Blockbuster: White Helmets corruption scandal deepens: Dutch gov’t investigated parent org for fraud, but covered it up

The Netherlands investigated fraud by the Mayday Rescue Foundation, which funded the Syrian White Helmets with over $120 million in Western government contracts. But top Dutch officials covered up the corruption.

2
1558

Greyzone: The decade-long dirty war on Syria proved to be a cash cow for some of the most prominent US and UK regime-change operatives. Western government contractors got hundreds of millions of dollars to run schemes to destabilize Damascus – and some of them took a cut for themselves, profiting off of the pillage.

One of the main players in the cottage industry of contractors that helped run the Western regime-change war on Syria,  and which was eventually implicated in a massive corruption scandal, was the Mayday Rescue Foundation.



Mayday served as the fiscal sponsor of Syria Civil Defense, known popularly as the White Helmets, a deceptive humanitarian interventionist operation that became a key propaganda weapon in the dirty war on Damascus.

With more than $120 million in funding from numerous Western governments, the White Helmets were portrayed in servile media campaigns and by slick PR films as a noble philanthropic group dedicated to saving civilian lives. In reality, the organization functioned as the de facto civil and medical infrastructure for areas in Syria that were controlled by brutal, theocratic Salafi-jihadist insurgents.

The White Helmets operated exclusively in areas run by the Syrian armed opposition, and collaborated extensively with extremists, including ISIS and al-Qaeda. White Helmets were even filmed assisting in public executions on numerous occasions.

The White Helmets helped NATO member Turkey militarily invade and ethnically cleanse Kurdish-majority towns in northern Syria as part of a plan to repopulate those areas with Sunni Muslim Arabs who supported Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Following the invasion, schoolchildren were indoctrinated with Turkish nationalist propaganda.

A Syria producer at the BBC has even stated that the White Helmets helped stage a fake chemical weapons attack in the city of Douma, to try to pin the blame on the Syrian government and spur Western military intervention against it.

Yet while Western governments were lavishing the White Helmets with praise and funneling huge sums of taxpayer money into their parent organization, the Netherlands-based Mayday Rescue Foundation, they were also quietly investigating the group for fraud.

A series of mainstream Dutch media reports document how the Netherlands knew Mayday had presided over serious financial irregularities, but top officials covered it up, refusing to inform elected lawmakers and even ignoring recommendations from their own regulators to reclaim millions of dollars worth of contracts.  read more..

White Helmets corruption scandal deepens: Dutch gov’t investigated parent org for fraud, but covered it up

by Ekaterina Blinova

Being aware of fraud allegations against the White Helmets’ international cashbox, the Mayday Rescue Foundation, the Dutch government opted to keep it on the hush-hush, the newspaper de Volkskrant reported on 7 May. What’s behind the supposed cover-up attempt and what else are European governments hiding?

The Mayday Rescue Foundation was registered in the Netherlands in 2014 as a not-for-profit entity by James Le Mesurier, a former British Army officer. Since its inception, Mayday has provided support to the Syria Civil Defence, commonly known as the White Helmets, a controversial group acting under the guise of a “humanitarian” organisation in the jihadist-held areas of Syria.

According to The Grayzone, Western governments, including Britain, Germany, Canada, Denmark, and the Netherlands, funnelled a total €100 million ($121 million) in taxpayer money to Mayday to fund the White Helmets. Judging from the White Helmets’ official website this funding was intended to go “towards the training, equipment, and support” to the Syrian group. However, serious concerns over potential financial mismanagement prompted the Netherlands to stop funding Mayday by the end of 2018, the newspaper de Volkskrant noted.

​The first audit of the entity was requested by the UK’s Department for International Development (DfID) in late 2018. Ending in June 2019, it cited no serious issues but recommended “introducing more stringent accounting controls and tighter governance”, according to The Guardian.

The problems came to light in November 2019, when Dutch firm SMK Audit, visited Mayday’s office in Istanbul and uncovered forged receipts and inconsistencies in documentation. According to de Volkskrant, the entity’s bookkeeping was seriously inadequate, with payments being untraceable. Mayday’s founder James Le Mesurier admitted to the accountant that he did take $50,000 in money intended for the Syrian group for himself.

