Showing posts with label gfatm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gfatm. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

With Inspector General of Global Fund fired - who would stop the corruption at UNDP's disbursement of $$$CASH ?


Click here for this: http://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/presscenter/pressreleases/2012/11/20/reprise-d-un-programme-complet-de-lutte-contre-le-vih-sida-au-mali-.html

image Women listen to UNDP administrator Helen Clark at the Timbuktu HIV/AIDS clinic, Mali, 2010 . AFP PHOTO / HABIB KOUYATE
 
BAMAKO/GENEVA – The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria today signed an accord with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) to resume a full-scale HIV program including delivery of life-saving HIV treatment to tens of thousands of people in Mali.
Under the accord, the Global Fund approved funding for EUR 58 Million (US$75 million) for HIV screening, prevention and treatment in Mali over the next three years.  Some 50,000 people in Mali are currently living with HIV.

“The signing of this agreement involving the Global Fund, the UN Development Programme and Mali brings hope for many of our citizens who can now say they have not been forgotten,” Mali’s Minister for Foreign Affairs Tiéman Coulibaly said.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

GFATM - Global Fund declares bankruptcy - stops all operations due to UNDP's corrupt manager's denial to provide access to audits

undpwatch
- thanks 2 denial 2 provide full accounting- supp Fund pays price

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UNDP's internal corruption, denial to provide access to audits of GFATM's projects - send Bill Gates funded GFATM to bankruptcy.

BILL GATES' GFATM IS BANKRUPT

THANKS TO HELEN CLARK'S UNDP


CLICK HERE FOR FULL STORY ON TELEGRAPH.CO.UK

UN Aids fund frozen

A United Nations fund to fight Aids and other infectious diseases has been forced to freeze its spending for three years because of the economic downturn and widespread corruption claims.


9:51PM GMT 24 Nov 2011






The Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria said that it could no longer afford to pay for new programmes to meet an international drive to prevent new infections.

The UN-backed fund has been beset by allegations of mismanagement and accusations that it has failed to detect corruption among local officials. An internal investigation found grave misuse of its resources had resulted in $73 million worth of fraud.

That prompted several donor states, including Germany, Sweden and Denmark, as well as the European Union, to suspend their contributions and demand reform of its practices. Meanwhile, other states such as Italy have failed to make payments they had pledged because of their own financial problems.

Now the fund has been forced to announce a freeze in its spending until 2014, meaning no new projects to tackle diseases in the most vulnerable parts of the world will receive funding before then.

Publicly, the fund blamed the economic downturn, rather than corruption, for the freeze. It said it faced a double blow of slower donations and lower interest rates reducing its income from its investments.


CLICK HERE FOR FULL STORY ON TELEGRAPH.CO.UK

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Helen Clarks's UNDP screws Bill Gates's Global Fund (GFATM)

Decision from UNDP's Comptroller and its internal mafia not to comply and allow a timely investigation into the use of 76% of GFATM's funds around the globe - will cost a lot to Bill Gates flagship Fund.

Maybe it will have to shut down!

undpwatch
Report shows major oversight flaws on funded - shows that stonewalling of investigation could bring it down

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Monday, February 7, 2011

Major campaign against internal leaks at Global Fund, corrupt managers order cleaning of comments on their facebook page

WHAT DOES GLOBAL FUND HAS TO HIDE ?

GLOBAL FUND RUNNING SCARED FROM QUESTIONS ABOUT ITS OPERATIONS

DELETES COMMENTS ON ITS FACEBOOK'S PAGE AFTER BILL O'REILLY FACTOR INTERVIEW





Sunday, February 6, 2011

Tarnished aid fund says others in worse shape

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THIS STORY ON VALLEYNEWSLIVE.COM

By JOHN HEILPRIN
Associated Press

GENEVA (AP) - A $21.7 billion health fund championed by the rich and famous has come under harsh scrutiny amid revelations it's bleeding money to corruption. But fund officials and outside experts in the field have a stark message for global development: other aid agencies are in much worse shape.

"The others should follow our lead," the fund's inspector general, John Parsons, told a press conference Monday organized by the fund's top officials to discuss an Associated Press story about $34 million in losses in several African nations.

Investigations led by Robert Appleton, a veteran former U.S. federal prosecutor whom Parsons hired last fall to root out corruption, are showing that up to two-thirds of some grants provided by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria are lost to graft, with much of the money accounted for by forged documents or improper bookkeeping.

