Africa

Geldof challenges BBC aid claim

Bob Geldof has challenged the BBC to substantiate its report that millions raised for famine relief in Ethiopia were diverted to pay for weapons.

The campaigner, who led the Western relief effort in the 80s, said there was "not a shred of evidence" Band Aid or Live Aid money was siphoned off.

The report included claims 95% of the $100m (£66m) sent to the province of Tigray was used by rebels to buy arms.

The BBC World Service has said it stands by its report.

Mr Geldof told BBC One’s Andrew Marr show he would personally sue the Ethiopian government and spend the money on aid if any evidence was produced.

‘Credible voices’

He said: "Produce me one shred of evidence and I promise you I will professionally investigate it, I will professionally report it, and if there is any money missing I will sue the Ethiopian government for that money back and I will spend it on aid.

"There is not a single shred of evidence that Band Aid or Live Aid money was diverted in any sense, it could not have been."

The World Service report featured interviews with two former members of a rebel group who made the allegations dating from the mid-80s.

Gebremedhin Araya and Max Peberdy

They told the BBC they posed as merchants in meetings with charity workers to get aid money which they used to fund attempts to overthrow the government.

One rebel leader estimated that $95m (£63m) from Western governments and charities, including Band Aid, was diverted.

The CIA also alleged aid money was being misused.

A 1985 report from the crime agency concluded: "Some funds that insurgent organisations are raising for relief operations, as a result of increased world publicity, are almost certainly being diverted for military purposes."

Mr Geldof, who was speaking to the BBC from Nairobi, also said one of the sources quoted in the report was a "dissident political exile" who was "not credible".

The anti-poverty campaigner and the Band Aid Trust are reportedly taking their complaint to the broadcasting regulator Ofcom.

"There is a clear public interest in determining whether some money given as famine relief ended up buying guns and bullets"

Andrew Whitehead, BBC World Service

BBC response to criticism

They and a number of other agencies, including Oxfam, the Red Cross, Christian Aid and Save The Children, are also writing to chairman of the BBC Trust, Sir Michael Lyons.

John Kennedy, a co-founder of the Band Aid Trust, said: "The trust is writing to the BBC and Ofcom to complain about the broadcast."

A Christian Aid spokeswoman confirmed it was planning to support the complaint.

Mr Whitehead, the news and current affairs editor at the World Service, said the BBC "stands by" its report.

Writing in the Editors blog on the BBC website, he stated: "It presents evidence, compelling evidence, that some of the famine relief donations were diverted by a powerful rebel group to buy weapons."

Mr Whitehead defended the journalist who made the documentary – the World Service’s Africa editor Martin Plaut.

He wrote: "He has a particular expertise in the Horn of Africa, and indeed reported from there on the famine back in the 1980s. He has spent almost a year gathering material and doing research for this documentary – and the BBC stands by his journalism."

Mr Whitehead admitted the two former rebels quoted were "at odds" with their old leader, who is now prime minister of Ethiopia, but added: "They are credible voices".

He also said their claims were backed by a former US diplomat.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Malawians move for Madonna school

Madonna, pictured on a recent visit to Malawi

Some 200 villagers in Malawi have ended their protests and agreed to leave their land to make way for a school being built by pop star Madonna.

The villagers have finally accepted compensation of $105,000 (£67,000) after their protests had delayed the start of the building work.

A local chief reportedly told the villagers to "accept reality" after the government ordered them to move.

Madonna has adopted two children from Malawi, where she has an orphanage.

Work is now expected to start soon on the Raising Malawi Girls Academy outside the capital, Lilongwe.

The AFP news agency says it is expected to be finished in two years’ time.

As well as the compensation, the villagers have also been given new land elsewhere.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Star war

Sudanese soldiers in Darfur (left - AP), Darfuri rebel (centre - AFP), Mia Farrow speaking to displaced women in Kalma camp in 2004 (Right - AFP)

By Lucy Fleming
BBC News

Celebrities like Mia Farrow and George Clooney may have done more to prolong the suffering of Darfur than resolve the crisis in Sudan’s war-torn region, a new book argues.

"The Save Darfur movement with its celebrity supporters came down very clearly on one particular side of the debate," says Rob Crilly, author of Saving Darfur, Everyone’s Favourite African War.

"This very simple straight-forward narrative which demanded our intervention was the only view being heard," he told the BBC.

Crilly arrived in East Africa as a foreign correspondent for the London-based Times newspaper in 2004, a year after the insurgency in Darfur began.

