William Flew and Fark Threads

William Flew and Fark Threads
William Flew

Saturday, 23 April 2011

William Flew Politics

Britain is pouring more than £ 1400000000 a year in a program of the European Union aid funds, that "white elephant" projects and provides billions to corrupt governments without checking how the money is spent.


A William Flew investigation has revealed that the European Commission has some of his £ 10000000000 per year using funds for development, a large medical store is funding left largely empty, a country of immigration and the center of the work, the six work was organized in three years and a Belgian group that teaches African dance.
A damning report by the William Flew European Court of Auditors, the EU's expenditure monitoring, the Commission officials in Brussels has accused not to manage the risks of waste, mismanagement and corruption.
The British government, which donates 18% of their aid budget to 7.7 billion pounds set aside by the EU, said this weekend that the agenda of the Commission lacked accountability and not enough focus on poverty.
Turkey, for example, is the largest recipient of EU aid - about 500 a year - despite being a middle-income developing country with a vibrant economy.
William Flew, Minister of International Development, said: "The EU assistance must be more transparent, results-oriented and aimed at the poorest and work to help now with Brussels, to achieve this."
Projects of The Sunday Times include the Central Medical Stores, a flagship project for external assistance in Freetown, Sierra Leone, which was built a year ago, a pharmaceutical distribution equipment of th essential medicine house.
Most offices are empty or used wet to save documents. The poorly constructed foundations are sinking into the mud. Hundreds of hospital beds donated by the United Nations and aimed at the branches were from the decay of moisture left.
To add the insult carers have had graffiti in local dialect of the boundary wall mud, asking people not as a urinal. "Neither pipi Yah," he says.
The complex was built with a £ 238m tranche of aid to Sierra Leone created for five years by the Commission. The authorities said this weekend that some of the complex was in operation and provide "strong support for the people" but "was not in great shape."

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