Article 6QJTD Tory Covid contracts worth £15bn had corruption ‘red flags’, study finds

Tory Covid contracts worth £15bn had corruption ‘red flags’, study finds

by
Daniel Boffey Chief reporter
from World news | The Guardian on (#6QJTD)

Findings by Transparency International UK point to more than coincidence or incompetence', says chief executive

A landmark study has uncovered corruption red flags" in government Covid contracts worth more than 15bn - representing nearly one in every three pounds awarded by the Conservative administration during the pandemic.

The analysis, billed as the most in-depth look yet at public procurement during the crisis, warns that systemic bias, opaque accounting and uncontrolled pricing resulted in vast waste of public funds on testing and personal protective equipment (PPE).

At least 28 contracts, worth 4.1bn, went to those with known political connections to the Conservative party. This amounts to almost a tenth of the money spent on the pandemic response.

Fifty-one contracts, worth 4bn, went through the VIP lane", a vehicle through which certain suppliers were given priority, of which 24, worth 1.7bn, were referred by politicians from the Conservative party or their offices.

1bn was spent on personal protective equipment from 25 VIP-lane suppliers that was later deemed unfit for use. The VIP lane was found to unlawful by a high court judge in a 2022 ruling.

Eight contracts, worth 500m, went to suppliers that were no more than 100 days old.

The UK government awarded more than 30.7bn in high- value contracts without competition - equivalent to almost two-thirds of all Covid contracts by value.

The Department of Health and Social Care wrote off 14.9bn in public money over a two-year period - equivalent to the government's total spend on personal protective equipment.

Continue reading...
External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://feeds.theguardian.com/theguardian/world/rss
Feed Title World news | The Guardian
Feed Link https://www.theguardian.com/world
Feed Copyright Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. 2024
Reply 0 comments