Bribes are how climate guys 'always do business,' UN global warming tax dollars diverted-report
Indonesian climate 'negotiator' at Copenhagen suspect in corruption, says he 'just found $10,000 laying on his table," was told, we always do business this way....Reuters
- 9/17, "Corruption jeopardizes lucrative climate-change deals," Reuters, Jakarta Globe, by S. Creagh
- Norway is preparing to pay the first $30 million of the $1 billion it agreed to give Indonesia as part of
- a UN scheme in which rich nations will pay developing countries not to clear woodlands."...
- (TRANSLATION: US and other taxpayers will be robbed blind by corrupt politicians. ed.)
- reach $15 billion a year by 2030.
- forestry sector has long had a reputation for mismanagement and graft.
- Antigraft officials are concerned that the
- vast sums on offer under the
- UN scheme could lead to further trouble.
Wandojo Siswanto, a senior forestry official who helped negotiate the Norwegian deal and
- represented Indonesia at the Copenhagen climate talks last year,
- is a suspect in a corruption case, adding to concerns.
- conspired to ensure the firm won a lucrative radio project.
- ($7.75 million).
- It says Wandojo awarded the contract to Masaro rather than going through a tender process.
- A travel ban was imposed on him last year after Copenhagen.
- “I wasn’t brave enough to make a report to the KPK at that time,” he said, adding that he held on to the money for
- four months before handing it to the authorities.
- “I was advised by my committee that it was conducted every year this way,” he said.
As part of the same investigation, the KPK last year raided the office of the ministry’s secretary general, Boen Purnama, where they
- found $20,000 in cash, allegedly also from Anggoro.
- Anggoro has fled the country since being named a suspect.
- The Norwegian International Climate and Forest Initiative, part of the Environment Ministry, said the
- $1 billion deal was designed in such as way as to reduce the risk of corruption.
- Adnan Topan Husodo, a deputy coordinator of Indonesia Corruption Watch, said
- “The credibility of the team involved in the agreement is at stake,” he said. “This is huge money we’re talking about.”
George Soros in Indonesia in his capacity as a UN 'high level climate' negotiator, speaks with Indonesian President S. Bambamg Yudhoyono, May 13, 2010, Indonesia Press. (What a surprise to find Soros in the middle of this). ed.
- via Tom Nelson
Labels: Global warming graft suspect in middle of billion dollar taxpayer handouts
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