[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 138 (Tuesday, September 29, 2009)]
[House]
[Pages H10045-H10046]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ASSISTANCE TO LIBYA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from Florida (Ms. Ros-Lehtinen) is recognized for 5
minutes.
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. Madam Speaker, I am here to speak on a different
topic, on U.S. assistance to Libya and the need for U.N. and foreign
aid reform in our budgeting process.
Madam Speaker, just as the convicted extremist of Pan Am Flight 103
was being given a hero's welcome in Libya and just prior to the Libyan
leader's own bizarre 93-minute diatribe against all freedom-loving
nations before the U.N. General Assembly last week, the Congress was
receiving a notification from our State Department that it intended to
provide $2.5 million in economic support funds for Libya. That's
unbelievable.
The State Department plans also to send 400,000 of those dollars to
organizations run by members of the Qaddafi
[[Page H10046]]
family; $200,000 of this is to go to the Qaddafi Development Foundation
for assisting indigenous NGOs identify potential for reform. Reform in
Libya? You have got to be kidding. This foundation is not a
nongovernment organization. It has direct links to Libyan Government
and is actually run by the son of Qaddafi. For those of who don't know
Qaddafi's second oldest son, he is the one who personally escorted the
man responsible for the tragedy of Pan Am Flight 103 from Scotland upon
his release back to Libya on his father's personal jet.
The foundation run by Qaddafi's second eldest son is the very group
that was used by the Libyan regime to channel funds to compensate
American victims of Libyan-sponsored attacks, including victims of Pan
Am Flight 103. State Department funding for this foundation may, in
fact, serve as a backdoor replenishment of funds used by Libya to
compensate our victims of Libyan-sponsored attacks.
Turning to a separate $200,000 slush fund proposed under the heading
of ``Inclusive Economic Law and Property Rights: Promoting Women's
Economic Opportunities,'' the State Department has indicated that the
anticipated implementing partners will be the United Nations
Development Programme and an organization run by Qaddafi's daughter.
Qaddafi's daughter also serves as the UNDP's goodwill ambassador to
Libya, so she gets two opportunities to directly benefit from U.S.
Government programs in Libya at our taxpayers' expense.
The role of the United Nation Development Programme is very
disturbing. It has been the center of several major corruption scandals
in recent years. It reportedly cannot account for millions of American
dollars that it received in Afghanistan. It also allegedly funneled
hard currency to the North Korean regime while Kim Jong Il was
consolidating his nuclear program. UNDP then retaliated against the
whistleblower who uncovered this wrongdoing.
So I ask you, was funding for the Qaddafi family and a notoriously
unaccountable UNDP what Congress had in mind when it appropriated funds
to support what they call promotion of democracy and human rights in
Libya? Oh, my gosh. Absolutely not.
Unfortunately, the Libya aid program presents just one more example
of the need for broad, comprehensive reform of the United States
foreign assistance program. Our U.S. foreign assistance can go a long
way in improving people's lives while promoting our most cherished
ideals of freedom and human rights. However, when administered poorly
where unaccounted foreign governments, international organizations and
bureaucrats are the beneficiaries, then our foreign aid programs only
serve to undermine our very own interests.
It is time for us to get serious about reforming our foreign aid
system and about effectively vetting our programs and partners.
Toward this end, Madam Speaker, I have proposed two separate pieces
of legislation: H.R. 1062, the Foreign Assistance Partner Vetting Act,
and H.R. 557, the United Nation's Transparency, Accountability, and
Reform Act, and I hope that we can get those bills heard forthwith.
Thank you very much, Madam Speaker.
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