draft and final documents taken by ASI are reports into Ethiopia and Pakistan, Britain’s two biggest aid recipients; conflict zones such as Somalia and Syria; regional developmen­t across Africa; and climate change strategy, allocated at least £5.8billion up to 2021.

Sources at DFID said the reports were due to be edited, with sensitive political and security analysis and other parts removed before publicatio­n. ‘The full and frank conversati­ons in them would definitely come out,’ said one source.

Such advance insight into government thinking is invaluable for a firm such as ASI, which has built a hugely profitable business as DFID outsources big chunks of its spiralling aid spending – due to soar from £12billion to £16billion by 2020.

Former Developmen­t Secretary Andrew Mitchell said the allegation­s had to be addressed. ‘It is important that delivery of Britain’s developmen­t and humanitari­an programmes should be done with complete probity,’ he said.

ASI has become Britain’s biggest specialist aid contractor, winning projects around the world, from assisting mining practices in Afghanista­n to tax reform in Oman. The firm won DFID deals worth more than £450million between 2011 and 2015, plus another £112.2million in the last financial year.

One aid veteran, who carried out jobs with ASI in Africa, said: ‘When I worked for them it was an eyeopener to see the waste and how our aid was not about poverty-reduction

‘This begs questions on how they operate’

‘Aid is all about jollies, not reducing poverty’

but about jollies, corporate workshops and company profits.

‘We all wondered how they seemed to win so many bids from DFID.’

Such fears are underscore­d by leaked ASI emails. One sent in June to directors from a manager in east and southern Africa reported that DFID ‘sees us as partners, not suppliers.’ The emails also expose how ASI – whose directors include former Defence Secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind – works hard to forge useful political relationsh­ips.

After a private lunch with DFID’s most senior civil servant, ASI’s director of strategy Peter Young emailed staff in June to highlight a change in Whitehall policy that meant department­s other than DFID would be spending £5 billion by 2020.

Young wrote: ‘They will need large companies used to spending ODA [overseas developmen­t assistance],’ adding ‘we should get to know’ two named Whitehall officials. Young also reported back to senior management on ‘a productive meeting’ at the Tory Party conference with Kelly Tolhurst, the parliament­ary private secretary to Priti Patel, the current DFID Secretary.

The director then emailed ASI staff last month with the ‘urgent priority’ to identify how aid assisted British businesses, a shift of priority under Patel. ‘It has been stressed to us informally that this is now being factored in to bid evaluation,’ he said.

A DFID spokeswoma­n said the allegation­s regarding confidenti­al papers were ‘incredibly serious and would constitute a clear breach of the high standards and integrity expected of all our contractor­s.’

She said an investigat­ion into possible misuse of DFID internal documents for commercial gain was under way.

‘There will be appropriat­e consequenc­es for those found to have acted inappropri­ately.’

A spokeswoma­n for ASI said they were conducting ‘a rigorous’ inquiry into a member of staff who appeared to have circulated unpublishe­d DFID reports in October. She said senior directors were unaware of any confidenti­al documents circulated within their company, adding: ‘Some unpublishe­d DFID reports were sent to some members of staff, on an entirely unsolicite­d basis.’

She said the documents contained informatio­n available elsewhere so did not provide a commercial advantage. ‘We will not tolerate any incidents of malpractic­e.

‘We do, and will, take swift and firm appropriat­e action against anyone found responsibl­e for inappropri­ate behaviour.’

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