UN pays tens of millions to Assad regime under Syria aid program – The Guardian

The UN has awarded contracts worth tens of millions of dollars to people closely associated with the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, as part of an aid program that critics fear is increasingly at the whim of the government in Damascus, a Guardian investigation has found.

Businessmen whose companies are under U.S. and EU sanctions have been paid substantial sums by the UN mission, as have government departments and charities – including one set up by the president`s wife, Asma al-Assad, and another by his closest associate, Rami Makhlouf, The Guardian has reported.

The UN says it can only work with a small number of partners approved by President Assad and that it does all it can to ensure the money is spent properly.

”Of paramount importance is reaching as many vulnerable civilians as possible,” a spokesman said. ”Our choices in Syria are limited by a highly insecure context where finding companies and partners who operate in besieged and hard to reach areas is extremely challenging.”

However, critics believe the UN mission is in danger of being compromised.

They believe aid is being prioritized in government-held areas and argue UN money is effectively helping to prop up a regime responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of its own citizens.

UN insiders admit the relief mission in Syria is the most expensive, challenging and complex it has ever undertaken.

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