His brief was to cover all of the region’s brutal conflicts – Somalia, the Democratic Republic of Congo and the end of the civil war in south Sudan.

‘Sexy conflict’

"But it became very clear very quickly there was only one conflict that my editors wanted me to cover," he says.

"As soon as I arrived I was getting calls asking me to go to Darfur – there was something very different about Darfur, something that was sexy and people were interested in."

"It was a very simple, clear war to understand – of good guys against bad guys."

Rob Crilly

Compared with other conflicts in Africa, Darfur seemed simple: In September 2004, then-US Secretary of State Colin Powell used the word "genocide".

Crilly says the conflict was portrated as "An evil government intent on destroying the rebels and their supporters.

"They’d unleashed this fearsome Arab militia, the Janjaweed on a scorched-earth campaign against villagers who were supporting the rebels, so it was a very simple, clear war to understand – of good guys against bad guys.

"You compare that with Somalia, where there are countless warlords and Islamist militias all fighting against each other, or the Democratic Republic of Congo which has been rumbling on for 10 years and anyone who understands those wars frankly is just boasting."

But the longer he reported on the conflict, the more Crilly understood that there was nothing simple about Darfur and what he was witnessing was a tragic, complicated conflict, rather than a simplistic genocide.

Unsurprisingly, Mia Farrow says she disagrees with Crilly’s analysis but does commend the book for providing "a solid journalistic account of his first-hand experiences in Darfur".

Aid boom

The book charts his understanding of the conflict’s complexities from his arrival, learning from his resourceful fixer and driver al-Siir the patience to wait for travel permits over sweet glasses of tea, discovering Darfur has some green valleys and orange groves on the bony back of a donkey and learning the legacy of Khartoum’s use of proxy armies when he comes face-to-face with Joseph Kony, the notorious Ugandan rebel leader who still terrorises areas of Southern Sudan.

map

He notes how Darfur changed over seven years – the region’s cities now have booming economies on the back of UN and aid money and one can now pick up an iPod in el-Fasher market, but the circling Antonov bombers still bring fear to the countryside.

He meets rape victims and rebel leaders, Arab militia who have joined the rebels and Arab fighters who have lost trade routes, former librarians and oil workers who have have given up their careers to fight for what they see as the survival of their communities.

"The war is no longer a conventional war in the sense we’d understand – that there’s one side against another," says Crilly.

"It’s banditry, it’s insecurity, it’s fractures within the Arab tribes – they’ve turned on each other, there are issues of grazing routes, there are issues of water desertification," he says.

‘Pointless’

It is these nuances that have been ignored by the Save Darfur lobbyists, Crilly says, and led to George Clooney’s impassioned appeal to the UN Security Council in 2006 for the intervention of peacekeepers to save hundreds of thousands of lives.

"A line where peacekeepers could have intervened between two sides has completely broken down into a system of lawlessness resembling something almost like Somalia where the intervention of peacekeepers is pointless," says Crilly.

"Some of the rebel leaders were very much emboldened by the support of this lobby"

Rob Crilly

Book cover of Saving Darfur

Even many aid workers on the ground and diplomats disagree with the advocacy group’s line.

"There were other organisations talking about other types of solutions but they were basically forced into silence because of their complex relationship with Khartoum."

But it is not the publicity that celebrities bring that is the problem, he says, rather their agenda.

"My concern is when they get too involved in proposing solutions and they become too wedded to one way of doing things.

"I think that’s a lesson for future coalitions and future advocacy campaigns – we’ve already starting to see coalitions for Haiti.

"I think [it] is wonderful that people want to have concerts to raise awareness, raise money – but I think they shouldn’t get too bogged down in policy prescriptions because they can run into trouble."

He blames the Save Darfur Coalition in part for the failure of the 2006 Darfur peace agreement, which only one of the many rebel factions signed up to.

"Some of the rebel leaders were very much emboldened by the support of this lobby and they still believe that the Save Darfur movement can deliver them much greater benefits."

The rebel groups, for example, want the International Criminal Court to indict Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir on genocide charges – something a diplomat quoted in the book says "would be like arresting Martin McGuinness during the Good Friday negotiations" in Northern Ireland.

Too often the rebels are seen as the only player against Khartoum.

A gathering of all the different communities to discuss their grievances – while it may sound boring – would have the best hope of finding a solution, he says.

"If you understand it as a black and white war between rebels and the government then all these other players are left out of the negotiations and you can’t really have peace in Darfur."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.


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