On 11 November 2019, the British Army officer fell to his death in Istanbul. Three days before the alleged suicide, Le Mesurier confessed to financial fraud in a letter to donor countries.

​Immediately after his death, European donor countries commissioned Grant Thornton, a UK-headquartered international accounting firm, to conduct a forensic inquiry into Mayday’s financial activities.

At the end of 2019, Sigrid Kaag, the Dutch minister for foreign trade and development cooperation, planned to send a letter to the nation’s House of Representatives about the Mayday Rescue Foundation’s alleged fraud, according to de Volkskrant. Top government officials, however, stopped her from informing lawmakers, citing the potential “harm” the letter could inflict on Mayday and the White Helmets.

In mid-2020, the Netherlands’ Central Audit Service advised the government to reclaim more than €3.6 million ($4.4 million) in tax money that it had poured into Mayday. Nevertheless, the Dutch government, that contributed a total of €12.5 million ($15.2 million) to the foundation, did not request the money.

© AP PHOTO / EMRAH GUREL
Police forensic officials work at the site after former British army officer who helped found the “White Helmets” volunteer organization in Syria, James Le Mesurier’s body was found in Istanbul, early Monday Nov. 11, 2019

Mayday’s ‘Errors and Internal Failures’

While Le Mesurier took responsibility for the disappearance of $50,000 intended for the White Helmets, it was not the only issue with the foundation. The former British officer also cited very high salaries, cash bonuses, and unpaid taxes, according to de Volkskrant.

The Dutch accountant found that until 2018, revenues and expenditure were registered in handwritten cash books which appeared very messy.

The entity had no supervisory board, meaning that administrators could decide their own salaries. In some cases these salaries amounted to €26,000 ($29,195) a month. Thus, one of the administrators received $320,000 for 2018. These figures were well above the approved salary ceiling of a subsidised organisation in the Netherlands. The fact that the non-profit had “commercial” branches in Turkey and Dubai also prompted criticism.

In addition to that, the Dutch auditor found entries in the cash book labelled “James for wedding” and “loan to Emma”, an apparent reference to Le Mersurier’s wife, Emma Winberg, who served as a foundation administrator. On top of this, the former British officer and his wife took additional bonuses. It appeared that they withdrew large portions of cash for private use. On the other hand, Winberg’s work for the entity raised serious concerns over a potential conflict of interest.

© AP PHOTO
FILE – In this image taken from file video, showing James Le Mesurier, founder and director of Mayday Rescue, talks to the media during training exercises in southern Turkey, March 19, 2015

In his letter to international donors, the ex-British military man admitted he feared a second investigation by a forensic auditor might reveal further “errors and internal failures”. This, according to him, would be leaked to the media and become “a victory for Russia and the pro-Assad trolls”. In the end, Le Mesurier left the choice of how to proceed up to the donor countries.

Damage Control Operation

Shortly after Le Mersurier’s death, European donor countries held a series of “crisis meetings” in the Dutch Consulate in Istanbul. Eventually, in February 2020, they agreed on the need to “avoid political risks” and ways to ensure “minimal exposure”.

This is how the damage control operation began, according to The Grayzone. In July 2020, de Volkskrant journalist Ana van Es drew attention to European governments having kept quiet about the foundation’s wrongdoings.

​Also in July 2020, the UK-headquartered accounting firm Grant Thornton, which investigated the foundation, stated that it had found no proof of Mayday’s fraud. The firm admitted, however, that much information from the entity’s financial administration was missing. Grant Thornton concluded that the cash withdrawals by Le Mesurier and his wife were accounted for and put the disappearance of $50,000 down to a “misunderstanding”.

Nevertheless, the company’s forensic audit of Mayday’s books has never been made public. The incumbent Mayday chair, Cor Vrieswijk, said the donor countries do not want to share this information, according to de Volkskrant.

