Monday, January 22, 2024
A scandal of high caliber. UN staff in Iraq took bribes to help businessmen, 22 JAN
A scandal of high caliber. UN staff in Iraq took bribes to help businessmen
Baghdad Today - Follow-up
An investigation conducted by the British newspaper The Guardian revealed on Monday (January 22, 2024) that employees working for the United Nations in Iraq are demanding bribes to help businessmen win contracts in post-war reconstruction projects in the country, noting that United Nations employees Required 15% of the value of contracts.
The alleged commissions are one of a number of allegations of corruption and mismanagement revealed by The Guardian at the Stabilization Financing Facility, a $1.5 billion UNDP scheme launched in 2015 from more than 30 donors.
Interviews with more than two dozen current and former UN staff, contractors and Iraqi and Western officials suggest that the UN is nurturing the culture of bribery that has permeated Iraqi society since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in 2003.
The Guardian found that "UNDP staff demanded bribes of up to 15 per cent of the contract value, according to three staff members and four contractors," and in return, the employee helps the contractor navigate the UNDP's complex bidding system to ensure that the vetting process passes.
The newspaper quoted one of the contractors, saying that "no one can get a contract without paying, and there is nothing in this country that you can get without paying, neither from the government nor from the United Nations Development Program," noting that " UNDP employees contacted them asking for bribes."
One UNDP staff member said the deals were made in person rather than on paper to avoid being discovered, with influential Iraqis sometimes acting as guarantors, noting that "the third party also takes a share of the bribes," adding that contractors "will choose people with connections and power."
Government officials entrusted by UNDP with supervision of construction projects are allegedly also receiving a share.
Contractors and UNDP staff who oversaw the projects explained that officials used that power to "extort" to obtain bribes from companies in exchange for signing projects completed, with two contractors tellingThe Guardianthat they were forced to make such payments.
The interviewees, many of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, said the program had seen unwarranted expansion and extension that mostly preserved the UNDP footprint while relieving the Iraqi government of its own obligations to rebuild the country.
The newspaper also indicates that most of those interviewed described the training and workshops run by the United Nations Development Program within the framework of these initiatives as "trivial" and "lacking strategic coherence."
The Guardian was told that the sessions were attended by government officials and community members mostly to enjoy a free trip and cash in, with one former staff member saying: "UNDP just wants to burn money and show donors that they are doing workshops."
A former staff member described the UNDP Livelihood Initiative to teach displaced women to sew as "unrealistic" because Iraqis tend to buy cheap imported clothes from local markets: "They were trying to create an economy that doesn't exist." "It was like going back to the Middle Ages," they added.
UNDP said initiatives such as skills training were developed based on community needs and in full consultation with local authorities or community leaders.
Donors have appreciated the difficulty of tracking how their funding is and relying on UNDP to carry out monitoring and evaluation through an internal unit that the agency described as "fully independent", even though it is managed by UNDP.
Five interviewees familiar with the UNDP reported they did not reflect the reality on the ground.
One consultant who conducted an external audit of another UNDP program said: "A lot of these documents are mostly for PR purposes, when you actually go to these districts and sit down with the beneficiaries of these funds and actually look at the projects, it's very different from what you imagine by reading these reports."
Isolated behind concrete walls and allowed only limited field visits due to strict security protocol, embassy staff appear to lack the means to challenge the information, with a Western official noting, "Everyone only stays for two years, and when they find out, they leave " " "That's how these programs continue year after year."
Responding to the Guardian's request for comment, an advisor to the Iraqi prime minister, Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, said that if allegations of corruption at the UNDP and the involvement of government agencies were proven to be true, legal action would be taken. .
Farhad Aladdin added, "We will communicate with the highest authorities in the United Nations to discuss the details of these allegations, investigate them and refer those involved in corruption to the competent authorities." We will also review all programs to find out the truth."
"ANALYSIS OF IRAQ NEWS: MAINTAINING THE EXCHANGE RATE" BY MNT GOAT, 22 JAN
MAINTAINING THE EXCHANGE RATE… PARLIAMENTARY FINANCE DETERMINES THE VARIABLES OF THE 2024 BUDGET
Today, Wednesday, the Parliamentary Finance Committee confirmed that the exchange rates of the dollar and a barrel of oil will be maintained in the budget for the current year 2024.
