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Ethiopia

Deconstructing Construction Corruption in Ethiopia

corruption ahead In my fifth commentary on corruption in Ethiopia this year, I focus on the construction sector. The other commentaries are available at my blogsite.

The cancer of corruption in the construction sector the World Bank (WB) documented in its “Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia” is just as malignant and metastatic as in the land, education and telecommunications sectors. According to the WB report:

In the construction sector, Ethiopia exhibits most of the classic warning signs of corruption risk, including instances of poor-quality construction, inflated unit output costs, and delays in implementation. In turn, these factors appear in some cases to be driven by unequal or unclear contractual relationships, poor enforcement of professional standards, high multipliers between public sector and private sector salaries, wide-ranging discretionary powers exercised by government, a lack of transparency, and a widespread perception of hidden barriers to market entry.

Ethiopia’s “construction sector” falls into four categories: roads, water supply and irrigation, power, and other public works including construction of universities, schools, hospitals and markets. Annual spending on roads alone is estimated to be US$1.2 billion. The “government” totally dominates the construction sector. “Ethiopia is unusual compared with most other African countries, which have already fully privatized the design and construction of public works.”

There are multiple and “interrelated drivers of corruption in Ethiopia’s construction sector.” These drivers are “related to deficiencies in accountability (transparency based on clear performance criteria), capacity (availability of sufficient material and human resources and proper procedures), and trust (confidence in the market that allows businesses to invest in increasing their own capacity). In Ethiopia, “A lack of capacity makes corruption possible, a lack of accountability makes corruption happen, and a lack of trust allows corruption to take root.”

The WB report highlights corruption in Ethiopia’s construction sector along six dimensions. The policymaking and regulatory processes are at high-risk area of corruption. Such corruption has a major effect on sector governance.” Policies and regulations could “encourage, or help hide, corrupt practices” and unless corrected perpetuate corruption by groups or individuals. The Ethiopian “government” “controls the price of construction materials, access to finance, and access to equipment. It controls professional and company registrations. It maintains high-level, bilateral infrastructure deals with China and lacks independent performance audits.” According to the WB report, “Many stakeholders are concerned about the possibility of a connection between the dominant role of Chinese contractors in the road sector and high-level links between the Ethiopian and Chinese governments” and the “lack of effective competition, with Chinese contractors dominating the international market and a limited set of domestic contractors dominating the national market.” These problems are compounded by other factors such as poor quality control, weak enforcement of professional standards and overall lack of transparency. Professionals in the construction sector are reluctant to complain “for fear of being victimized” and believing there is no truly independent body to which they can appeal.” Since the “government is a major client”, “there is a reluctance to express dissent.”

The planning and budgeting (P&B) process is the second area of high corruption in Ethiopia’s construction sector.  When planning and budgeting “deviates from the use of a rational, objective basis for prioritizing the allocation of limited resources on the basis of need, anticipated rates of return, or other objective criteria,” it opens the floodgates of corruption. In Ethiopia, the P&B process is characterized by “lack of separation between policy making, budget allocation, and implementation functions” and “top-down planning by decree.” There are instances in which “projects that are not responding to a prioritized need and (when combined with weak procurement regulations) can sometimes be negotiated directly between a  corrupt official and a specific construction company.” Corruption also occurs in the form of “adoption of inappropriately high construction standards to enhance contract values, construction of new infrastructure while neglecting to maintain existing facilities, conflicts of interest for officials with a stake in the construction sector” and aiding “construction companies with party political allegiances.”

The third area of corruption is found in management and performance monitoring . According to the WB report, management weaknesses can lead to corruption in three main ways: “(a) Without basic good management controls, individuals (whether working for the client, the consultant, or the contractor) can find themselves free to take shortcuts that may cross the line into corruption. (b) Without good data management and reporting systems, the management information needed to identify and address corruption does not exist. (c) If the management is so incompetent that it gives rise to administrative or technical obstacles that are otherwise impossible to address, corrupt activities may be seen as the only realistic way for otherwise professionally minded individuals to deliver results.” In Ethiopia such corruption occurs for a number of reasons including “low remuneration of some managers and procurement staff”, “shortlisting of poorly performing companies and companies without capacity for new work”, “difficulty of obtaining public information about contracts,” and “lack of independent professional bodies and weak enforcement of professional standards”, among others.

The fourth area of corruption is manifest in the tendering and procurement (T&P) process.  Among the commonly encountered corruption risks in the T&P process include sale of inside bidding information by corrupt officials to prospective bidders to enhance the prospects for submitting a successful bid. It could also involve “collusion between contractors in the form of price fixing and intimidation of aspiring new entrants, unofficial quota system for the award of contracts on the basis of political affiliation of the companies involved and bribery.” In Ethiopia, the list of corrupt practices in the T&P process is mindboggling. In addition to the “general lack of transparency in procurement processes,” the “government” “shortlists companies known to be poor performers or lacking requisite experience or capability,” excludes “capable companies”, inconsistently applies procurement standards, imposes unfair selective restriction of access to advance information about bidding opportunities and distorts the bidding process to benefit favored bidders,  among others.

The fifth area of corruption is manifest in the operations phase. Generally, contractors who have paid bribes to secure contracts “try to recoup his outlay during the construction phase. This is most commonly achieved through various forms of fraud involving client’s staff or the supervising consultant’s staff, including supply of inferior materials, falsification of quantities, inflated claims, and concealment of defects.”  In Ethiopia, “contracts are rarely completed on budget”. Significant delays in contract completion are common. There is “often a problem with poor-quality construction” and “some contractors knowingly underbid then recoup costs through variations.” Contractors “conceal construction defects or improperly influence client or consultant to accept substandard materials”. In other cases, a “consultant or contractor submits falsified documentation” and “receives exaggerated payments as result of falsified utilization records.”

The sixth area of corruption in the construction sector involves payment and settlement of certificates. A client “can fabricate a justification for refusing or withholding payment as “a means of punishing companies that have refused to honor understandings.” In the absence of effective complaints adjudication or appeals process, this could result in corruption “related to legal advisers, including in dispute resolution. Such advisers may be implicated in the submission of incorrect claims, concealment of documents, the supply of false witness statements, bribery or blackmail of witnesses, or excess billing, all of which contribute to overall levels of corruption in the project.” In Ethiopia, it is “commonly reported that facilitation payments may be required to speed up settlement of certificates.” Alternatively, “contractors sometimes curtail progress because cash flow problems arise as a result of late payments.”

EthioConstruction Corruption, Inc.

The Ethiopian “government” is not only the single dominant construction client but also the singular policy maker and regulator of the construction sector. The “government” is in effect EthioConstruction Corruption, Inc. Though the WB report is timid in stating the facts as they are and frames the truth in the buttery language of bureaucratese, it is clear that the type of corruption in the Ethiopian construction sector covers the whole gamut including the policy making and budgetary process, project selection, tender specifications, procurement outcomes, contract negotiations and renegotiations and payments. It is manifest from the report that the bidding process is generally rigged and projects are often granted to companies that have more political ties to the ruling regime than qualifications. It is obvious that newcomers and those disfavored by the regime have little chance of securing public works project contracts. It is also manifest from the totality of the evidence in the report that public project money is ingenuously finds its way to the pockets of top regime officials.

