BFF-31 DR Congo ex-minister accused of $4.3 million embezzlement

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DRCONGO-HEALTH-EBOLA-EPIDEMIC

DR Congo ex-minister accused of $4.3 million embezzlement

KINSHASA, Sept 15, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Detained former DR Congo health
minister Oly Ilunga has been accused of embezzling $4.3 million of public
funds raised to tackle the Ebola epidemic, his defence counsel said Sunday
while insisting on his innocence.

“Police accuse him of having siphoned off a total of $4.3 million made
available by the treasury to fight Ebola,” lawyers Guy Kabeya and Willy
Ngashi said in a statement.

Ilunga, who resigned as health minister in July after being removed as head
of the country’s Ebola response team, was arrested Saturday in Kinshasa.

Police have alleged he was planning to flee the country and escape justice,
something his lawyers denied.

Kabeya and Ngashi said that “more than $1.9 million of the sum was paid out
in a month following Dr Ilunga’s resignation — as such he can in no way be
held accountable”.

“As for the remaining $2.4 million… the accounts show that this sum was
disbursed exclusively for the purpose of fighting the Ebola virus,” they
added in their statement.

Ilunga is due to be referred to a state prosecutor Monday, according to
police.

Police spokesman Colonel Pierrot-Rombaut Mwanamputu told AFP on Saturday
that he is accused of “misdemeanours of the mismanagement of funds allocated
to the Ebola response.”

He was questioned in August as part of an inquiry into the management of
funds to fight the outbreak, which has claimed more than 2,000 lives since
August 2018.

The 59-year-old, who had already been banned from leaving the country,
stepped down from his role after criticising plans by the UN’s World Health
Organization (WHO) to introduce a new, unlicensed vaccine to fight the
epidemic.

President Felix Tshisekedi had also stripped him of overall responsibility
for tackling the outbreak and handed control to Jean-Jacques Muyembe,
director of the DRC’s National Institute for Biomedical Research.

The outbreak is the second-worst in history after more than 11,000 people
were killed in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia between 2014 and 2016.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1834 hrs