Jimma Times logo
 
 
 Web  Jimma Times 
Reader Login
Username:
Password:
 Save Login?
Free Sign-up
Forgot Password?
Reader Control Panel
 
 
 
Western NGOs accuse BBC for Ethiopian aid theft story


BBC under fire for Band Aid 'slur'

Charities in uproar at claims that donations were spent on weapons

(By Paul Vallely/Independent) Bob Geldof and the Band Aid trust are to report the BBC to the broadcasting regulator Ofcom over a World Service report that millions of pounds raised for famine victims in Ethiopia in 1985 were actually spent on weapons.

A group of Britain's most respected agencies – including Oxfam, the Red Cross, Unicef, Christian Aid and Save the Children – are joining Band Aid in writing an official complaint to the chairman of the BBC Trust, Sir Michael Lyons.

They are to complain of the "false and dangerously misleading impression" created by a report by the BBC World Service's Africa editor, Martin Plaut, which alleged that 95 per cent of the $100m in aid which went to the northern province of Tigray in 1985 had been diverted for military use by the rebel forces which held the area.

A draft of a letter written by the agencies, seen by The Independent, speaks of "disgracefully poor reporting by the BBC which "relied on dubious sources and rumour" and which was "designed to leave an overall impression that the vast majority of resources raised by aid efforts in the mid 1980s largely went on buying arms". In a clearly angry tone the agencies say: "There is not in fact a shred of credible evidence that this happened. There is overwhelming evidence that tens of thousands and even millions were saved by these efforts, which were in fact spurred by reporting by the BBC." The draft concludes: "How the quality of the BBC's work then contrasts with the quality of this specific story now."


The story, which went out in the World Service's Assignment programme – and in a shorter version on Radio 4 in From Our Own Correspondent, as well as on the BBC website – relies on the testimony of two former senior Tigrean rebels. The most senior, Aregawi Berhe, a one-time commander in the rebel army, was expelled from the guerrilla movement in the summer of 1985.

"He therefore not only had a political axe to grind against his former colleagues but he wasn't even in Tigray at the time," said Sir Bob Geldof last night, "so he could not have witnessed these alleged transactions".

The anti-poverty campaigner, who raised $144m for Africa in the Live Aid concert in 1985 – which was spent in six different countries – accused the BBC of "wilfully naive reporting".

"This is a Ross/Brand moment in BBC standards for me," Sir Bob said. "This story has gone around the world on the internet and created a totally false impression of what actually happened. At the time of Live Aid we had journalists crawling all over everything we did trying to find something wrong – and they couldn't.

"And now, on the strength of one disgruntled soldier, the BBC has undermined the faith of ordinary people across the world in the effectiveness of giving to people in their hour of need. It is a disgrace."

It was not just the volatile campaigner who was incensed. The BBC story was "outrageous and very damaging," said Nick Guttmann, director of emergency relief operations at Christian Aid .

"It is palpable nonsense," said Phil Bloomer, director of Oxfam's campaigns and policy division. "The idea that 95 per cent of aid was diverted is beyond belief. We know because we bought the food, we bought the trucks, we took the food in, saw it distributed and then we drove the empty trucks out.

"You have to ask what is the motive of those behind these claims, made by political opponents of the Ethiopian Prime Minister as an election approaches in Ethiopia," he added.

"And you have to ask why the BBC seems to have been prepared to run with these extraordinary claims about our work without even putting in a call to Oxfam before they were broadcast."

"We're not utter fools," said Mr Bloomer. "We've worked for 60 years in some of the most difficult situations in the world with the extremes of human behaviour and have systems in place to safeguard against diversion."

A former British ambassador to Ethiopia, Myles Wickstead, added weight to the aid agencies' condemnation last night. "I'd give no credibility whatsoever to the idea that 95 per cent of aid to Tigray was diverted," he concluded.

"It was too highly monitored, most particularly that of Live Aid. Some money may well have gone astray in Ethiopia in 1985. But nowhere nearly on the scale which the BBC has alleged."

SOURCE: INDEPENDENT

Post A Comment
Comments 13 comments for this article
  <<  <   1  |  2   >  >>
Added: March 08, 2010. 09:43 AM GMT
to Waqjira
Can we start by killing your mother !!
ous
Added: March 07, 2010. 09:30 PM GMT
OLF needs TPLF's killer mentality
the problem with our OLF and Oromummaa is we do not use illegal ways
THE TPLF USED DIRTY MONEY AND KILLED TO GET WHERE IT IS

OLF needs to stop worrying about human rights and fight dirty
Waqjira
Added: March 07, 2010. 09:12 PM GMT
The end justify the means. What ever Wayane did to get to where they are today was right. After all they were "shifta". Morality is not one of "Shiftas" means. When you are rebel you do what rebels do. You robe and steal if you can.
Do not forget the NGO's get 75% percent of what they collect and give 25% for the needy. Their big salary is coming from the money they collect.
Bwendimu
Added: March 07, 2010. 05:51 PM GMT
looks like tigres were responsible for their own famine and misery
Anonymous
Added: March 07, 2010. 02:11 PM GMT
Those NGO bases their life with the money they collect in the name of the poors. so they do not care provided that they continue working. If they keep silent they know that woyane will kick them out. So they prefer to protect Woyane. There are many humaniterian crimes committed by woyane but the westerns want to hide.
Tsegay
Added: March 07, 2010. 11:13 AM GMT
loooosers!
election came and U use any disgraceful propaganda, idiot .... no BBC is full of sh*t they are very naive about the Hippocracy of Ethiopian opposition!
USA
Added: March 07, 2010. 09:13 AM GMT
Yes!!!
That is it ! International Shame on Ethiopian Diaspora! Agurash ijin Menkes Jemerachu aydel? U hate Woyane, OK, I understand! but then When Woyane won international respect through its development policies u turned ur ugly teeth on the international donors who saved ur families!
Ujulu
Added: March 07, 2010. 12:28 AM GMT
Shame on the west NGOS
Either the father of falsehood zenawi beg them to lie or persons representing such NGOS must have participated in the diversion of the aid...shame on all who forward white lies on behalf of zenawi,,,,truth cast to earth shall rise again,,,all such lies will be recorded,,,,
Anonymous
Added: March 06, 2010. 10:35 PM GMT
Gobez BBC!! shame on NGOs!
It is funny how all international NGOs joined hand to save their business empire by atacking the messenger BBC


in 1980s, dictator Mengistu accused BBC for reporting about his abuses by using anti-Mengistu sources (aka "White Terror" sources)

both NGOs and Mengistu want to save their bloody empires by attacking the messenger
warso
Added: March 06, 2010. 07:43 PM GMT
what about the photo of Gebremedhin taking money coumoflaged as sudan marchant? Is Gebrededhin was not the finance head of Tplf? It was an open secret that woyane used aid as a meanse of political tool to get assistance. how they record the bombardment of Hawuzen? Another to be told trick of Woyane to fool the world and make bussiness with a blood of Tigreayans.
Anonymous
  <<  <   1  |  2   >  >>