Committee member, MP Hussein Moanis, said in a statement to Al-Maalouma, “The government kept calculating the price of a barrel of oil, the quantity of oil exported, and the dollar exchange rate stipulated in the tripartite budget in the current year’s 2024 Without budget change.”
He added, “The Parliamentary Finance Committee has not yet received the changes that will occur to some tables in the current year’s budget in order to study them and then submit them to a vote in the House of Representatives.”
Muanis pointed out that “the changes that will occur in the current year’s budget will be made in the schedules without any change in their items,” noting that “the change in the schedules relates to added imports as well as spending.”
The House of Representatives approved, on Monday, June 12, 2023, after long deliberations between the government and parliament members that extended for months, the financial budget law for the three years 2023, 2024, and 2025, as the budget approved more expenditures and Investments as a direct result of the increase in oil revenues, which constitute 90% of the country’s revenues.
Coffee with MarkZ. 01/22/2024
Sudani: Victory over ISIS necessitates changing the mission of the international coalition, 22 JAN
Sudani: Victory over ISIS necessitates changing the mission of the international coalition
Information/BaghdadPrime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani stressed on Monday his rejection of any aggression on Iraqi soil or prejudice to its autonomy, while pointing out that the reason for the expansion of the conflict in the region is due to the continuation of the war in Gaza.
The media office of the Prime Minister, in a statement received by the information, that "Sudanese, received today the Dutch Minister of Defense Casey Olonggreen and her accompanying delegation."He added that "during the meeting, they discussed bilateral relations between the two countries, and ways to enhance cooperation in all fields, as well as the joint files that will be discussed during the Prime Minister's visit to the Netherlands, based on the official invitation submitted by the Dutch Prime Minister."
The prime minister praised "the efforts of the Netherlands in helping Iraq during its war against terrorism, within NATO," stressing his rejection of "any aggression on the territory of Iraq or prejudice to its autonomy."He renewed "the government's commitment to providing protection for diplomatic missions and advisors working in Iraq," pointing to "the government's decision to rearrange the relationship with the international coalition and move to another level of bilateral relations and cooperation with the coalition countries."
The Prime Minister stressed that "the reason for the expansion of the conflict in the region is due to the continuation of the war in Gaza and the brutal crimes committed by the occupation authorities against the Palestinian people," calling on "the international community to exert Pressure to stop genocide and policies of killing and starvation, as well as pressure to limit the opening of other fronts that lead to destabilization in the region and the world.
"For her part, Olonggren expressed her thanks "for the efforts of the Prime Minister in maintaining security and stability, and activating the good relations between Iraq and the Netherlands."
Awake-in-3D: Obstacles and Solutions to Freeing the Dinar from the Official Rate, 22 JAN
Awake-in-3D: Obstacles and Solutions to Freeing the Dinar from the Official Rate
Freeing the Dinar from the Official Rate: Obstacles and Solutions
On January 20, 2024
By Awake-In-3D
Reading between the lines… is demonetization on the horizon?
Source: Al-Alam Al-Jadid Newspaper [Translated to English]
January 13th, 2024 – With the return of fluctuations in the exchange rates of the Dinar, the discussion about the necessity of getting rid of the “official rate” is renewed. The aim is to reduce the gap with the rate in the parallel market, by subjecting the local currency to global supply and demand, similar to other countries. However, there are many obstacles to this step, including the “unilateral economy” of Iraq which relies on oil and government revenue, and the absence of correspondent banks in Dinar currency, according to specialists. They also called for other possible solutions, such as “deleting zeros” from the currency, and withdrawing the monetary mass from citizens and transferring it to banks.
Mudhar Mohammed Saleh, the financial advisor to the Prime Minister, says, “The exchange rate of the Iraqi Dinar follows a fixed exchange rate system, and the process of setting the exchange rate is one of the tasks of the monetary policy of the Central Bank of Iraq as it is the independent entity, especially since Iraq primarily depends on oil sources that provide foreign currency. Thus, oil revenues are transferred to the Iraqi Central Bank, and the reserves follow a mechanism of exchange between the Dinar and the Dollar, considering that the Central Bank is the source of exchange between them.”
The exchange rates of the Dollar in the local market witnessed significant fluctuations in the past few days, where it suddenly dropped to 148,000 Dinars for every 100 Dollars, then quickly rose to 150,000 Dinars, and then continued fluctuating until it reached 154,000 Dinars for every 100 Dollars, after it was close to about 157,000 Dinars.
