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Madonna 'Raising Malawi' Foundation Disappoints Government For Changing Course On Education Project

By RAPHAEL TENTHANI 03/28/12 11:04 AM ET AP

Madonna Malawi

BLANTYRE, Malawi -- Celebrity promises have turned to disappointment, finger-pointing and lawsuits in Malawi, an impoverished and troubled southern African country where Madonna has drastically scaled back charity efforts.

Some Malawi officials say Madonna's changes in plans have taken them by surprise, but Madonna's camp says the government has been informed and involved in the new agenda.

In 2009, Education Minister George Chaponda helped Madonna break ground for a $15 million academy for girls. Earlier this year, Madonna's Raising Malawi foundation announced that instead of building the academy, it is providing $300,000 to the non-governmental organization buildOn, which has years of experience in Malawi, to develop 10 schools. They'll serve about 1,000 boys and girls in the southern African nation of 15 million that is among the poorest in the world.

"We haven't been officially approached" about the change, Chaponda complained recently. "We are just reading from the media but we haven't been told anything."

Ministry of Education officials said a memorandum of understanding that Raising Malawi, founded in 2006, signed with the Malawi government for the academy project has a clause that binds either party to notify and get the other's agreement should it want to alter any aspect of the project.

John Bisika, the top bureaucrat in the education department, said the Malawi government was disappointed.

"We need to know what's happening. She can't just say: `I'm building schools here.' We need to be consulted in order to work out where schools are needed based on our data," he said. "Let's do it properly."

But Trevor Neilson, who is helping to direct Madonna's school project in Malawi as a partner of the Global Philanthropy Group, said allegations the government was being left out of Madonna's planning are "absolutely not true."

"Our partnership with buildOn received the explicit approval from the education ministry. We had ... six government officials who attended the contract signing along with about 50 or so members of the community," he said.

Neilson gave The Associated Press a copy of a Jan. 31 letter sent to Chaponda. Days earlier, Madonna had released a public statement about her new plans.

Neilson called himself Madonna's adviser in his letter to Chaponda and referred to Raising Malawi having "changed course" on the academy. Neilson stressed Madonna remained committed to helping children in the country, taking a new "community based approach" by working with buildOn.

He added: "Raising Malawi would like to graciously return the land in Chinkhota granted to us by the government for the original Raising Malawi Academy for Girls project."

Headman Binson Chinkhota had a tough time convincing villagers of the importance of Madonna's academy project. Now, he feels let down.

"My people reluctantly gave up their land because I convinced them the project was beneficial not only because our girls would get world-class education but also because some of the villagers would get piecework," said the chief whose subjects mainly survive on subsistence agriculture and day labor in the city of Lilongwe, some 25 kilometers (15 miles) away. "Now the land is just lying idle."

A leading child care group also expressed disappointment in Madonna and said its funding by Raising Malawi stopped suddenly and without explanation.

"We are really struggling – they were our main funders. In fact, we increased the children we feed daily because of them," said Lucy Chapomba, administrator at Consol Homes, a group that runs projects for orphans and vulnerable children in central Malawi.

Neilson said Raising Malawi was funding Consol Homes through the middle of this year, but that Consol Homes was not fulfilling its financial reporting obligations and there were "major concerns" about the performance of its management team.

"So, as of now, we're not going to be continuing that funding unless they can show us that the money will be well used," Neilson said. "Raising Malawi does not just hand out money to anyone and everyone that wants it. We have a clear grant making process and performance metrics associated with these grants. So people in Malawi might not like that we measure their performance but that is the way that Raising Malawi is now run."

Neilson said that since 2007, Raising Malawi has invested over $7 million, including $1 million for Consol Homes, in programs to support orphans and vulnerable children in Malawi.

Anjimile Ntila-Oponyo, a Harvard-trained teacher Madonna poached from the United Nations Development Project to head her Malawi project, is locked in a legal battle over unpaid wages. Ntila-Oponyo is gagged by a confidentiality clause she signed with the singer, and refused to discuss the issue with the AP.

Malawi's relations with foreign donors have been strained by accusations President Bingu wa Mutharika is authoritarian and responsible for human rights abuses. Earlier this month, a U.S. aid agency that rewards good governance suspended $350 million worth of assistance to Malawi.

Madonna says her new approach in Malawi will serve twice as many children as an original plan that had led some to draw parallels to the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls the talk show host and entrepreneur started in neighboring South Africa in 2007. Winfrey, who spent $40 million on her campus, recently acknowledged hers "is not a sustainable model for most people in most countries."

Madonna has adopted two children from Malawi, David and Mercy, both now six. Children's welfare groups had expressed concern about the adoptions, saying rules meant to protect children were bent because of Madonna's celebrity, and perhaps out of gratitude for what she had done and was expected to do for Malawi.

"Currently half of all Malawi's children don't finish the primary school cycle," said Neilson, Madonna's adviser. "Madonna would like to help those children go to school."

