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Pakistani minister denies flood aid corruption - BBC

by Luke Balleny | http://www.twitter.com/LBalleny | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Wednesday, 24 November 2010 13:07 GMT

The interior minister blames public dishonesty rather than official corruption for marred flood compensation scheme

 

LONDON, Nov 24 (TrustLaw) – Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik has denied that government aid meant for the survivors of recent floods has been misused, the BBC reported on Wednesday.

Pakistan’s government has set up a cash compensation scheme that allows the estimated 1.5 million people affected by the floods to withdraw cash from special bank accounts by using an electronic card. Each household can withdraw a maximum of 85,450 rupees ($1,000).

The BBC quoted some would-be users of the scheme as saying they had been denied cards and others said payments had disappeared from their accounts.   

Malik admitted there were problems with the compensation scheme, such as identity fraud and illegal sale of the cards, but he said the scheme was “foolproof” and blamed public dishonesty for the problems rather than official corruption.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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