Categories: Stories

Who is really benefitting from the USAID US$19.8 million food insecurity project in Zimbabwe?

While Washington boasted that it had poured US$3 billion into Zimbabwe over the past 30 years, Zimbabwe says sanctions have cost it more than US$42 billion over the past 17 years.

What is more interesting, however, is that, according to American researcher Jake Johnston, “the principal beneficiary of America’s foreign assistance programmes has always been the United States”.

Writing about USAID role in Haiti following a devastating earthquake that killed more than 200 000 people and displaced about 1.5 million, Johnston said for every dollar that USAID spent in Haiti, less than one penny (cent) went directly to Haitian organisations, the rest went to US corporations.

“As a jobs creator back home, USAID’s Haiti reconstruction effort has been an astounding success,” Johnston wrote. “The single largest recipient of USAID funding in Haiti was a for-profit, DC-based firm, Chemonics International, through USAID’s Office of Transition Initiatives.”

Chemonics has been one of the top contractors for USAID though it has been cited in numerous congressional reports for doing shoddy jobs.

Its performance has been questioned in Afghanistan, Haiti and in the US$9.5 billion global health management supply chain. It has done such poor work, but continues to be awarded contracts, that one congressional report in which it is cited is entitled: Rewarding bad actors: why do poor performing contractors continue to get government business?

Chemonics made headlines in Zimbabwe in February 2018 when it ordered malaria test kits worth nearly US$500 000 which had been rejected by the Zimbabwe government.

The Para-Check test kits were rejected by medical practitioners in Zimbabwe in 2012 because they were not giving accurate results.

Chemonics did the same thing in Afghanistan where it built grain storage silos and greenhouses which locals never used because they had not been consulted. When asked, the farmers said they would never have used the silos because their fruits, grains and vegetables would have been easy prey for thieves.

But that is not all. Chemonics had to pay nearly US$500 000 in damages after it was accused of discriminating against blacks.

Continued next page

(302 VIEWS)

Civil: Credibility Indicators

Original Reporting

This article contains new, firsthand information uncovered by its reporter(s). This includes directly interviewing sources and research / analysis of primary source documents.

Sources Cited

As a news piece, this article cites verifiable, third-party sources which have all been thoroughly fact-checked and deemed credible by the Newsroom in accordance with the Civil Constitution.

Learn more about Civil’s Credibility Indicators

This post was last modified on %s = human-readable time difference 9:04 pm

Page: 1 2 3 4

Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

Recent Posts

My 50 years of writing- Part Two

I left The Chronicle after nine years and returned to freelancing. I started The Insider,…

September 24, 2024

My 50 years of writing

I have been quiet for some time. Thinking. I have been running The Insider single-handedly…

September 22, 2024

ZiG payments now  account for 40% of transactions- 80% of government trade

Payments in Zimbabwe’s latest currency, the Zimbabwe Gold, now account for 40% of transactions, up…

August 22, 2024

De-dollarisation the only way to go – Cross

Zimbabwe should de-dollarise otherwise its new currency the Zimbabwe Gold will go the way other…

August 20, 2024

Zimbabwe serious about de-dollarisation

Zimbabwe has come up with a de-dollarisation roadmap which will soon be presented by Finance…

August 7, 2024

Chamisa says it is not easy to run a political party under a dictatorship – but told you are probably talking about yourself

Former Citizens Coalition for Change leader Nelson Chamisa says it is not easy to lead…

July 31, 2024