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Tonus
06-15-2009, 04:59 PM
No doubt this will come as a shock (http://hotair.com/archives/2009/06/15/un-workers-stealing-food-from-starving-children/) to many...


The UN still has not learned anything from the Oil-for-Food scandal that enriched Saddam Hussein beyond the dreams of avarice while leaving Iraqis to starve. This time, Somalia gets the brunt of Turtle Bay corruption, with the food donated by UN countries and individual contributors disappearing into the black market in Mogadishu. In fact, the UN had no idea that the food wasn’t getting to the starving people of Somalia until reporters showed them pictures of UN-packaged goods on sale:

One of the UN’s largest international relief efforts is under investigation after it emerged that thousands of sacks of food aid were being diverted from starving refugees and openly sold for profit.

The head of the UN’s $955 million (£580 million) aid operation in Somalia has launched an inquiry after being shown footage showing tonnes of food bearing the World Food Programme (WFP) logo widely on sale in Mogadishu, the capital.

Stacks of bags of maize and wheat and tins of cooking oil — marked “not for re-sale” and bearing the UN stamp — are on sale from ten warehouses and 15 shops in the city’s main market.

About 45,000 tonnes of WFP food are shipped to Somalia from Kenya every month. Mogadishu traders told Channel 4 News that they bought their supplies straight from UN staff. “We buy [food] aid from WFP staff directly or from people they employ,” one market trader said.

“They take us to the warehouses used by the WFP and let us load our lorries. The goods are freely available and you can buy as much as you like, but we usually buy no more than 500 to 1,000 sacks at a time. Just a tonne or half a tonne a day can be shifted more discreetly.”

Dishonest people flock to these kinds of efforts. Wherever money can be made, corruption does not linger for long. However, competent organizations put rational safeguards in place to keep corruption from happening — especially when the same organization has had a number of high-profile scandals.

How difficut is it to put effective guards on the warehouses? The UN personnel sold it right out of their own warehouses and helped them load the trucks. The UN has probably already lost millions of dollars in cash and food donations while its employees enrich themselves at the expense of starving women and children. And the only way Turtle Bay found out about it was to have someone outside the organization videotape the product on the black market, which shows conclusively that the UN doesn’t bother to audit their efforts, even after committing the largest fraud in human history with the Oil-for-Food program.

Who benefits from all of the black-market theft? Certainly the UN employees do, but who gets the cash from the sale of the goods? Usually in situations like Somalia’s, black market profits wind up in the hands of the warlords, revolutionaries, and terrorists — the people who cannot compete in legitimate markets. With the current anarchy in Somalia, it will be hard to pinpoint exactly where the money went, but it’s at least a good bet that the UN has funded the very people who created the need for humanitarian relief in the first place.

Even when it does something right, the UN manages to get it wrong.

Two things here:

1- I don't know how much clearer it can be shown just how useless and corrupt the UN is. Even with something as simple and straightforward as delivering food to starving people, they manage to screw up. The UNs own "employees" see the organization as a patsy, a way to make money by criminalizing humanitarian efforts (when they aren't raping children (http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/europe/05/27/charity.aidworkers/index.html), anyway).

2- I wonder how many of those starving Somali people were among the ones who cheered the BlackHawk Down film (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/1777435.stm) when it was shown in Somalia. Or specifically, who cheered the scene where the US choppers are shot down. After this incident, President Clinton turned tail and ran, and Osama Bin Laden is said to have drawn the conclusion that the US lacked the will to fight, thus setting 9/11/2001 in motion.

What people may not know or remember, is that the US forces in Somalia were part of a UN task force that was protecting food and medicine caravans from Somali warlords who wanted to (get this) steal them and make money off of them. More than 15 years after the USA pulled its troops out of Somalia, there are still food shortages and the food being provided by the UN is being stolen and fenced. I wonder if any of them are still cheering, or if they're too hungry to think about anything else.

Dr. L
06-15-2009, 06:47 PM
Seriously...


...


They're stealing candy from children now. What the hell. Who runs this world, Snidely Whiplash?

Grunthos
06-16-2009, 03:30 AM
UN diplomats and troops have been stealing virginity from children under their care for years... So what's a little food?