Showing posts with label Corruption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corruption. Show all posts

Monday, August 28, 2023

Sudan Climate Change: Root causes of Darfur conflict

NOTE from Sudan Watch Editor: Taking time out to search Sudan Watch's archives and collate various posts from the past 20 years. They are taking hours to find and prepare for a series of posts focussing on peace and the alleviation of poverty and extreme poverty in Sudan and South Sudan.

To start, here is an excerpt from a post published July 14, 2006 entitled:

'The root causes of the Darfur conflict: A struggle over controlling an environment that can no longer support all the people who must live on it'


DARFUR IN THE EYES OF A NOBEL PEACE PRIZE WINNER


Environmentalist Wangari Maathai who won the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize stated to The Washington Post on May 12, 2005 that:

"Darfur is an example of a situation where a dire scarcity of natural resources is manipulated by politicians for their own ambition. To outsiders, the conflict is seen as tribal warfare. At its roots, though, it is a struggle over controlling an environment that can no longer support all the people who must live on it. You must not deal only with the symptoms you have to get to the root causes by promoting environmental rehablitation and empowering people to do things for themselves. What is done for the people without involving them can not be sustained."

Full story: https://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2006/07/root-causes-of-darfur-conflict.html


[Ends]

Saturday, August 24, 2019

S. Sudan: IGAD urges Kiir to pay out peace deal funds

Note from Sudan Watch Editor: Who knows where the funds are sitting, maybe used to pay the soldiers and civil servants who were not paid for six months. These two men seem shameless, pity IGAD can't put them on trial for corruption.  They are ex-rebels with much blood on their hands, they could not care less about 7M South Sudanese people facing humanitarian catastrophe, 2M facing starvation from famine.  
President Salva Kiir, right, of South Sudan shakes hands with Riek Machar after concluding a peace deal to end the conflict in the country in September 2018.

By John Adukata
Dated 22 August 2019
South Sudan: IGAD Urges Kiir to Disburse Peace Deal Funds

Regional bloc Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (Igad) has asked South Sudan President Salva Kiir to disburse the balance of the pledged $100 million to speed up the implementation of the peace agreement.

Igad, which brokered the peace agreement, urged Juba "to be transparent and put in place accountability mechanisms in the use of funds for the implementation of the peace agreement."

The bloc also called on rival leaders -- President Kiir and Riek Machar -- to set a face-to face meeting to resolve outstanding issues.

The government had earlier pledged to release the funds towards the deal's implementation but cash is yet to be paid out.

The Reconstituted Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (RJMEC) reported that between April and July, only $6.5 million had been disbursed for security arrangements.

South Sudan has been under pressure from the international community to use oil revenue to finance the peace process.

Saturday, August 17, 2019

Corruption among staff of the UNHCR and the Sudanese government’s Commission for Refugees

THIS is sickening. Corruption among staff of the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) and the Sudanese government’s Commission for Refugees which it partners with, is one of the reasons refugees prefer to head to neighbouring Libya, before trying to cross the Mediterranean to Europe. A graft probe led to the suspension of resettlement for refugees in Sudan, it hasn’t restarted. Let's hope that UNAMID stays in Darfur.
To visit the above tweet click here: https://twitter.com/newhumanitarian/status/1162113485892980736

Hat tip and thanks to Eric Reeves @sudanreeves for retweeting the following by @LaurenPinDC 16 Aug 2019:Corruption among staff of the UNHCR and the Sudanese government’s Commission for Refugees, which it partners with, is one of the reasons refugees told TNH they preferred to head to neighbouring Libya, before trying to cross the Mediterranean to Europe.”
To visit the above tweet click here:
Note, in reply to the above tweet @umasalam commented saying:
“There are structural issues involved - the rarity of resettlement places makes them a very valuable commodity. The involvement of corrupt security and humanitarian staff is almost inevitable, sadly”

Wednesday, August 07, 2019

UK Serious Fraud Office investigates De La Rue over South Sudan operations

Note from Sudan Watch Editor: What a story, you could not make this up. The UK's Serious Fraud Office (SFO) is investigating the world’s biggest printer of banknotes over suspected corruption in South Sudan. 

Shares of the 206-year-old UK company De La Rue producing Bank of England notes have more than halved in past year.  The company produces notes for countries worldwide and is also the biggest commercial printer of passports. De La Rue said it was cooperating with the SFO.

Full story in two news reports here below.

Article from The Guardian
By SEAN FARRELL
Date: Tuesday, 23 July 2019 20.25 BST

Serious Fraud Office investigates De La Rue over South Sudan operations

The Serious Fraud Office is investigating the world’s biggest printer of banknotes over suspected corruption in South Sudan.

The SFO said it was examining how the UK company De La Rue, which produces notes for the Bank of England, and associated individuals conducted business in the African country.

De La Rue said it was cooperating with the SFO, which investigates serious fraud, bribery and corruption. The Basingstoke-based company and the SFO declined to give further details about the investigation.

“Given the early stage of these matters, it is not possible to predict reliably what effect their outcome may have on De La Rue,” the company said.