The “tofu” road to Kombolcha

In June 2013, the “Ethiopian Roads Authority” signed another agreement with two Chinese companies to upgrade the 133 Km-long Kombolcha-Bati-Mille road to asphalt-concrete level. The Chinese companies will snag a whopping 2.8 billion Br. in the deal. Why aren’t Ethiopian construction companies getting these contracts? In other words, why are Chinese companies eating the lunches of Ethiopian companies? Why is there not an Ethiopia construction consortium organized (with the aid of the “government”) to bid for such construction jobs? Will there ever be Ethiopian construction companies with the capacity for large-scale infrastructure projects? How could the “government” talk about development when the “infrastructure development” is left entirely to foreign contractors?  How can the “government” justify use of international bank loans to bankroll foreign companies squeezing out homegrown ones? How is Chinese economic penetration and exploitation of Ethiopia different from the exploitation of the evil neoliberal, imperialist, neocolonial, globalist… exploitation?

There is one question that needs to be answered: Is Ethiopia getting its money’s worth by handing out contracts to Chinese companies?  In 2011, the Economist reported, “The Chinese-built road from Lusaka, Zambia’s capital, to Chirundu, 130km (81 miles) to the south-east, was quickly swept away by rains”. Will the 133 Km-long Kombolcha-Bati-Mille road also be “quickly swept away by rains”?

It is common knowledge that many state-owned Chinese construction companies engage in shoddy workmanship not only in Africa but also in China. After Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji saw the shoddy workmanship of flood dykes on the Yangtze River in 1998 which resulted in major loss of life and property, he described the work of these companies as “tofu” construction. There is much documented about corruption and shoddy workmanship in the Chinese construction sector. “All across China, everything from sidewalks to apartment buildings to mega dams are compromised corruption.” Chinese construction companies in Ethiopia and the rest of Africa will underbid any other local or international competitors because they are not interested in short-term profits but sector monopoly. They maintain low profits to increase market share (monopolize) at the expense of local companies while driving  out of international competitors. That’s how they do business. The blame for Chinese monopoly of the public works sector in Ethiopia should be placed squarely on the shoulders of the ruling regime in Ethiopia which manifestly lacks the technical capacity and competence and political will to do what needs to be done to ensure a reasonably corruption-free and high quality construction sector.

Reducing corruption through CoST accountability

The Construction Sector Transparency Initiative (CoST) launched by the British Department for International Development (DFID) and taken over by the World Bank in 2012  “seeks to help  (9 countries in a pilot program including Ethiopia) participating countries improve the value for money spent on the construction of public infrastructure.” The program aims to create a “multi-stakeholder initiative designed to promote transparency and accountability in publicly financed construction.” At the core of the program “is the belief that the processes involved in the construction of public infrastructure must be made more transparent. The public must be armed with the information they need to hold decision makers to account and to ensure better value for money in the construction sector.” CoST aims to “establish a public disclosure process for the construction sector that is viable and appropriate to country conditions, that is sustainable in the medium and long term as a government system, and that achieves a credible and substantial level of compliance in the relevant sector entities.” Ultimately, CoST seeks to “reduce waste in public budgets, enables fairer competition in the private sector and increased opportunities for investors.”

On November 17, 2012, a CoST consultancy agreement was “signed between Engineers Against Poverty (EAP) and Hagos Abdie (Individual Consultant)the consultant is selected as a preferred candidate among bidders invited through short listing.”  The aim of the consultancy agreement is to find ways of maximizing the capacity of government agencies to gather, verify and disclose information into the public realm. (It is unclear why Abdie was “selected as a preferred candidate among bidders invited through short listing” and how much he was paid for his consultancy services.) But the selection of Abdie lends irrefutable proof that only those closely allied to the ruling regime get plum contracts as the World Bank report amply documented in its massive study.

Close examination of Abdie’s 38-page “Assessment of procuring entity capacity to disclose project information in Ethiopia” shows that it is nothing more than a cut-and-paste of bureaucratic documents from a variety of sources. The report stylistically “collates and assembles information” on various projects, a task that could be done efficiently by an adroit college intern. One is hard pressed to show how the “collated and assembled” hodgepodge of information could “arm” the public in “holding decision makers to account and to ensure better value for money in the construction sector.” The recommendations at the end of each section of the “assessment” appear to be unoriginal, cut-and-paste boilerplate recommendations. There is no need to waste time discussing Abdie’s “assessment report”, but one cannot escape the irony of corruption even when corruption is being “assessed”.

Increasing transparency and accountability in Ethiopia’s construction sector

Corruption is dyed in the very fabric of the ruling regime in Ethiopia. It cannot be washed out with the detergent of make-believe anti-corruption programs designed by self-serving, sanctimonious and self-congratulating international poverty pimps. Neither could it be solved by corrupt anti-corruption crusaders. The simplest and most direct approach to dealing with corruption in Ethiopia requires massive involvement of civil society watchdogs and rigorous independent audits. Those countries that have been successful in controlling corruption in the construction sector have implemented have had rigorous compliance audits and made available to the public comprehensive and detailed information on bids, winning bids for government contracts and reports of procurement audits on a timely basis. Most of them disseminate up to date comprehensive public works contract  information on line. They also allow civil society representatives to observe the tendering process.

Ethiopia supposedly has a freedom of information law (Proclamation No. 590/2008 – A Proclamation to Provide for Freedom of the Mass Media and Access to Information.) Anyone who has carefully studied this proclamation will be impressed by the lofty platitudes, truisms and boilerplate legal clichés and verbiage cut and pasted from the laws of other nations. Under the proclamation, citizens supposedly have a right of “access, [to] receive and import information held by public bodies, subject to justifiable limits based on overriding public and private interests.” But the “justifiable limits” include non-disclosure of any Cabinet documents or information (Art. 24), any information relating to the “financial welfare of the nation or the ability of the government to manage the economy of the country” (Art. 25), and any information on the “operation of public bodies [including] an opinion, advice, report or recommendation obtained or prepared or an account of a consultation, discussion or deliberation… minutes of a meetings…” (Art. 26). Simply stated, no information may be released on the activities of government ministers and officials, banks or any other official financial institutions and the internal proceedings or external reviews of public institutions. To top it all off, any public body may refuse a request for information if it determines for any reason the “harm to the protected interest which would be caused by disclosure outweighs the public interest in disclosure.” (Art. 28.)

Corruption, like mushrooms, grows best in darkness. The benighted leaders of the ruling regime in Ethiopia have so far provided splendid husbandry to mushrooming corruption in all sectors of the Ethiopian political economy. What the people of Ethiopia need now are “sunshine laws” for their country of 13 months of sunshine!

To track corruption in Ethiopia, follow the money. It leads straight to the top!

Professor Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at California State University, San Bernardino and is a practicing defense lawyer.

