Palestinian anti-corruption chief claws back $70m
Anti-corruption chief tells Reuters news agency millions of dollars still missing abroad due to shady business deals.
Palestinian anti-corruption chief claws back $70m
While Pal'istanian and corruption go hand in hand, like Islamic and terrorist, there's some good news in the linked article.
No. This is the bad news you would expect to read in connection with the Pal'istanian Islamic terrorists and the fraud that defines the only UN sponsored Islamic terrorist welfare maintenance program:
"But Rafiq al-Natsheh, chairman of the Palestinian Anti-Corruption Commission, told the Reuters news agency in an interview late on Tuesday that "tens of millions of dollars" still needed to be tracked down.
One of the biggest challenges for his team, he said, was finding money that had disappeared abroad.
Natsheh said his investigators had failed to uncover evidence to justify allegations that hundreds of millions of dollars in government funds had gone missing."
Wait, wait. I told you there was good news. Here's the good news:
"Over the past five years, direct support to the Palestinian budget from the EU and others has fallen from around $1.3bn a year to less than $700m, with the decline attributed in large part to frustration over money not being spent where it was intended, or not being fully accounted for."
Anti-corruption chief tells Reuters news agency millions of dollars still missing abroad due to shady business deals.
Palestinian anti-corruption chief claws back $70m
While Pal'istanian and corruption go hand in hand, like Islamic and terrorist, there's some good news in the linked article.
No. This is the bad news you would expect to read in connection with the Pal'istanian Islamic terrorists and the fraud that defines the only UN sponsored Islamic terrorist welfare maintenance program:
"But Rafiq al-Natsheh, chairman of the Palestinian Anti-Corruption Commission, told the Reuters news agency in an interview late on Tuesday that "tens of millions of dollars" still needed to be tracked down.
One of the biggest challenges for his team, he said, was finding money that had disappeared abroad.
Natsheh said his investigators had failed to uncover evidence to justify allegations that hundreds of millions of dollars in government funds had gone missing."
Wait, wait. I told you there was good news. Here's the good news:
"Over the past five years, direct support to the Palestinian budget from the EU and others has fallen from around $1.3bn a year to less than $700m, with the decline attributed in large part to frustration over money not being spent where it was intended, or not being fully accounted for."