De La Rue has done business with South Sudan since the country was established in 2011, designing and printing the country’s banknotes. The company produces notes for countries worldwide and is also the biggest commercial printer of passports.

The SFO’s attention adds to problems for De La Rue, which is looking for a new chief executive after Martin Sutherland agreed to leave following two profit warnings and the loss of a £490m contract to print the UK’s post-Brexit blue passport.

De La Rue shares closed down 15.8% at 251p on Tuesday. The shares have more than halved in the past year as the company has suffered poor trading and a series of setbacks.

The 206-year-old firm reported a 77% drop in annual profit in May and warned that profit would fall further this year as it faced tough competition. After losing out to a foreign rival to print the new UK passport, Sutherland said the decision risked jobs and that he would appeal, but gave up a month later.

De La Rue’s chairman, Philip Graham Rogerson, will step down once Sutherland’s replacement is found. The company’s senior independent director has also said he will quit by the end of 2019.

Rogerson and De La Rue’s board will face unhappy shareholders at its annual general meeting on Thursday. 

Last week the company rejected a call by its third-biggest shareholder, Crystal Amber, for Rogerson to stand down at the AGM. The activist investor has repeatedly criticised Rogerson’s performance.

The SFO has investigated De La Rue twice in the past 12 years. In 2010 it notified the SFO that some employees had falsified paper specification certificates, costing it at least £35m. Another investigation launched in 2007 was closed with no action taken against the company or employees.

- - -

Article from The Northern Echo, UK
By NICK GULLON
Reporter (Tees Valley)
Date: 23 July 2019

'Suspected corruption' investigation at De La Rue's South Sudan business
Photo: A rare look inside De La Rue Gateshead

SHARES in a North-East passport and bank note manufacturer dived yesterday after it said the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has opened an investigation into "suspected corruption" related to business in South Sudan.

De La Rue, which has a plant in Gateshead, saw shares dive 12 per cent after it informed investors about the investigation.

In a short update to shareholders, De La Rue said: "The UK Serious Fraud Office has informed De La Rue that it has opened an investigation into the De La Rue group and its associated persons in relation to suspected corruption in the conduct of business in South Sudan.

"Given the early stage of these matters, it is not possible to predict reliably what effect their outcome may have on De La Rue."

It said that it intends to co-operate with the SFO in relation to the investigation and said it will provide a further update when appropriate.

De La Rue has worked in South Sudan since first designing and manufacturing a new currency for the country's creation in 2011.

The Basingstoke-based printer has already had a turbulent month, after it blamed the Government’s decision last year to give the post-Brexit passport printing contract to a French company for the potential loss of 170 jobs in Gateshead.

Trade union Unite said the announcement that the company has begun consultation on the future of 170 skilled printing jobs working on the foreign currency contracts came on top of the 100 passport printing jobs due to go in the autumn.

It added the Government’s "short-sighted and blinkered decision" had "seriously undermined" the financial viability of the Gateshead operation.

If the redundancies go ahead, there will still be 200 workers doing currency printing at Gateshead.

A De La Rue spokesperson said at the time: “As the world’s largest commercial banknote printer we regularly review our operational footprint to ensure it meets demand. We are in the final stages of a restructuring programme to ensure we continue to be competitive."

Shareholders are due to vote on the future of chairman Philip Rogerson, as well as executive pay, at the company's annual general meeting tomorrow.

The company is also in the midst of a leadership reshuffle after chief executive Martin Sutherland announced in May that he would quit the firm following a string of profit warnings.

Last week, the firm hit out at Crystal Amber, its third-biggest investor, and described its threats against the chairman as "precipitous and destabilising".



HERE IS A COPY OF 1 COMMENT
Corruption with African countries??? Printing currency? -----No sh!t Sherlock!!

Friday, November 27, 2009

South Sudan, Western Bahr el-Ghazal: Corruption among top government officials is delaying development in the state

Lino Agustino Adam, the director-general of Public Service and Human Resource Development in Western Bahr el-Ghazal, southern Sudan, is calling on the government to take a lead in fighting corruption in the region.

Report by Sudan Radio Service - SRS:
27 November 2009 - (Wau) - Corruption among top government officials is delaying development in the state, according to Lino Agustino Adam, the director-general of Public Service and Human Resource Development in Western Bahr el-Ghazal.

Agustino says that most offices are occupied by incompetent people, adding that the state is spending money on the salaries of employees who don’t deliver services.

[Lino Agustino Adam]: “You find someone in government telling you that they want their friend or relation to be appointed or employed in some kind of job, without putting the person in the budget. You put them in a job that doesn't suit them. Then they come to you saying, “I am the sister, or I am the son or nephew of His Excellency”. Dressing themselves like a lord, with five pens in their breast pocket and strutting around with a briefcase, when you give them a desk, they cannot work!”

Lino Agustino Adam was speaking to Sudan Radio Service on Thursday in Wau.

He is calling on the government to take a lead in fighting corruption in the region.
Sudan Radio Service - SRS new website will be online soon.