The fund rocketed to prominence with the backing of celebrity campaigners like Bono, who see it as an alternative to the bureaucracy of the United Nations.

On Monday, the organization defended its record. Only a tiny fraction of grants have been examined so far, but fund officials say the vast majority of the money is going to where it should, based on the results they are seeing in terms of saved lives.

Fund officials and several outside anti-corruption experts said that while the Global Fund's new investigative unit is aggressively tackling corruption, many of the world's biggest development agencies, including the United Nations, don't even look for major corruption in their midst for fear that would turn away donors.

An AP investigation last year found the United Nations cut back severely on investigations into corruption and fraud within its ranks, shelving cases involving the possible theft or misuse of millions of dollars. That happened after the U.N. dismantled its anti-corruption Procurement Task Force at the end of 2008.

It's been much the same story at many of the major heavyweight organizations and others that were expected to hand out some $130 billion in aid globally in 2010, according to Transparency International, the Berlin-based anti-corruption advocacy group.

Though many began taking corruption more seriously in the mid-1990s, Transparency International said in a recent report that "accountability in development aid has been low" at many aid agencies, non-governmental organizations, the World Bank, the U.N. and other development banks and international bodies.

"All aid agencies need to practice greater transparency," said Robin Hodess, TI's director of policy and research.

"There's the need in the developing aid agencies to be accountable," she told AP. "Sometimes there hasn't been enough attention to preventing corruption."

The Government Accountability Project, a Washington-based nonprofit law firm, says its defense of whistleblowers at the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank and the United Nations shows those institutions are failing to take on corruption.

"The investigative function at these institutions has broken down," said Bea Edwards, the firm's international program director. "There's very little accountability at these institutions because the departments that should enforce it are comprised themselves."

In 2009, an independent unit within the World Bank faulted another arm of the bank, the International Development Agency, with failing to protect some $10 billion in loans to poor nations from theft and other fraud. That agency had handed out almost $200 billion in loans since 1960.

Research largely funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation also has revealed some U.N. health programs have been useless or riddled with corruption.

When officials studied the effectiveness of a major U.N. child health strategy used in more than 100 countries, they found no difference between the health of kids who were included in the strategy and those who weren't.

A similar study found that a $27 million UNICEF program designed to save children in West Africa also failed, as children who weren't included actually had a better chance of survival than those enrolled in U.N. programs.

And in 2008, Gates-funded research showed dozens of countries exaggerated figures on how many children were vaccinated against deadly diseases, which allowed them to get more money from U.N.-sponsored programs. After the research was published, the agency involved and its donors scrambled to cut off all payments until countries could explain what happened.

Bill Gates, a staunch supporter of the Global Fund, criticized the AP story reporting losses to corruption, saying it gave an incomplete picture and would breed reluctance to give to good causes.

"People will reduce their generosity and that causes deaths," Gates told the AP in a telephone interview.

The Global Fund has $21.7 million in pledges, and gives out $3 billion annually. Fund officials provided new figures Monday that it has dispersed $13 billion since the fund was created in 2002, with the U.N. Development Program responsible for managing $3.88 billion of that - $369 million this year - in dozens of the most strife-torn and difficult nations.

Parsons said that money - roughly a fifth of the fund's portfolio - is effectively off-limits to investigators because UNDP won't share their internal audit reports. As a result, the fund's investigators can't look more closely at some of the fund's biggest multimillion-dollar losses.

In Mauritania, where UNDP manages the grant money, for example, the fund's investigators say as much as 67 percent of an anti-HIV grant was lost due to faked documents and other fraud. They say 67 percent of the TB and malaria grant money they examined in that country was eaten up by faked invoices and other requests for payment.

UNDP, the U.N.'s main anti-poverty program, told AP it is reviewing its policy of keeping those audit reports to itself but "takes its responsibility towards our donors and the beneficiaries very seriously."

The Global Fund's choice of Appleton as its investigations director points to a contrast with the U.N. approach to corruption: From 2006 to 2008 he chaired the U.N.'s former Procurement Task Force. And unlike the U.N.'s secrecy with its investigative reports, the fraud that Appleton's team is finding can be found on reports on its website along with the efforts the fund has made to recoup some of the losses.

The fund's board of directors also have authorized a big budget increase for Parsons' office because investigators can't keep up with the volume of grant programs it needs to monitor. Appleton already has more than 100 cases, including 63 yet to be assigned because there are not enough people to pursue them.

