U.S. Delays Somalia Aid,
Fearing It Is Feeding Terrorists
(Dhakool Oct
04,
2009 Ceegaag Online)
One in five Somali children is wasting away from
malnutrition. Tens of thousands need urgent medical care to
survive. The whole middle belt of the country is teetering
on the brink of famine.
United Nations officials say
Somalia has not been in such perilous shape since the
central government collapsed in 1991 and is in desperate
need of help.
But right now that help is being delayed, they say, at
least partly because the American government is worried that
its aid is going to feed terrorists.
American officials are concerned that United Nations
contractors may be funneling American donations to the
Shabab, a Somali terrorist group with growing ties to
Al Qaeda. United Nations officials say the American
government has been withholding millions of dollars in aid
shipments while a new set of rules is worked out to better
police the distribution of aid.
Few aid officials believe that the American government
will actually shut off the spigot of life-saving assistance
to Somalia when a punishing drought is sweeping across the
region. But at least $50 million in American aid has been
delayed as talks continue, United Nations officials said.
Meanwhile, there is only enough emergency food to last
Somalia four more weeks, they said.
“The potential damage is huge,” said Kiki Gbeho, the head
coordinator of United Nations humanitarian operations in
Somalia, during a visit to a drought-stricken area on
Thursday.
Overall aid funds were drastically down this year, even
before the American government postponed its usually hefty
contributions, Ms. Gbeho said. As a result,
disease-prevention programs had to be cut, and “if you don’t
give funding to Al Shabab areas, that’s 60 percent of the
people,” she added.
American officials defended their actions on Thursday.
One State Department official said the amount of withheld
aid was less than $50 million, though the official would not
say exactly how much.
“We were compelled to hold up that amount once there were
legitimate concerns that the aid might be being diverted,”
said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity,
saying he was not authorized to be named. “We have to follow
the law.”
The official emphasized that the delays had not caused
any interruptions in
food aid delivery, something United Nation officials
confirmed, though they said the uninterrupted flow of
emergency food into Somalia was possible only because of
leftovers from last year’s budget and agencies’ borrowing
from themselves until new money comes in. The State
Department also says that it plans to resume full shipments
and that the delayed aid will be distributed soon.
Elders here in Docol, in central Somalia, say they are
running out of time and nearly finished with their emergency
rations, which they often share with their animals because
the drought has killed all the pasture land.
What will happen if the rations are delayed any longer?
“Simple,” Sheik Ali Gab said. “We will all starve.”
Docol is just one of the countless spots of concentrated
misery across Somalia, where people come after they have
lost everything — their animals, their homes, sometimes even
their children, in the hopes of getting a sack of donated
grain, which often has a big “USA” stamped on it.
The American government is the largest donor to Somalia,
providing about 40 percent of the $850 million annual aid
budget, intended to feed more than three million people.
Recent correspondence among American agencies shows that
the State Department was so concerned about the potential
legal consequences of aid diversions that it sent a letter
last month asking for a guarantee from the Treasury
Department that American aid officials would not be
prosecuted for any American aid that slipped into Shabab
hands.
Last year, the American government listed the Shabab as a
foreign terrorist organization, a designation that means
that aiding or abetting the Shabab is a serious crime. The
sanctions against black-listed groups are enforced by the
Treasury Department’s
Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC.
American aid programs “will be carried out in areas where
the Specially Designated Global Terrorist group Al Shabab
enjoys increasing control and influence,” the State
Department letter explained.
The State Department wanted “confirmation that OFAC will
not seek enforcement action against United States government
employees, grantees and contractors” if “accidental,
unintentional or incidental benefits” flowed to the Shabab.
The Treasury Department office responded that any
transactions with the Shabab were prohibited, but that it
would not prosecute American aid officials if they acted in
“good faith.”
American officials are increasingly concerned that the
Shabab and their allies are working with Al Qaeda to turn
Somalia into a factory for global jihad.
Some Somali-Americans have already joined the Shabab as
suicide bombers, raising the prospects that one day men like
these could exploit their American citizenship and return to
the United States to wreak havoc.
untrustworthy military.
While the transitional government struggles to establish
itself, United Nations officials say they have no choice but
to work with local Shabab commanders to distribute
critically needed aid, like 110-pound bags of sorghum, tins
of vegetable oil, plastic sheeting and medical supplies, in
Shabab-controlled areas.
But are United Nations contractors actually helping the
Shabab fight their war? Preliminary information from a
continuing United Nations investigation indicates that some
of the biggest Somali contractors hired by the United
Nations
World Food Program may be sharing their proceeds with
the Shabab or their allies, or, at a minimum, turning a
blind eye when militants steal sacks of American-donated
grain and sell them on the open market to get money for
guns.
“We know W.F.P. contractors have been diverting food to
the Shabab,” said one official close to the investigation,
who was not allowed to speak publicly. “And we’re talking
about millions of dollars of food.”
World Food Program officials have been tight-lipped about
the allegations. Peter Smerdon, a spokesman for the agency
in Kenya, said the World Food Program was conducting its own
separate investigation and “taking immediate actions to
increase security at W.F.P. warehouses and other
distribution points.”
Because Somalia is so dangerous, especially for
foreigners, it is extremely difficult for international aid
agencies to closely monitor operations inside the country,
especially since most of the agencies are based hundreds of
miles away in Kenya.
Somali businessmen, with thin résumés and fat contracts,
are given enormous leeway in how they carry out their
multimillion-dollar aid duties. On top of that, there is no
national banking system, so the United Nations is left with
an informal money transfer network to move hundreds of
millions of dollars of cash.
Some Somalis say the allegations against the United
Nations contractors are simply barbs of envy originating
from rival clans.
“Somalia offers perhaps the world’s most complex
operational environment for the U.N.,” a recent United
Nations assessment said, citing the “fluid, insecure and
highly politicized conflict.”
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