Previous commentaries by the author are available at:

http://open.salon.com/blog/almariam/

www.huffingtonpost.com/alemayehu-g-mariam/

Amharic translations of recent commentaries by the author may be found at:

http://www.ecadforum.com/Amharic/archives/category/al-mariam-amharic

http://ethioforum.org/?cat=24

US Deputy Defense Secretary Travels to Israel, Ethiopia

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By Cheryl Pellerin | American Forces Press Service

July 20, 2013

 

Dept. of Defense

 

 

ABOARD A MILITARY AIRCRAFT, July 20, 2013 – Deputy Defense Secretary Ash Carter began a weeklong trip today that will take him first to Israel and then to Uganda and Ethiopia in sub-Saharan Africa.

During Carter’s first official trip to Israel as deputy secretary, he will meet with senior Israeli defense officials to discuss issues of mutual strategic importance and reaffirm the U.S. commitment to the relationship between the United States and Israel.

While in Israel, Carter will meet with Defense Minister Moshe “Bogie” Ya’alon, Deputy Defense Minister Amos Gilad and National Security Adviser Yaakov Amidror, and attend an official dinner hosted by Ehud Shani, director-general of the Ministry of Defense.

After leaving Israel, Carter will stop briefly in Uganda to meet with senior Ugandan government and defense officials. The deputy secretary will thank the Ugandans for their continued commitment in maintaining and improving security in the region.

From Uganda, Carter will travel to Ethiopia to meet with Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegu and senior defense officials to discuss issues of mutual importance. The deputy secretary also will thank the Ethiopians for the positive and important security role they continue to play in the region

The last Ethiopian standing.

The last Ethiopian standing. By Yilma Bekele
That is exactly what I feel like now. Who died and left me with this burden is not clear to me but believe me I feel like I am all alone and it is up to me to carry the flag and sing the national anthem. This business of being an Ethiopian has never been easy but you would think with experience and practice I have gotten the hang of it. I am afraid I am hopeless in that department. I still feel the burden.
They say the environment shapes our behavior. I am not here to argue whether ‘nature’ or ‘nurture’ is the defining role in our development I will leave that to the scientists. Speaking for myself I believe the environment has played a big role in shaping who I am today. I am a transplanted Ethiopian who has been culturally shocked, mentally molded, philosophically tampered and forced to question realty on a daily basis. I have no idea how that central theme of being Ethiopian has managed to survive in all the thousands of ways my central core has been violently breached.
I have survived it all thanks to my family and that little town in Southern Ethiopia that imbued me with respect for elders, love for your neighbor and the beauty of leaving with different cultures in a mutually beneficial way. Those values are what differentiate the beast from the human. I believe that upbringing gave me an advantage when later on in life I found myself in circumstances that I have never thought I would find myself in. I have confronted moving to Addis from my small town, crossing an ocean to come to America, being the object of curiosity in small town in Oregon and coming to terms in growing old in the US with that wisdom I learnt while growing up that says ‘it is not really that bad just deal with it.’
As I said I have dealt with most things in a calm collected manner. The one thing that is really causing me pain and agony is this business of defending my country Ethiopia. It feels to me, mind you I might be mistaken, or a little touchy but it feels to me that every Hagos, Ketema, Kuma, Abdella, Betiso etc. is dumping on me for crimes I have no idea I committed.
Well you my Ethiopian reader, can I call you that without offending you, any way you must be thinking why the heck am I telling you all this in the middle of summer? It is because a few things happened the last few days and I felt they were directed at me. Not personally you know but since I feel I am the last one standing it felt personal in a roundabout way.
The big momentous event was my dear friend Jawar declaring he is Oromo first and his Ethiopianess was imposed on him. I have no problem with that. In fact I believe Jawar is Oromo, Ethiopian and American. He has got choices. Which one he puts primary is all up to him. I also don’t know if being an American was imposed on him or he voluntarily filled up a form and swore allegiance to the star spangled banner. With this speech he seems to dig the hole a little deeper. He was heard equating Ethiopian Oromo Moslems with those in Somalia and Djibouti claiming it to be one and the same struggle. I am afraid his next Al Jazeera appearance he is going to have to answer the question are you Muslim first or Oromo first. Good luck my friend.
The only thing I have problem is his assumption of the role of a spokesman ship for the Oromo people of Ethiopia. As far as I know he has never been elected to any office. He has never been sent as a delegate by any group in present day Ethiopia to speak for them. He has not articulated their demands in a coherent manner, written books about their glorious history, interpreted the nuances of their culture or educated the rest of us about the Oromo condition. In other words other than others declaring him an up and coming young intellectual and him playing that role to the hilt he has not bothered to study, interpret, add on the history and role of the Oromo people in what we call Ethiopia. Of course I stand to be corrected if someone could present me with a proof showing Obbo Jawar’s vast contribution to the knowledge base of Oromo history, Oromo culture and Oromo Psychology.
In the You tube video being distributed he is addressing a gathering of Oromo Muslims. I am assuming he was invited as an analyst regarding the Ethiopian Moslem confrontation with the dictatorial regime taking place in our country.
How did our political analyst approach the challenge is a good question to ask. All I could say is he did not respect the sensibilities of his audience. He was confrontational. He was dismissive, he was arrogant and he was an extremist of the highest order. That is the impression I got after watching this Duche like sermon. From what I understand the Ethiopian Moslem issue is regarding state interference in their religion. It is not about political power, it is not about demonizing the rest that don’t have the same belief. Then why is the speaker turning this peaceful issue of respect into one of violent confrontation? Our Ethiopian Moslem leaders have done a splendid job of making friends with all Ethiopians regardless of religion and gone the extra mile not to antagonize anyone and succeeded beyond expectations. The rest of Ethiopia has embraced their quest for fair treatment and stood side by side with them. Why is our young intellectual turning this simple request for respect into a jihad?
Is it possible our dear friend Jawar grew up in Woyane Ethiopia thus his understanding of our common history derives from that perspective. It looks like he never bothered to scratch below the surface and learn if there is more. What is education for if not to answer vital questions in a rational and measured manner? What is the point of learning if not to pinpoint problems and look for answers that would bring not only lasting solutions but harmony? Why would anyone boast about cutting peoples necks off because they follow a different god? Caught in the heat of the moment my young friend said that.
That was a week ago. Many people wrote their opinions about that. That is the beauty of democracy. It is all about the individual’s right to speak and write what he thinks and others to respond. We all learn from the diverse views and the give and take. Some we reject off hand, some gives us a pause and a some really say what we believe and we go ‘I am not alone.’ So that is what I was doing when I came across this audio by Ato Abdi Fite on Ze Habesha.com. It is presented in a rational manner but misses the point by a mile. It just does not seem to answer a very simple question that it itself asks. Who is us against them?
As far as I am concerned Ato Abdi Fite has locked himself into this small room and anybody outside is the enemy. Is that the way it is? What is the difference between the Oromo farmer, the Amhara peasant, the Tigrai laborer, the Adal pastoralist, the Ogaden herder, the Gambellan fisherman, the Dorze weaver etc.? Aren’t they all victims of the system? Isn’t this what the struggle is all about? Can one be free while the rest stay in bondage? Shouldn’t we all work together to liberate them all so they could grow and prosper?
Ato Abdi was repeating himself so much I thought we were on a never ending loop. Just because something is said many times over does not make it turn out to be a factual statement. It is just false hood but told in twenty minutes instead of two. The central theme in his audio essay is to accuse the rest of Ethiopians ignoring the plight of his Oromo people. Does he have a leg to stand on?
Not really. When in the sixties the Ethiopian students confronted the Imperial regime their number one slogan was ‘land to the tiller.’ They did not specify Amhara, Oromo, Sidama, Tigrai etc. land but their demand was all inclusive. When they went out and established EPRP and other anti-dictatorship associations they did not think in terms of ethnic affiliation but a nationwide movement. Today the Diaspora which Ato Abdi is addressing, I don’t see any ethnic based successful movement working to get rid of the ethnic based TPLF that is tormenting our country and people. We have one voice that abhors ethnic division, avoids ethnic/religion divide and concentrates in uniting the many to get rid of the few troublemaker woyanes.
It is true we popularize some of the victims of the TPLF but that is a political move. We are aware there are thousands of Eskinders, Reyots, Wubshets, Bekeles, Abubakers but we mention those victims as a symbol for the many. We don’t even ask what ethnic group they belong to nor do we care.
Instead of telling us where we failed him I wish he would tell us where he called on us and we ignored his cry. Instead of accusing us of not paying attention to the Oromo question I wish he would tell us what he did to popularize the Oromo issue. In today’s Ethiopia the system is the problem. The solution is to unite all the victims in a democratic and equal association to smash the system and build a new one that respects their aspiration to be free, to be seen as equal and form a lasting union. Being a polarizing figure like the road taken by Meles Zenawi is not the way to go. Uniting people to work for a common solution they could all live with is the Mandela way and it is much preferable and lasting.
What I find troubling about our two Oromo operatives is their failure to see the futility of the treatment they are prescribing to resolve the ethnic divide in our country. The medicine they are ranting about has been administered by the OLF for the last forty years. What exactly has it achieved other than give a false sense of cure while the disease is causing untold damage to our people? With wisdom born from experience the present day OLF is in the process of revising their failed policy and searching for ways of working with others like them that are feeling the brunt of TPLF fire. That is what leadership is about.
Our young intellectuals seem to be gung ho about opening old wounds and reviving past mistakes. What is also surprising is their suicidal drive to offend the one friend they always have on their corner. I am referring to the progressive forces in the Diaspora that are working hard to expose the TPLF regime. The Diaspora is the most important and natural ally of the oppressed people of Ethiopia. There is not one Diaspora organization that opposes the right of the Oromo people to determine their future without undue interference from outsiders. We feel the liberation of the Oromo is the liberation of the Amhara, the Gurage, the Tigrai and all Ethiopians.
Timing is very important in political struggle. Today our country seems to be entering a new stage with the death of the dictator. The political parties are making good progress in wiping out fear from their constituents. We have broken the regimes strangle on mass media thanks to ESAT. It is a shame the ranting and a childish tantrum of a few is taking our eyes away from the prize. All I can say is grow up, coming up with bizarre talk trying to garner attention lasts a few days but in the end you have to live with yourself. .

