U.N. Admits at Least $600G Lost on Overpriced Boat That Housed Peacekeepers-Added COMMENTARY By Haitian-Truth

By George Russell

Published March 31, 2011

| FoxNews.com

The United Nations has admitted that it lost at least $600,000 after it cancelled its controversial rental of a comfortably appointed cruise ship for U.N. staffers in the early stages of rescue operations last year in earthquake-shattered Haiti.

The world organization abruptly backed out of the deal after a Fox News exclusive analysis showed that the boat rental for the 11,000-ton ship called Ola Esmeralda, which cost $72,000 per day, was vastly overpriced compared to going commercial rates.

Overall, the U.N. contracted to spend $13 million on rental of the Esmeralda, and another $3.6 million on a companion vessel, the Sea Voyager—which was known to U.N. staffers as “the Love Boat.”

Even though it discontinued service on the Ola Esmeralda before its contract ended in August 2010, the U.N. apparently was stuck with paying the entire bill. Buried in a summary of U.N. internal auditors’ reports for 2010 is an admission that due to the nature of the contract that the U.N. had signed with the owners, who have close ties to the Venezuelan government of Hugo Chavez, “there was unfortunately no legal basis” for getting back any money for the unused portion of the contract.

Indeed, the loss may have been significantly more than the $600,000 cited in the report, which covered only unused fuel. The carefully worded reference says that the U.N. had paid for “services related to staff accommodations,” including the $600,000 fuel tab, “which were not fully rendered or were discontinued during the contractual period.”

According to the analysis by Fox News, a wide variety of services on the Ola Esmeralda—more than just fuel– were being paid for at higher-than-market rates. These included hot meals, laundry service and other amenities.

A shipping expert consulted by Fox News estimated that the overall cost of the Esmeralda’s contract with the U.N. was as much as 100 percent more than what normally would be charged in the commercial marketplace. In all, he estimated, the owners of the vessel were getting anywhere from $11,000 to $19,000 a day more than normal rates for the ship.

Using that expert’s figures as a baseline, the auditors’ careful phrasing could mean that much more money—perhaps in the hundreds of thousands of dollars—was also not recoverable.

The auditors’ report says that the U.N.’s department of field support, which provides logistical backup to peacekeeping missions, was chalking the losses up to “lessons learned, to be applied to any future cases involving similar requirements.”

George Russell is executive editor of Fox News.

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COMMENT: HAITIAN-TRUTH.ORG

The UN waves this off as something that will be added to its list of items in a learning process that never results in the United Nations learning anything.

Its handling of the emergency funds, after the January 12, 2010 Haitian quake, has been a pitiful example of incompetence, inefficiency and criminality.

There have been so many opportunities for criminal handling of funding that the auditors will never pick up more than a few – to be added, yet again, to their list of things to avoid,  in the future.

The MINUSTAH teams gobbles up nearli $1,000,000,000 to provide Haiti with things it does not need – namely thousands of foreign, non-Creole/French or English speaking soldiers, armed to the teeth, wearing flack-jackets, steel helmets…carrying assault rifles.

The $1,000,000,000 could go to rebuilding roads, infrastructure, assisting agricultural efforts and saving the ecology….rather than supporting the upscale restaurants, Toyota dealership and whore houses.

MINUSTAH operates over 2000 Toyota Land Cruisers each costing over $100,000 each, with local sales taxes. The cost could support a lot of schools, hospitals or other projects.

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4 thoughts on “U.N. Admits at Least $600G Lost on Overpriced Boat That Housed Peacekeepers-Added COMMENTARY By Haitian-Truth

  1. As I understand the situations, some two people in MINUSTAH received an 8% commission on this deal.

    There has been fortunes made through MINUSTAH deals with local businessmen and through MINUSTAH contracts with others.

    Many should go to jail but their names are protected.

  2. Remember the fuel contract scandal a couple of years ago when hundreds of thousands were paid by Vorbe, Mevs, Apaid and others to MINUSTAH people for big fuel contracts?

    Looked like criminal action would follow.

    Some MINUSTAH people disciplined but local people kept contracts.

    Nothing but silence!!!

  3. No crime in Haiti without MINUSTAH involvement.

    $1,000,000,000 allows many pay-off to keep game going.

  4. Was impossible for tenants to access living space. The boats – there were two – might as well have been on the moon.

    I stayed there one night.

    Impossible!!

    The contract was taken without any real negotiation. The many who signed it, plus two others received a substantial payment.

    Not too late to put them in jail.

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