More U.S. Taxpayer Funds for
Pro-Abortion Kenyan
Constitution, Congressmen Charge
Part Two of
Three
Editor's note. The following
was distributed by the office of
Congressman Chris Smith (R-NJ).
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Cong. Chris Smith
(R-NJ) |
WASHINGTON, DC – Potentially
illegal U.S. taxpayer funding in
support of Kenya's proposed
pro-abortion constitution may
now exceed five times the level
originally expected.
In a May 6 letter to the
Inspectors General at the State
Department and U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID),
three leading Republicans called
for investigations into
potentially illegal funding
including whether a $2 million
donation to promote the proposed
pro-abortion Kenyan constitution
violates a provision of law
known as the Siljander
Amendment. The provision
stipulates that no USAID and
State Department funds "may be
used to lobby for or against
abortion."
Subsequent meetings with
investigators have revealed that
actual U.S. taxpayer
expenditures in support of the
pro-abortion constitution are
estimated to exceed $10 million.
Representative Chris Smith
(NJ-04), the Ranking Republican
on the House Africa and Global
Health Subcommittee who is
spearheading three requests for
investigations into U.S.
spending in Kenya said, "This
week I learned that U.S.
taxpayer expenditures in support
of the proposed constitution may
exceed $10 million--five times
the level we original suspected.
"This massive spending will
undoubtedly be directed to those
entities that are pressing for
ratification of the proposed
constitution. Such support will
further enable passage of a
constitution that is opposed by
many pro-life leaders in Kenya,
because it enshrines new rights
to abortion. As such, the
funding is a clear violation of
federal law against use of U.S.
taxpayer funds to lobby for or
against abortion," Smith
explained.
"Learning of significant
additional U.S. donations gives
even more urgency to our request
for thorough and objective
investigations into all State
Department and USAID funded
activities related to Kenya's
proposed constitution. I hope
that all investigative agencies
will take our request seriously
and act swiftly in this matter,"
said Smith.
Smith authored the May 6 letters
and was joined by Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen (FL-18), the
Ranking Republican on the House
Foreign Affairs Committee and
Darrell Issa (CA-49), the top
Republican on the House
Oversight Committee. All three
Members of Congress have broad
legal oversight jurisdiction
concerning federal international
funds.
The letters were addressed to
Gene L. Dodaro, Acting
Comptroller General of the U.S.
Government Accountability
Office; to Harold W. Geisel ,
Acting Inspector General, U.S.
Department of State, Office of
Inspector General; and to Donald
A. Gambatesa Inspector General
of the U.S. Agency for
International Development.
Please send me your thoughts at
daveandrusko@gmail.com
Part Three
Part One |