http://www.zehabesha.com/are-you-oromo-or-ethiopian-first/

UK colludes with Ethiopian officials to steal aid to the poor: The Telegraph

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British aid money flows into offshore fund

By Robert Mendick | The Telegraph

July 7, 2013

More than £160 million of British foreign aid is being channelled through an offshore investment fund used to buy Boeing jets for an African airline and other big business deals.

The Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund (EAIF) has received funding from the British taxpayer through a set of offshore companies.

The British aid money is used to put together multi-million pound business deals in Africa.

A recent deal, signed last year, helped finance the purchase of 10 Boeing 787 Dreamliners – the world’s most advanced passenger plane – by Ethiopian Airlines, owned by the Ethiopian government.

The EAIF is managed by the Frontier Markets Fund Managers (FMFM), which receives about £4 million a year for its services from the money it receives from the Department for International Development (DfID) and other governments.

FMFM’s staff are based at Standard Bank in London, which receives 70 per cent of the profits the fund earns.

But the company is registered in Mauritius, where foreign companies receive an 80 per cent discount on corporation tax, meaning any profits earned by companies linked to the fund pay tax at a rate of 3 per cent.

This compares with a UK rate of 23 per cent.

Critics said yesterday that DfID appeared to be using aid money to pay City bankers and fund corporate deals rather than help the world’s poor.

“International aid should be used to help the world’s poorest, not invest in international airlines,” said Matthew Sinclair, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance.

John Hilary, executive director of the anti-poverty charity War on Want, said: “DfID is legally obliged to use the aid budget to combat poverty around the world. Instead, it is now channelling hundreds of millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money to private investment funds run out of tax havens.”

He said using Mauritius as a base allowed companies funded by DfID to escape public scrutiny.

“The British public has a right to know why aid money is being used to prop up wealthy corporate enterprises rather than fighting poverty as it is supposed to do.”

EAIF was set up in 2002 by the then Labour government and received £68.5 million over the next eight years. The Coalition has committed £100 million of further funding until 2015.

FMFM also runs another investment fund called GuarantCo, which has received £64 million from DfID in the past decade.

The EAIF receives its money through the Private Infrastructure Development Group (PIDG), also registered in Mauritius. PIDG was set up by DfID with funding from the Swiss, Dutch and Swedish governments.

EAIF provided a £20 million bridging loan for the Ethiopian deal.

Nick Rouse, FMFM’s managing director, said the fund – because of its backing from DfID and other governments – could secure financing for schemes that commercial banks would not lend to.

Mauritius was used to register the varuious funds because it had a developed regulatory system able to handle large sums of money from a number of donor countries, he said.

Mr Rouse said the financing of the Dreamliners allowed Ethiopian Airlines to compete with rivals such as Emirates. “They couldn’t get the money anywhere else,” he added.

A DfID spokesman said: “Providing commercial loans when other finance is simply not available helps African economies to flourish and end their reliance on development assistance. This is an excellent example of how investing in local companies and creating jobs can lay the foundations for future growth.”

ኢህአዴግ በሩን እንዲከፍት የዓለም ባንክ አዘዘ

የማነቂያው ገመድ ከርሯል፤ “ትግሉ ይቀጥላል” ኦባንግ ሜቶ

By Goolgule.com

July 18, 2013

ኢህአዴግ ለሚገዛት ኢትዮጵያ ከፍተኛ መጠን ያለው ዕርዳታ የሚሠጠው የዓለም ባንክ፤ ለዕርዳታና ልማት የሚልከው ገንዘብ ኢህአዴግ የሕዝቡን ሰብዓዊ መብት ለመጣስ ተጠቅሞበታል በሚል ሙሉ ምርመራ እንዲካሄድ አዘዘ፡፡ የባንኩ ውሳኔ ኢህአዴግን የማነቂያው ገመድ እንደሚያከረው ተገለጸ፡፡ የአዲሲቷ ኢትዮጵያ የጋራ ንቅናቄ ዋና ዳይሬክተር አቶ ኦባንግ ሜቶ በተለይ ለጎልጉል በሰጡት መግለጫ “ይህ በጥናት ከምናካሂደው ትግል አንዱ ውጤት ነው፤ ገና ጅማሬ ነው፤ ጠንክረን እንሠራለን” አሉ፡፡

 