____

AP Music Writer Nekesa Mumbi Moody in New York contributed to this report.

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BLANTYRE, Malawi -- Celebrity promises have turned to disappointment, finger-pointing and lawsuits in Malawi, an impoverished and troubled southern African country where Madonna has drastically scaled...
BLANTYRE, Malawi -- Celebrity promises have turned to disappointment, finger-pointing and lawsuits in Malawi, an impoverished and troubled southern African country where Madonna has drastically scaled...
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01:28 PM on 04/13/2012
$300,000? Really? And then to attack the organizations they pulled funding from with spurious accusations? These aren't the actions of a socially conscious person. But I think we knew Madonna's Raising Malawi was always about her, and not about helping orphaned children.
09:47 AM on 03/30/2012
Looks like there is a big difference between $15 million and $300,000.
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jankantius
08:39 AM on 03/30/2012
The socially retrograde can't stand Madonna. She defied their conventions. I suspect most of her haters are also Obama's. The only changes they like are those that take us back to an imaginary past.
05:14 AM on 03/30/2012
ed leveridge
7:41 PM on 03/28/2012
"Damn you seem like you were there when all this was discussed......just how do you know anything about this........I guess in your mine she screwed the two kids she adopted by bringing them to America giving them a better life......... "

Actually, that could very well be the case, but I guess we'll have to wait a few years till gaped tooth Madge signs off and the kids write a tell all "Madonna Dearest" book with the all the gory details about the boozing, stable boys, night raids, forced raw produce feedings, rose bushes mowed down to dust and orange trees hatched to pieces. Damn is right!
11:16 PM on 03/29/2012
She dropped from 15 MILLION, to 300 K? Very convenient since her promises of donations, ect are the reason the government waived residency requirements to adopt her new toy ( ooops, I meant boy). Maybe they should take the kid back ?
10:28 PM on 03/29/2012
Dear Grandma Madonna,

Can I have your Boustier, the one with the cones, you once wore in a concert. I hear it's coming back in style. For Christmas, I'm getting you a jar of cold cream to wash away those deep trenches they call fine lines.

xoxo,
Leilani lei
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Carol Yothers
My micro-bio is empty. Yes, yes it is~*
10:17 PM on 03/29/2012
Whoever made the comment about the skimming may just have a point there.
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RJofDC
09:33 AM on 03/29/2012
Poor Madonna. Not a very flattering story OR picture.
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Gilbert Albright
09:32 AM on 03/29/2012
The whole thing was just another Madonna publicity stunt. She was jealous of all the Media Attention Angelina Jolie was getting for her charity work and adopting children so she decided to jump in and steal some of the publicity for herself. Madonna is a well known media junkie addict who gets upset if her name isn't constantly in the news on a regular basis.
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DaniFoxy
Crazy girl from LA
08:25 AM on 03/29/2012
Why is her face all puffy and weird?
09:10 AM on 03/29/2012
That's the booooootox :)
04:45 AM on 03/30/2012
Danny those puffed cheecks are packed with Botox enough to smooth the wrinkles off an elephant.
02:43 AM on 03/29/2012
She now looks like Betty Davis! Heeeeeeeelp!
04:46 AM on 03/30/2012
Do not insult Miss Davis, please. She looks more like an old hamster with a mouthful of pellets.
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Mr Nightlinger
Corporate outsourcing same as hiring illegals
12:40 AM on 03/29/2012
What's the difference between Madonna and a gross, 55-year-old Italian grandma in a black dress?

A black dress.
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11:27 PM on 03/28/2012
Here's a quote from The New Yorker article on celebrity philanthropy. "[Trevor] Neilson derides the ethic of "anonymous" check-writing as outdated. The new philanthropy should be sexy and fun," he told me. "And you should be acknowledged for."
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11:23 PM on 03/28/2012
In this weeks issue of The New Yorker, there is a 9 page article on how celebrities use charity to bolster their public image. Online you will ONLY find a 1 page abstract. It talks about how Trevor Neilson, mentioned in this article, has assisted: Madonna, Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt, Bono, Kobe Bryant, etc., on setting up "charitable foundations". You be the judge once you read the article.

John Colapinto, Letter from Hollywood, “Looking Good,” The New Yorker, March 26, 2012, p. 56
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11:36 PM on 03/28/2012
Just to clarify in the article is does state that Madonna is one of those starts who has donated a "ton of money".

"Although Neilson says that Shakira gives away millions of dooars, and that Madonna has donated "a ton of money," he readily admits that not all celebrity clients give large sums to the charities set up for them.
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timbeaux
Novelist, anti-professional politicians, liberal l
10:17 PM on 03/28/2012
I can't stand Madonna, but having lived off and on in emerging countries for more than 30 years, I think it's possible that the government's prime reason for being upset is that they won't be able to skim their usual 80 percent off the money. I've seen million-dollar grants turn into three-room schools with no teachers and shipments of food intended for the poor turning up in the marketplace the day after they arrived. In many of these nations, the government is the people's worst enemy.