"We are vigilantly seeking to protect funds that are earmarked to save lives," Appleton told AP. "The Global Fund should be lauded, not criticized, for promoting transparency, having a strong inspector general and publicly identifying the issues and trying to get the fund's money back."

___

AP Medical Writer Maria Cheng contributed to this report from London.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Germany to investigate UNDP and GFATM, while Helen Clark stonewalling the investigation



Minister Dirk Niebel. Copyright: Anika Gensicke

31.01.2011
Meeting with the Secretariat of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria at the BMZ

Today intensive discussions were held with the Global Fund Secretariat at the invitation of the BMZ. Given the allegations of corruption and misuse of funds that have been directed towards the Fund, the German government called on the Secretariat to clarify the situation regarding the possible extent to which funds have been misused by widening the circle of cooperation countries already being reviewed to include the remaining 112 countries receiving support from the Fund. Moreover, the German government asked the Fund to quickly take steps that would ensure that everything possible was done to prevent corruption and misuse of funds.

"We will support these efforts by the Fund by arranging for an independent external review to determine the nature and the extent of the misuse of funds based on a representative sample of countries," said German Development Minister Dirk Niebel. "This sample will focus above all on countries that are particularly affected by corruption. Also to be examined is the degree to which the implementing and financing modalities used by the Fund – which often include the direct transfer of funds to recipient countries – may favour corruption and the misuse of funds. The focus will be particularly on areas that have been shown to be especially susceptible to corruption, for example expenditures on training measures, per diem allowances, the reimbursement of travel costs or the procurement of medicines. I also want us to find ways of boosting the Fund’s results orientation."

The German government is seeking to find ways of including other concerned donors in the review, involving the Bundesrechnungshof(Federal Audit Office) and also German and European institutes specialising in development policy. It invites the Global Fund Secretariat and its Board of Directors to make suggestions regarding the concept and scope of the review.

"The German government will make a decision about its contributions to the Global Fund for 2011 based on the findings from the special review, which will be available by the summer, and on the measures that the Fund has taken by then to address the susceptibility of its activities to corruption," said Dirk Niebel. "The Fund has given an assurance that the ongoing treatment of sick people will not be compromised at any point by the enquiries."

Given the wide-reaching allegations of corruption and misuse of funds directed towards the Global Fund, German Development Minister Dirk Niebel had announced on 25 January 2011 that all German payments to the Fund were to be suspended and a special review undertaken.

EXCLUSIVE: Global Fund Backed by Bill Gates to Launch Probe in the Wake of Fraud

Click here to view this on Fox News - Fair & Balanced

By George Russell

Published February 02, 2011

| FoxNews.com

An independent probe into fraud allegations at the $28 billion global health fund supported byMicrosoft founder Bill Gates and his wife Melinda will be announced later this week, perhaps as early as Wednesday, Fox News has learned.

The investigation was originally demanded by the government of Germany, which last week announced the suspension of more than $250 million in new contributions to the fund. Its imminent announcement was officially confirmed to Fox News by Jon Liden, a spokesman for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM), who added that “an independent, trusted individual” will be named as head of the probe, which the fund prefers to call a “review.”

Negotiations about the scope of the probe were still under way Tuesday, and were slated to include a major international conference call among donors on Wednesday. According to Liden, “all donor countries” to the fund would be invited to participate in the review.

Some 54 countries have contributed or pledged more than $28 billion to the fund since 2001, according to the Global Fund. The United States is far and away its biggest supporter, with donations and pledges of more than $9.5 billion from 2001 through 2013; the U.S. has paid up more than $5.1 billion of that total.

The GFATM has also received backing from a number of high-profile private-sector institutions, including Product (RED), which has the backing of rock star Bono; the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; and the Fox Television show "American Idol."

So far, only Germany and Sweden ($85 million) have suspended upcoming donations to the fund.German Development Minister Dirk Niebel, who initially sparked the funding freeze, has said that the funding freeze will stay in place until the investigation finishes its work, which he anticipates will be this summer.

According to Germany’s Niebel, the fund has “given an assurance that the ongoing treatment of sick people will not be compromised at any point by the investigations.” But according to the fund’s spokesman, “any withholding of a German contribution for 2011 will affect our ability to sign grants approved for funding in December 2010.”