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የዓለም ባንክ ለልማት ሥራዎች የሚሰጠው የእርዳታ ገንዘብ በኢትዮጵያ በተለይም በጋምቤላ ክልል የሚኖሩትን ዜጎች ሰብዓዊ መብት በመጣስ ላይ ውሏል በሚል ከዚህ በፊት ክስ ቀርቦበት እንደነበር ይታወሳል፡፡ ጎልጉል የድረገጽ ጋዜጣ ጉዳዩን ከ9 ወራት በፊት በዘገበበት ወቅት ተጠቂዎቹ ዜጎች ያቀረቡትን ማስረጃና የኢንስፔክተር ቡድኑ የሚያደርገውን ምርመራ በዝርዝር ሰፍሮ ነበር፡፡ በወቅቱ ምርመራውን ያደረገው የመርማሪ ቡድን (ኢንስፔክሽን ፓናል) በአካባቢው የሚገኙትን ተጠቂዎች ካነጋገረ በኋላ ለባንኩ የሥራ አመራር ቦርድ በሰጠው ሪፖርት በዕርግጥ የዕርዳታው ገንዘብ በሰብዓዊ መብት ረገጣ ላይ መዋሉን ይፋ አድርጓል፡፡

ይህ የኢንስፔክተር ቡድን ከፍተኛ ሥልጣን ያለው መ/ቤት ሲሆን የዓለም ባንክ ለአገራት የሚሰጠውን ገንዘብ በትክክለኛ ቦታ ላይ አለመዋሉን በመጥቀስ ክስ የሚያቀርቡ ወገኖችን ጉዳይ በመከታተልና ቦታው ድረስ የራሱን ምርመራ በማካሄድ ውጤቱ ተግባራዊ እንዲሆን የባንኩን እጅ የማስጠምዘዝ ዓቅም ያለው እንደሆነ ከዚህ በፊት ያካሄዳቸው የምርመራ ውጤቶች ይጠቁማሉ፡፡

ቡድኑ መረጃውን ይፋ ባደረገበት ወቅት ቢያንስ የ600 ሚሊዮን ዶላር ዕርዳታ ከዚህ ካለፈም በቢሊዮን የሚቆጠር ገንዘብ የማጣት ጭንቀት ውስጥ የገባው ኢህአዴግ አንገቱ መታነቁን ሲያስተውል የኢንስፔክሽን ቡድኑን ውሳኔ አጣጥሎት ነበር፡፡ በወቅቱ መግለጫ የሰጡት በጠ/ሚ/ር ሃይለማርያም ቢሮ አፈቀላጤ የነበሩት ጌታቸው ረዳ “ከኢንስፔክተር ቡድኑ ጋር አንተባበርም፤ ትብብር ማድረግ ካስፈለገንም ከዓለም ባንክ ጋር ይሆናል፤ … ይህ በኢህአዴግ ላይ የተነጣጠረ የፕሮፓጋንዳ ዘመቻ ነው፤ … ኢንስፔክሽን ፓናል የራሱ የዓለም ባንክ ኢንስፔክተር (መርማሪ) ቡድን አይደለም፤ … ቡድኑ የራሱን ልብወለድ ዘገባ በዓለም ባንክ አሠራር ላይ ለመጫን ያደረገው ሙከራ ነው” በማለት ነበር ያጥላሉት፡፡

ከዚህ በኋላ የዓለም ባንክ በኢንስፔክተር ቡድኑ የውሳኔ ሃሳብ መሠረት ሙሉ ምርመራ እንዳያደርግ ኢህአዴግ እንደለመደው ውሉ ያልለየለት አካሄድ በመከተል ሲከላከል አምስት ወራት አስቆጥሯል፡፡ በመጨረሻም ለዛሬ ሐምሌ 11 (ጁላይ 18) ከፍተኛ የኢህአዴግ ባለሥልጣናት ከአዲስ አበባ፤ እንዲሁም ከኢትዮጵያ ኤምባሲ ከፍተኛ ዲፕሎማቶች በመሆን የዓለም ባንክን አመራሮች ለማነጋገር ቀጠሮ ይዘው እያለ ባንኩ ከአንድ ቀን በፊት ሙሉ ምርመራ እንዲካሄድ ማዘዙ “ኢህአዴግን የማነቂያው ገመድ” እየከረረ መምጣቱን የሚጠቁም ነው፡፡ ከዚህም በላይ ባንኩ በራሱ ገንዘብ ማንም ሊያዝበት እንደማይችል ያሳየበትና ለኢህአዴግም እጅግ አሳፋሪ ውሳኔ መሆኑ ጉዳዩን በቅርበት የሚከታተለው ኢንክሉሲቭ ዴቨሎፕመንት ኢንተርናሽናል Inclusive Development International (IDI) እና ሌሎች ክፍሎች ይናገራሉ፡፡ በውሳኔው መሠረት አሁን የሚካሄደው ሙሉ የምርመራ ዘገባ ኢህአዴግ በእርግጥ የሚሠጠውን ገንዘብ ለሰብዓዊ መብት ረገጣ ማዋሉን ካረጋገጠ፤ ኢህአዴግ በትንሹ 600ሚሊዮን ዶላር ያጣል፤ ጉዳቱም እስከ ቢሊዮኖች እንደሚደርስም ይገመታል፡፡

ለአዲሲቷ ኢትዮጵያ የጋራ ንቅናቄ ከሚያካሂደው ሁሉን ዓቀፍ ትግል ይህ አንዱ ክፍል አንደሆነ የተናገሩት የንቅናቄው ዋና ዳይሬክተር አቶ ኦባንግ ሜቶ “እኛ በመሠረቱ ልማትን አንቃወምም፤ ሆኖም ግን በልማት ስም የሚሠጠው ዕርዳታ የዜጎችን ሰብዓዊ መብት ለመርገጥ የሚውል ከሆነ ህወሃት/ኢህአዴግ ተጠያቂ መሆን ይገባዋል” ብለዋል፡፡ የግልጽነትና ተጠያቂነት ዕጥረት እንዲሁም የሙስና በሽታ እንዳጠቃው በራሱ መሪዎች የሚነገርለት ኢህአዴግ፤ የፈለገውን ነገር እንደፈለገው የማድረግ አምባገነናዊ አሠራሩ ራሱን አጣብቂኝ ውስጥ እንደሚከተው አቶ ኦባንግ በተለይ ለጎልጉል በስካይፕ በሠጡት አጭር ቃለምልልስ አስታውቀዋል፡፡ እልህ አስጨራሽ ቢሆንም የጋራ ንቅናቄው በጥናትና በዕቅድ ከሚያካሂደው ሁሉን ዓቀፍ ትግል አንዱ እንደሆነ የጠቆሙት የንቅናቄው ዳይሬክተር፤ “ይህ ገና ጅማሬ ነው፤ በተጠናከረ መልኩ በመንቀሳቀስ ጉዳዩን ዳር በማድረስ የተጎዱ ዜጎች ላይ የሚደርሰውን መከራ” እንደሚታደጉ ጨምረው አመልክተዋል፡፡

