Red Cross apologise for losing $5m of Ebola funds to fraud
The Red Cross has confirmed that
more than $5m (£3.8m) of aid money was lost to fraud and corruption
during the Ebola epidemic in West Africa.
Auditors found overpriced supplies, salaries for non-existent aid workers and fake customs bills.
The disease, which raged between 2014 and 2016, claimed at least 10,000 lives.
It required a massive humanitarian operation costing hundreds of millions of dollars to bring it under control.
As Ebola spread across Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, the Red
Cross Federation in Geneva was dispersing cash donations to the national
Red Cross societies in each of those countries - altogether a sum of
about $100m.
An investigation by Red Cross auditors has revealed
that in Liberia $2.7m disappeared in fraudulently overpriced supplies,
or in salaries for non-existent aid workers.
In Sierra Leone, Red
Cross staff apparently colluded with local bank workers to skim off
over $2m while in Guinea, where investigations are ongoing, around $1m
disappeared in fake customs bills.
The Red Cross told the BBC's Imogen Foulkes in Geneva that it is deeply sorry for the losses.
The
organisation adds that it has introduced stricter financial rules, and
promised to hold any Red Cross staff involved to account.
Fraud involving donor money is every aid agency's nightmare, our correspondent says.
The Red Cross is the world's best-known humanitarian organisation, and this revelation will be damaging, she adds.
BBC
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