Saleh adds, “The balance and stability of the price in flexible exchange rate systems require a financial and banking market, where interest rates play a major role in the inflows and outflows of foreign currency. This is not available in Iraq, and the economy is unilateral, dependent on governmental oil revenues for foreign currency inflows, where the forces of supply and demand are not homogenous with the unilateral economy.”
He continues, “The economy sometimes faces a large deficit in the current account and in the balance of payments, and the general budget also faces a deficit. Here, governments resort to loans and are forced to reduce the national currency so that the foreign currency becomes expensive. This is what is called financing from inflation, and although this conflicts with the policy of the Central Bank, it is done in consultation with monetary and fiscal policies.”
He points out that “the function of the Central Bank, in general, is to maintain the exchange rate and its stability for a long period, but this depends on the nature of the current account and the balance of payments, whether there is a surplus or there is a long-term or stable deficit, and also the nature of the budget whether it is expansionary or contractionary. So, the issue is not easy, as all we need in the exchange rate is a circle for consultation and communication between monetary and fiscal policies to maintain its stability.”
It is worth mentioning that since the beginning of the exchange rate crisis more than two years ago, many options have been proposed to control it, including printing new currency denominations like 100,000 Dinars, or deleting three zeros to control the rise in the value of numbers in cash transactions.
Iraq has suffered since the 1990s and during the imposition of economic sanctions, from significant inflation in the currency, which led the previous regime to print currency locally. After 2003, the previous currency was destroyed and new denominations were issued, and its exchange rate was fixed against the Dollar by order of the then Civil Administrator of Iraq, Paul Bremer, who revealed the new currency and its exchange rate against the Dollar.
On his part, the economic expert Nasser Al-Kinani, indicates, “Regarding the fluctuation of the Dinar, the Central Bank used to sell the Dinar at 1,118 per Dollar, then it was changed since the arrival of the previous Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi to power and the emergence of the white paper, where its price increased and became 1,450 Dinars. In addition to that, the Iraqi Dinar began to rise until it currently reached 1,530 Dinars for every Dollar in the local market, but despite this, solutions can be found for this problem.”
He explains, “The solutions revolve around reprinting the currency anew and zeroing it, especially if the printing process is accompanied by a process of retrieving hoarded money inside homes to the banks. From here, it is possible to fix the Iraqi Dinar by giving banks a percentage for each citizen who owns an account or opens an account inside the bank, for example, 10 percent, to be a deposit for the citizen inside the bank.”
He continues, “The above steps will lead to solving the issue of imports that the government is currently suffering from and trying to control to limit smuggling. The stability of the currency and the activation of local industry and agriculture will overall lead to solving all economic and currency problems.”
Iraq, according to the Central Bank of Iraq’s website, has 80 operating banks, including 62 local and 18 branches of foreign banks.
It is worth noting that the Iraqi banking sector is neglected by citizens who have lost confidence in it. According to World Bank figures released last year, only 23 percent of Iraqi families have an account in a financial institution, which is among the lowest rates in the Arab world, especially since those account holders are state employees whose salaries are distributed to public banks at the end of each month. However, these salaries also do not remain long in the accounts, as queues quickly form in front of banks from employees withdrawing their salaries in cash and preferring to keep it in their homes.
On his part, the financial and economic expert Mustafa Akram Hantoush, points out, “The local Iraqi currency is printed by the state and gives its value in exchange for other currencies or gold, that is, currencies or metals in the global supply and demand market.
Hantoush notes, “Currencies exposed to supply and demand are currencies that have countries and have correspondent banks for their currencies. For example, the Dollar, there are banks that correspond in Dollars so that the whole world receives and trades in it, therefore such a currency is considered a flexible currency with variable prices.”
He continues, “The Iraqi Dinar, used to have correspondent banks with a global currency that is used in international trade, and here its demand would be higher, thus increasing the value of the Dinar. However, Iraq as a country currently does not have correspondent banks, therefore its national currency is a local currency and does not subject to global supply and demand, as it is a currency issued in exchange for other currencies, and the process in it is fixed and does not rise to be a global process.”
It is worth mentioning that Washington intervened in the Dollar smuggling crisis last year, and Iraq was subjected to the global SWIFT system, creating a gap between the parallel and official markets, and increasing the loss of confidence in Iraqi banks. Dozens of banks were subjected to American and Iraqi sanctions without addressing the depositors’ money, in addition to most banks currently being involved in smuggling operations, as confirmed by the U.S. Treasury Department.
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