ባንኩ የሚልከው የመርማሪ ቡድን ወደ ኢትዮጵያ በቅርቡ እንደሚንቀሳቀስና ኢህአዴግም ቡድኑ ለሚያደርገው ሙሉ ምርመራ በሩን ክፍት ማድረግ እንዳለበት ተመልክቷል፡፡ የምርመራው ውጤት ከዚህ በፊት የተደረገውን ምርመራ የሚያጸና ከሆነ ኢህአዴግ ለልማት ሥራ እንዲያውለው በዕርዳታና ድጎማ ስም የሚያገኘው ገንዘብ እንዲሁም ሌሎች የእርዳታ ምንጮች እጅግ ከፍተኛ አደጋ ላይ ይወድቃሉ፡፡ ባንኩ ከዚህ በፊት በደቡብ እስያ አገር ላይ የወሰደው ዓይነት አስከፊም እርምጃ ሊወሰድ ይችላል፡፡

ጉዳዩ እንዴት እዚህ ደረጃ ደረሰ? ለሚሉት ጥያቄዎችና ኢህአዴግ ስለተከሰሰባቸው ዝርዝር ጉዳዮች ጎልጉል የድረገጽ ጋዜጣ (“ኢህአዴግ አንገቱን ታንቋል”፤ ዓለም ባንክ ርምጃ ለመውሰድ ጫፍ ደርሷል) በሚል ርዕስ February 16, 2013 እንዲሁም (ኢህአዴግ በ600 ሚሊዮን ዶላር አጣብቂኝ ውስጥ ገባ!! ብያኔው ከጸና ኪሣራው በቢሊዮን ዶላር ሊደርስም ይችላል!) October 12, 2012 አስቀድሞ የዘገበውን ማጣቀስ አግባብ ሆኖ በመገኘቱ ከዚህ በታች እንዳለ አቅርበነዋል።

ኢህአዴግ በ600 ሚሊዮን ዶላር አጣብቂኝ ውስጥ ገባ!!

ብያኔው ከጸና ኪሣራው በቢሊዮን ዶላር ሊደርስም ይችላል!

inspection panel

October 12, 2012 11:23 am
ኢህአዴግ ከዓለም ባንክ ያገኘውን 600 ሚሊዮን ዶላርና በተመሳሳይ ፕሮጀክት ወደፊት ሊያገኝ የሚችለውን ከፍተኛ ገንዘብ በተመለከተ አደጋ ውስጥ መውደቁ ተሰማ። ኢንስፔክሽን ፓናል (Inspection Panel – IP) የተሰኘ ተቋም ይፋ ያደረገው መረጃ እንደሚያመለክተው ኢህአዴግ የቀረበበት ውንጀላ ከተረጋገጠ የሚያጣው ገንዘብ በቢሊዮን ዶላር እንደሚደርስ ታውቋል። ይፋ የሆነውን መረጃ አስመልክቶ ከኢህአዴግ ወገን እስካሁን በይፋ የተሰጠ ምላሽ የለም።

ግፍ የሚፈጽሙ መንግስታትን፣ በልማት ስም የሰብዓዊ መብት ጥሰት የሚፈጽሙ ወንጀሎችን መረጃዎችን በስፍራው በመገኘትና ከመሠረቱ ዘልቆ በመግባት አደራጅቶ ተጠያቂ የሚያደርገው ኢንክሉሲቭ ዴቨሎፕመንት ኢንተርናሽናል Inclusive Development International (IDI) ከሰለባዎቹ ውክልና ተሰጥቶታል። ተቋሙም በውክልናው መሰረት ለኢንስፔክሽን ፓናል በዝርዝር የሰለባዎቹን በደል በማተት አሳውቋል።

የኢህአዴግ መከላከያ ሠራዊት የሚያደርሰውን እስራት፣ ግርፋት፣ አስገድዶ መድፈር፣ ከመኖሪያ ቦታ ማፈናቀል፣ የግዳጅ ሰፈራ ወዘተ በማምለጥ ወደ ኬንያ የተሰደዱ የጋምቤላ ነዋሪዎች ይህ ሁሉ ግፍ የሚፈጽምባቸው የኢትዮጵያ መንግሥት በልማት ስም ከዓለም ባንክ በሚያገኘው የዕርዳታ ገንዘብ በመሆኑ ለባንኩ በላኩት የአቤቱታ ደብዳቤ አመልክተዋል።

አቤቱታውን መሠረት በማድረግ የሚደረገው ምርመራ ውጤት ይፋ ሲሆን፣ በሌሎች አገሮች እንደተደረገው በዕርዳታ ስም የሚገኝን ገንዘብ ኢህአዴግ ለፖለቲካ ተግባር መጠቀሙ ሲረጋገጥ፣ በመስከረም ወር መጀመሪያ አካባቢ ከዓለም ባንክ ተፈቅዶ የነበረው 600ሚሊዮን ዶላር ሊከለከል ይችላል፡፡

የዛሬ ዘጠኝ ዓመት አካባቢ በሟቹ ጠ/ሚ/ርና የጦር ኃይሎች ጠቅላይ አዛዥ መለስ ዜናዊ ቀጥተኛ ትዕዛዝ በጋምቤላ ክልል በተለይ የተማሩ ወንዶች ላይ በማተኮር 424 ንጹሐን የአኙዋክ ተወላጆች በተገደሉበት ወቅት በሺዎች የሚቆጠሩት ወደ ጎረቤት አገር ኬንያ መሰደዳቸው ይታወሳል፡፡ ከዚያን ጊዜ ጀምሮ ክልሉ ሰላም የለም፡፡ በየጊዜውም የሰብዓዊ መብት ጥሰቶች ሲካሄዱበት ቆይቷል፡፡ በተለይም ለም የሆነውን እጅግ ሰፋፊ መሬት ለውጪ ባለሃብቶች በሳንቲም በመሸጥ ላይ የሚገኘው የኢህአዴግ አገዛዝ ከቅርብ ጊዜ ወዲህ በቀድሞው የደርግ ዘመን ሲካሄድ ከነበረው ባለፈ መልኩ እጅግ በሚያሰቅቅ ሁኔታ በመንደር ምስረታና አስገድዶ የማስፈር ፖሊሲ ከመኖሪያ ቀዬ የማፈናቀል ተግባራትን እያከናወነ መሆኑን የኦክላንድ ተቋም፣ ሂውማን ራይትስ ዎች፣ … የመሳሰሉ ድርጅቶች ያወጧቸው ዘገባዎች ይጠቁማሉ፡፡