For their part, some European mainstream media outlets such as The Guardian and the BBC, tried to whitewash Le Mesurier’s apparent misdeeds, depicting him as nothing short of a second Lawrence of Arabia and a victim of a “disinformation campaign” by the Russians, Syrians, “pro-Assad bloggers”, “alt-right media figures”, “self-described anti-imperialists”, and “useful idiots”.

Why Did European Governments Try to Cover It Up?

Per The Grayzone, Le Mesurier and other British and American operatives were part of Western governments’ decade-long effort to topple the government of Bashar al-Assad in Syria. It appears that some of these operatives took a cut from multi-million dollar schemes to destabilise Damascus for themselves, the media outlet noted.

​Le Mesurier’s White Helmets was particularly important for the Western narrative about the Syrian war. In 2017, Netflix won an Oscar for a documentary called “The White Helmets”, showing the group as heroic rescue workers who provided emergency medical assistance to Syrian civilians. However, Vanessa Beeley, a British investigative journalist and peace activist, dismantled this narrative in 2017 citing testimonies of liberated Syrian civilians from East Aleppo, who lambasted the group as an al-Qaeda* and al-Nusra Front* offshoot.

© AFP 2021 / OMAR HAJ KADOUR
Syrian civil defence volunteers, known as the White Helmets, carry a body retrieved from the rubble following reported government airstrike on the Syrian town of Ariha, in the northwestern province of Idlib, on February 27, 2017

The group was later accused of staging a chemical attack in Douma, Syria, in 2018 in order to blame it on Assad’s military forces. The White Helmets have been crucial to anti-Assad propaganda efforts, providing “proof” of the government’s alleged “atrocities”, and later used as a pretext for intervention, Beeley told Sputnik.

According to the BBC, Le Mesurier was “furious” about the British journalist’s revelations.

Dubious activities by the Mayday Rescue Foundation and the White Helmets threatened to cast a further shadow over Washington and Brussels’ decade-long involvement in the Syrian civil war.

Earlier, a declassified 2012 DIA report indicated that the Obama administration knew from the very beginning that the major forces driving the insurgency in Syria were not “moderate rebels”, but al-Qaeda in Iraq*, the Muslim Brotherhood*, and Salafists.

In 2019, French investigative journalist Maxime Chaix published a book, “The Shadow War in Syria“, shedding light on the CIA’s Operation Timber Sycamore and describing how several Western European intelligence services provided aid to jihadist militias in Syria.

“Western governments and their stenographers in the press have helped shield war profiteers from any consequences, as they have defrauded taxpayers in numerous countries out of huge sums of money, all in a desperate crusade to destroy Syria”, The Grayzone underscored.

*Al-Nusra Front, al-Qaeda, and the Muslim Brotherhood are terrorist organisations banned in Russia and many other countries.

ATTENTION READERS

We See The World From All Sides and Want YOU To Be Fully Informed
In fact, intentional disinformation is a disgraceful scourge in media today. So to assuage any possible errant incorrect information posted herein, we strongly encourage you to seek corroboration from other non-VT sources before forming an educated opinion.

About VT - Policies & Disclosures - Comment Policy
Due to the nature of uncensored content posted by VT's fully independent international writers, VT cannot guarantee absolute validity. All content is owned by the author exclusively. Expressed opinions are NOT necessarily the views of VT, other authors, affiliates, advertisers, sponsors, partners, or technicians. Some content may be satirical in nature. All images are the full responsibility of the article author and NOT VT.

2 COMMENTS

  1. Funny you should post this, just checked out FOX and they are keeping up their pace of providing one, ‘why we need to destroy Iran’ article per week which they have been doing for years. Their last one was on how the German, Dutch, and Swedish Intel agencies documented Iranian attempts to obtain nuclear and WMD weapons components.
    Since Iran is not allowed to buy a screw driver from Europe, you could classify that as a nuclear weapons enabling technology, along with metallurgy. They did not give any specific examples. Their articles are designed to provoke emotional responses. If you look at the responses it works.

  2. I think George Clooney has a lot to answer, what game was he playing at the time? He must apologize and tell Syrians he was wrong to support “White Helmets”.

Comments are closed.