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WORLD
BANK LOADS MISUSED IN 5 INDIAN HEALTH PROJECTS
Washington, January 15, 2008 (IANS)
An
internal World Bank inquiry has uncovered a multimillion-dollar
scandal involving five health projects in India worth $569 million.
The bank has found significant indicators of fraud and corruption
in the projects, which appear to have affected, to varying extents,
the projects' implementation and outputs. The bank's Department
of Institutional Integrity conducted a Detailed Implementation Review
(DIR) of the projects and submitted a report last week, which has
been accessed by The Wall Street Journal.
"The
probe has revealed unacceptable indicators of fraud and corruption,"
World Bank President Robert B. Zoellick said in a press release.
"The government of India and the World Bank are committed to
getting to the bottom of how these problems occurred." The
Indian government said it would prosecute those behind the reported
corruption, according to a release by the finance ministry.
In
the $54-million "Food and drug capacity building project",
for which money is still being disbursed, the investigation found
"questionable procurement practices, some of which indicate
fraud and corruption, in contracts representing 87 percent of the
number of pieces and 88 percent of the total value of equipment
procured."
For
the $194-million "Second national HIV/AIDS control project",
the inquiry discovered that "some of the test kits supplied
by particular companies often performed poorly by producing erroneous
or invalid results, potentially resulting in the further spread
of disease."
In
the $114-million "Malaria control project", the review
found "numerous indicators of poor product quality in the bed
nets supplied by the firms."
In
the $125-million "Tuberculosis control project", the bank
discovered "bidders sharing the same address and telephone
numbers, unit prices showing a common formula, and indicators of
intent to split contract awards among several bidders."
And
in the $82-million "Orissa Health Systems Development Project",
"implementation and procurement of the project's civil works
and equipment components exhibited significant indicators of fraud
and severe deficiencies in buildings certified as complete,"
the report said.
Moreover,
the DIR, which was initiated in mid-2006, observed inadequate project
financial, audit and internal control systems. These findings will
result in a number of investigations by the World Bank into specific
cases of possible fraud and corruption, The Wall Street Journal
said in its article titled "World Bank Disgrace".
Investigators
haven't yet concluded whether the corruption involves World Bank
staff, Indian government officials or other parties. The bank and
the Indian authorities have promised stricter oversight of the nine
health projects remaining in the bank's India portfolio. Four of
the five projects have already been completed.
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