ከ1998ዓም ጀምሮ የመሠረታዊ አገልግሎት ጥበቃ ፕሮግራም (Protection of Basic Services “PBS Program”) በሚል በአራት ተከታታይና ሁለት ተጨማሪ የገንዘብ ድጎማ የሚደረግባቸውን ፕሮግራሞች የዓለም ባንክ በኢትዮጵያ ሲያካሂድ ቆይቷል፡፡ ይህ መሠረታዊ የሆኑ አገልግሎቶችን ለማሟላት ተወጥኖ የሚካሄድ ፕሮጀክት በትምህርት፣ በጤና፣ በእርሻ፣ በንጹህ ውሃ አቅርቦት፣ በገጠር መንገድ ሥራ፣ ወዘተ መስኮች ላይ እንዲውል (PBS I, PBS I-AF (Additional Financing), PBS II, PBS 11-AF, PBS-Social Accountability Program and PBS III) በማለት በተለያዩ ደረጃዎች ለተከፋፈለው ኦፐሬሽን ማስፈጸሚያ የሚውለው ገንዘብ ከ13ቢሊዮን ዶላር የሚበልጥ ነው፡፡ ከዚህ ውስጥ ከፍተኛው የዓለም ባንክ ድርሻ 2ቢሊዮን ዶላር ሲሆን የተቀረው በሌሎች ለጋሽ መንግሥታት እና ድርጅቶች የሚሸፈን ነው፡፡ PBS III የተሰኘውን በሦስት ንዑሳን ፕሮግራሞች የተከፋፈለውን ፕሮጀክት ለማስፈጸም በአጠቃላይ የሚፈጀው 6.3ቢሊዮን ዶላር በላይ ነው፡፡ ከዚህ ውስጥ የባንኩ ድርሻ የሆነውን 600ሚሊዮን ዶላር ቦርዱ መስከረም 5ቀን 2005ዓም አጽድቋል፡፡

በአስገድዶ ማስፈር፣ መንደር ምስረታና ሌሎች በርካታ የሰብዓዊ መብቶቻቸው የተጣሱባቸው በኬንያ የሚገኙ ሦስት የአኙዋክ ስደተኞች ተወካይ ድርጅቶች በሰሜን አሜሪካ ከሚገኙ ሌሎች የሰብዓዊ ድርጅቶች ጋር በመሆን ባንኩ ሊሰጥ የወሰነውን ገንዘብ ለኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብ ጥቅም ከመዋል ይልቅ ለኢህአዴግ የፖለቲካ ዓላማ ማስፈጸሚያ እየዋለ መሆኑን በመጥቀስ ለባንኩ ፕሬዚዳንት ዶ/ር ጂም ዮንግ ኪም መስከረም 6፤ 2005ዓም ደብዳቤ ልከዋል፡፡ በጥያቄያቸውም መሠረት በዓለም ባንክ በኩል ወደ ኢትዮጵያ የሚፈሰው ገንዘብ “በልማት ስም የኢትዮጵያ መንግሥት በጋምቤላ ክልል ለሚያካሂደው የመንደር ምስረታ እየዋለ ነው” በማለት ይከሳል፡፡ ሲቀጥልም የአኙዋክ ሕዝብ

ለዘመናት ከኖረበት መንደር በማፈናቀል “የተሻለ አገልግሎት

 

ይሰጣችኋል” በማለት በግድ የማስፈር ተግባር እየተፈጸመ ሲሆን “የተባለው አገልግሎትም ሆነ ለእርሻ የሚሆን በቂ ቦታ እንዲሁም ለከብቶች የሚበቃ የግጦሽና የውሃ ቦታ የላቸውም” በማለት ሰፈራውን የተቃወሙ ሁሉ እጅግ ከፍተኛ የሆነ የሰብዓዊ መብት ረገጣ እየደረሰባቸው እንደሚገኝ ጠቁሟል፡፡ ይህንን ግፍ የሚፈጽሙት ደግሞ የዓለም ባንክ ለመሠረታዊ አገልግሎት ጥበቃ ፕሮግራም (Protection of Basic Services “PBS Program”) ስም ለልማት እንዲውል ከሚሰጠው የዕርዳታ ገንዘብ በመንግሥት ተቀጥረው ደመወዝ የሚከፈላቸው ሠራተኞች መሆናቸውን ገልጾዋል፡፡ ይህንን ጉዳይ ከዓለም ባንክ ጋር እንዲነጋገሩላቸው Inclusive Development International (IDI) የተባለውን ድርጅት መወከላቸውን አስታውቀዋል፡፡ (የደብዳቤው ሙሉ ቃል እዚህ ላይ ይገኛል)

ተመሳሳይ ጉዳዮችን በዓለምአቀፍ ደረጃ በመከታተልና በማስፈጸም የታወቀው IDI በመስከረም ወር አጋማሽ ላይ ጉዳዩ በቀጥታ ለሚመለከተው የመልሶ ማቋቋምና ልማት ዓለምአቀፍ ባንክና (International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD)) የዓለምአቀፍ ልማት ማኅበር (International Development Association (IDA)) ሥር ለሚገኘው የኢንስፔክተር ፓናል ባለ 18ገጽ ደብዳቤ ጽፏል፡፡ (የደብዳቤው ሙሉ ቃል እዚህ ላይ ይገኛል) ይህ የኢንስፔክተር ቡድን ከፍተኛ ሥልጣን ያለው መ/ቤት ሲሆን የዓለም ባንክ የሚሰጠውን ገንዘብ በትክክለኛ ቦታ ላይ አለመዋሉን በመጥቀስ ክስ የሚያቀርቡ ወገኖችን ጉዳይ በመከታተልና ቦታው ድረስ የራሱን ምርመራ በማካሄድ ውጤቱ ተግባራዊ እንዲሆን የባንኩን እጅ የማስጠምዘዝ ዓቅም ያለው እንደሆነ ከዚህ በፊት ያካሄዳቸው የምርመራ ውጤቶች ይጠቁማሉ፡፡

ይህ የመርማሪ ቡድን የቀረበለትን አቤቱታ መቀበሉንና በጉዳዩ ላይ የማንም ተጽዕኖ የማይደረግበትን የራሱን ምርመራ እንደሚያደርግ ከትላንት በስቲያ ባወጣው ባለ 8ገጽ መግለጫ ላይ አሳውቋል፡፡ ይህ የአቤቱታ ፋይል ቁጥር የተሰጠው ጉዳይ በግልባጭ ለባንኩ ፕሬዚዳንትና ለከሳሽ ተወካይ ድርጅት (IDI) እንዲደርስ ተደርጓል፡፡(የደብዳቤው ሙሉ ቃል እዚህ ላይ ይገኛል)

ጎልጉል የሰሜን አሜሪካ ዘጋቢ ባጠናከረው መረጃ መሠረት ቡድኑ ከያዝነው ዓመት የጥቅምት አጋማሽ በኋላ ወደ ምስራቅ አፍሪካ ያቀናል። ቡድኑ ስደተኞቹ የሚገኙባቸውን፣ እንዲሁም ጉዳዩን በሚመለከት አስፈላጊ የሚላቸውን ቦታዎችና ግለሰቦች ሙሉ በሙሉ ያነጋግራል። ለስራው መሳካት የሚሆነውን ሁሉ በሚፈለግበት ቦታ በመገኘት በግንባር እንደሚያከናውን ለማወቅ ተችሏል።

በተለያየ ጊዜ ኢህአዴግ የሚፈጽመውን ግፍና በደል በማደራጀት ሥርዓቱ ላይ ከትጥቅ የጠነከረ ትግል ማካሄድ እንደሚቻል አስተያየት ሰጪዎች ተናግረዋል:: አያይዘውም በመላው አገሪቱ የሚፈጸመውን የሰብአዊ መብት ረገጣና የመብት ጥሰት በማሰባሰብ የኢህአዴግን የገንዘብ ምንጭ የማድረቅ፣ ብሎም በእርዳታ ገንዘብ የሚገነባቸውን የአፈና ተቋማት ማስለል እንደሚቻል አስታውቀዋል። ይህንን ታላቅ ስራ የሰሩትን አካላት ልምዳቸውን ለሌሎች በማካፈል አስፈላጊውን ስራ ሊሰሩ እንደሚገባም አሳስበዋል።