The controversy over the misuse of Global Fund health money erupted two weeks ago, after an Associated Press story, citing a report from the fund’s inspector-general, charged that “as much as two-thirds” of some Global Fund health grants to developing countries had been “eaten up by corruption.” The story specifically named projects in Djibouti, Mali, Mauritania and Zambia, and cited forged or non-existent receipts for “training events,” phony travel and housing claims and outright theft, along with shoddy bookkeeping

In response, the Global Fund noted that all of the wrongdoing had been uncovered by the fund itself the previous year; that programs in the offending countries had been suspended and criminal charges laid; and that the fund was demanding the return of $34 million. The total amount involved, according to the Global Fund, was only a pittance compared to some $13 billion in spending so far. It quoted the inspector general, John Parsons, as declaring that “The distinguishing feature of the Global Fund is that it is very open when it uncovers corruption.”

On the other hand, only a fraction of the total Global Fund disbursements had been examined.
Further complicating the issue was the fact that the fund does not manage the health programs it finances in afflicted countries, but delegates that to various “implementing agencies” or governments themselves -- or parts of the United Nations.

In the case of Mauritania, half the fund’s money was managed directly by the government, but some projects were managed by the sprawling United Nations Development Program (UNDP), the U.N.’s flagship anti-poverty agency. According to a UNDP spokesman, the agency’s own auditors identified “more than $1 million in fraud” involving fund money among UNDP’s government partners, and blew the whistle itself.

Worldwide, UNDP is among the largest managers for Global Fund projects, handling 63 grants in 27 countries, worth about $1.1 billion, and providing “capacity development support” to “a wide variety” of other fund partners, according to a UNDP spokesman.

The main reason for the fund’s reliance on UNDP, according to knowledgeable sources, is the U.N. agency’s array of offices in 166 countries, including a large number where the fund can’t find other project managers.

Just how sure the Global Fund can be that UNDP is doing its job well, however, is a matter of contention. According to a source familiar with the situation, it is a longstanding sore point between the Global Fund and UNDP that the U.N. agency does not provide copies to non-government donors of internal audits it carries out on Global Fund projects. Instead, the fund gets overall summaries.

“This is a big weakness,” says one informed source, who added that there has been a “long dialogue” between the two institutions over the lack of auditing information and that the fund’s campaign to get full auditing details from the agency is continuing. Fox News has learned that the fund’s inspector general, John Parsons, met with UNDP officials Tuesday on the issue.

“You can’t manage billions of dollars in spending volume just by handing over summaries of audits,” the source added.

On its own website, UNDP says that “Global Fund grants managed by UNDP are subject to intensive audit scrutiny,” before acknowledging that under “current policy” it can’t provide the audit details. But, UNDP says, it “does, as a standing practice, inform the Global Fund about key audit findings and recommendations resulting from internal audits of Global Fund grants managed by UNDP.”

In addition, a UNDP spokesman said, “we have on several occasions exchanged with the Global Fund’s Office of the Inspector General, on a confidential basis, information relevant to investigations.”

The spokesman added that UNDP is “currently working out procedures” with its 36-nation supervisory executive board “to share complete audits with the Global Fund and other institutional donors.”(The U.S. is an executive board member, and also has a representative on the Global Fund’s International Board.)

UNDP’s Executive Board is currently meeting in New York City, but a UNDP spokesman said it hoped the new arrangement would be in place “in September, if not sooner.” The Global Fund, according to a knowledgeable source, “thinks it can be done faster.”

The issue of UNDP’s disclosure of internal audits, even to executive board members, has long been a point of controversy. They remained a UNDP internal secret (in UNDP terms, a “management tool”) until 2007, after a prolonged battle with the Bush administration over programs in North Korea, and even now are not given to countries that ask for them, but simply are presented for reading -- along with a non-disclosure agreement. Even then, they can be redacted or kept confidential if the country where the audit takes place raises significant objections.

Nor will further audit disclosure on UNDP’s part necessarily bring full transparency to the way the U.N. agency is handling the Global Fund’s money in some of the world’s toughest and most sensitive places. According to UNDP documents, the agency itself can farm out to other contractors some of the responsibilities for spending and accounting for Global Fund money -- as, for example, in the case of Northern Sudan.

CLICK HERE FOR THE UNDP HELP-WANTED OFFER FOR NORTHERN SUDAN

The issues of shared audits, sub-contracted programs and financial controls and other safeguards over all the money supposedly flooding in to help millions of the world’s ailing people will no doubt be among many things examined by the independent investigation, once it has been announced and organized.

George Russell is executive editor of Fox News