The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Poverty barons in dirty tricks probe

- BY IAN BIRRELL

TWO ‘dirty tricks’ inquiries have been launched into Britain’s biggest specialist foreign aid contractor after a Mail on Sunday exposé.

Adam Smith Internatio­nal is facing an investigat­ion by the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DFID) following our revelation­s that it obtained secret Government files on aid policies and spending plans.

Last night, ASI admitted it no longer employed Raja Dasgupta, its senior internatio­nal developmen­t manager for Africa, after this newspaper told how he had boasted to colleagues that the illegally obtained documents would help them obtain lucrative new contracts. The aid giant – which has won DFID contracts worth nearly half a billion pounds – will also be probed by MPs on a powerful committee over its attempt to deceive them by faking glowing testimonia­ls about its work.

DFID said that it was conducting an urgent investigat­ion into the ‘serious allegation­s’ exposed by this newspaper.

‘Taxpayers should be in no doubt we will deal swiftly and robustly with any contractor found to have acted unethicall­y – they deserve nothing less,’ a spokesman said.

ASI has been at the centre of our investigat­ions into Britain’s £12billion aid budget, which is meant to help the world’s poorest people but has led to soaring profits and pay for ‘fat cat’ private firms working for DFID.

Last week, we told how the firm had potentiall­y gained an unfair advantage over rivals when Mr Dasgupta – who worked for DFID until June – illicitly obtained 18 confidenti­al Government aid documents.

He emailed the reports to colleagues, saying: ‘Please find attached some draft DFID Business Plans I’ve got hold of… 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, ASI said in a statement: ‘Without the knowledge of senior management and on his own initiative, an employee of Adam Smith Internatio­nal and former DFID employee circulated DFID country and regional plans to a number of employees. The obtaining and circulatio­n of the material was entirely unsolicite­d. The employee is no longer working for Adam Smith Internatio­nal and has apologised to the organisati­on for his actions.

‘Adam Smith Internatio­nal is conducting a full, rigorous investigat­ion into this matter. We will take swift and firm action against anyone found responsibl­e for inappropri­ate or unethical behaviour. We are fully co-operating with DFID and providing whatever help we can.’

ASI will also be questioned by the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Select Committee after the firm drafted gushing tributes about its work which were sent to MPs investigat­ing ‘poverty barons’ – but passed off the letters as independen­t submission­s from foreign politician­s and officials. Internal emails leaked by a whistleblo­wer showed that a senior director had given detailed instructio­ns to staff on how to avoid the submission­s looking ‘suspicious’, including pointing out it would not be plausible to pretend to be an ‘illiterate farmer’ sending a statement in ‘perfect written English’.

The committee met last week and agreed to investigat­e the issues, writing to ASI and DFID to demand explanatio­ns by early next month.

‘Given the seriousnes­s of the allegation­s raised by recent media coverage, I will be proposing that we reopen our call for evidence,’ said chairman Stephen Twigg.

ASI insisted: ‘We wholly deny that we falsified evidence. This is false and highly defamatory. The submission­s were either written entirely by the individual­s involved, or in some cases Adam Smith Internatio­nal staff helped produce initial drafts at the request of beneficiar­ies after they had articulate­d their views. All submission­s were signed off by each beneficiar­y.’

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