“ኢህአዴግ አንገቱን ታንቋል”

ዓለም ባንክ ርምጃ ለመውሰድ ጫፍ ደርሷል

inspection panel and world bank

February 16, 2013 04:12 am
/ዜና ጎልጉል/ ኢህአዴግ ላይ ቀደም ሲል ሲቀርቡበት ከነበሩት ሪፖርቶች በተለየ ጥቅሞቹ ላይ ያነጣጠሩ አስደንጋጭ መረጃዎች እንደወጡበት ተሰማ። መረጃው የኢህአዴግን አንገት የማነቅ ያህል እንደሚቆጠርና ለተግባራዊነቱ የተንቀሳቀሱትን አካላት “የአስተዋይነት” ትግል ውጤት እንደሆነ ተጠቁሟል።

ኢህአዴግ በህዝብ ስም በብድርና በርዳታ የሚያገኘውን ከፍተኛ መጠን ያለው ገንዘብ ለፖለቲካ ስራ እንደሚያውለውና ለአፈና ተቋማቱ ማጠናከሪያ እንደሚጠቀምበት የተከሰሰበት ሪፖርት መጠናቀቁን የገለጹት የጎልጉል ታማኝ ምንጮች ናቸው። ምንጮቹ እንዳሉት ሪፖርቱ የቀረበለት የዓለም ባንክ በቅርቡ መረጃውን ተቀብሎ ርምጃ ይወስዳል ተብሎ ይጠበቃል። ኢህአዴግ ርምጃው ተግባራዊ ከመሆኑ በፊት ለማክሸፍ የተለመደውን ሩጫ መጀመሩ ተሰምቷል።

በኢህአዴግ ላይ የቀረበው ሪፖርት የመፍትሄ ሃሳብም ያካተተ እንደሆነ የተናገሩት የጎልጉል ምንጮች፣ የዓለም ባንክ የሥራ አስፈጻሚ ቦርድ ሪፖርቱን ሙሉ በሙሉ እንደሚቀበለውና ይፋ እንደሚያደርገው አስረድተዋል። የምርመራ ዘገባውን ስላጠናውና ስላቀረበው የኢንስፔክሽን ተቋምና የስራ ተሞክሮ በቂ ግንዛቤ ያላቸው እነዚህ ክፍሎች እንደሚሉት የዓለም ባንክ ቦርድ ይህ ተቋም ከዚህ ቀደም በተመሳሳይ ያቀረባቸውን ሪፖርቶች ላለመቀበል አንገራግሮ እንደማያውቅ ያስረዳሉ።

በሚመሩት ህዝብ ላይ ግፍ የሚፈጽሙ መንግስታትና በልማት ስም የሰብዓዊ መብት ጥሰት የሚያካሂዱ አገራት የሚፈጸሙ ወንጀሎችን በስፍራው በመገኘትና መረጃዎችን ከመሠረታቸው ዘልቆ በመመርመር  አጥንቶ ተጠያቂ የሚያደርገው ኢንክሉሲቭ ዴቨሎፕመንት ኢንተርናሽናል Inclusive Development International (IDI) የሚባለው ተቋም ከኢትዮጵያውያኑ ሰለባዎች ውክልና በመውሰድ ስራውን ለማከናወን እንቅስቃሴ መጀመሩን ጎልጉል ምንጮቹን በመጥቀስ መዘገቡ ይታወሳል። ተቋሙም በውክልናው መሰረት ለኢንስፔክሽን ፓናል በዝርዝር የሰለባዎቹን በደል በማተት አሳውቆ ነበር።

ኢህአዴግ በርዳታና በብድር የሚያገኘውን ከፍተኛ መጠን ያለው ገንዘብ ለፖለቲካ ስራ፣ ለአፈና፣ ለወታደራዊ አቅም ግንባታ፣ ለተለያዩ የአፈና ተቋም ሰራተኞቹ ደሞዝና ህዝብን በመርገጥ ስርዓቱን ለሚንከባከቡ የተለያዩ ጥቅማጥቅሞችን በመክፈል ገንዘቡን ለመጠቀም ከታለመለት ዓላማ ውጪ እንደሚያውለው በበርካታ መረጃዎች ያረጋገጠው የኢንስፔክሽን ቡድን ለዚሁ ስራው ኬንያ፣ ደቡብ ሱዳንና ኢትዮጵያ በቅርቡ አቅንቶ ነበር።

ምርመራው ያስደነገጠው ኢህአዴግ በተለያየ መልኩ ሰለባዎች በደላቸውን እንዳይናገሩ፣ በጥቅም የተደለሉ ሰዎችን በየቦታዎቹ በማዘጋጀትና በማስፈራራት አፈና ማካሄዱን የጎልጉል የመረጃ ምንጮች በወቅቱ ቢያስታውቁም ጎልጉል መረጃውን ለስራው መሳካት ሲባል ይፋ ከማድረግ ተቆጥቧል።

ከቀናት በፊት ሪፖርቱን አጠናቆ ለዓለም ባንክ ቦርድ ያቀረበው የኢንስፔክሽን ቡድን (ፓናል) በማያወላዳ መንገድ ተጽኖ ፈጣሪ ተቋም መሆኑንን ያስረዱት ለስራውና ለተቋሙ ቅርበት ያላቸው ክፍሎች፣ ሪፖርቱን ከቦርዱ አባላት አንዱ እንኳ አልቀበልም ቢሉ ምን ሊከሰት እንደሚችልም አብራርተዋል።

“አንድ ወይም ከአንድ በላይ የቦርድ አባላት የፓናሉን ሪፖርት ውይይት እንዲደረግበት እስካልጠየቁ ድረስ ፓናሉ ባቀረበው መሠረት እንዳለ ይጸድቃል። ከጸደቀም በኋላ ሪፖርቱ በዓለም ባንክ ስም ይፋ ይሆናል። ሪፖርቱ ታምኖበት ይፋ ከሆነ በሪፖርቱ የቀረቡት የመፍትሄ ጭብጦች ተግባራዊ ከማድረግ ውጪ ሌላ አማራጭ የለም። እስካሁን ባለው አሰራር የፓናሉ ሪፖርት ተቃውሞ አጋጥሞት አያውቅም” ሲሉ መልስ ሰጥተዋል።

“ይህ ታላቅ ውጤት የተገኘው በእቅድና አስተውሎ በመራመድ ነው። ወደፊትም በቀጣይ የሚከናወኑ ተግባራቶች አሉ። የአገዛዙን ትምክህትና ማን አለብኝነት የሚያረግቡ፣ ብሎም የሚያተኑ ስራዎች ለመስራት ለተጀመረው ስራ ይህ ውጤት ከፍተኛ መነቃቃት ይሆናል” ሲሉ ጉዳዩን በቅርበት በመከታተል እዚህ ያበቁት ክፍሎች አስረድተዋል።