Friday May 25, 2018
    Home > News > Society
    Text:| Print|

    Ethical doubts for charity again

    2012-12-25 10:17 Global Times     Web Editor: Wang Fan comment

    A media commentator is suggesting the China Charities Aid Foundation for Children (CCAFC) in 2011 transferred 18 million yuan ($2.89 million) in donations to a charity established by film star Jackie Chan just so it can collect a 10-percent administrative fee.

    The whistle-blower, Zhou Xiaoyun, claimed on his Sina Weibo Monday that the CCAFC had earmarked 31 million yuan to a project aimed at finding lost and kidnapped children but transferred 18 million yuan so it could collect a "management fee."

    Zhou told the Global Times that the CCAFC labeled the money transfer a "public expenditure" to the Jackie Chan Charitable Foundation Beijing.

    "The more money the foundation transfers out as 'public expenditures,' the greater the 'management fee' it can earn," said Zhou, adding that charitable foundations can collect an "administrative fee" every time the money is transferred. The fee is used to pay the salaries of foundation staff, doing little to help lost children.

    "I am worried that the donation will be handed from one foundation to another to fill their own pockets instead of helping those in need," said Zhou.

    The Jackie Chan Charitable Foundation responded to Zhou's doubts via its Weibo account Monday afternoon saying that it used the money in a project to help sick poor children, adding that it would never transfer the donation to other foundations, nor will it pay any commission to the CCAFC.

    Zhou's posting had been reposted nearly 8,000 times as of late Monday.

    "The 18 million yuan was designated to rescue kidnapped children, but the transfer redirects it to aid needy children afflicted by critical diseases. This contradicts the CCAFC's work report last year that stated the money had all been spent on missing children," Zhou told the Global Times.

    Zhou also claimed that according to the work report posted on CCAFC's official website, only 990,000 yuan was spent on helping find 31 kidnapped children.

    Calls to the CCAFC went unanswered as of late Monday.

    This new round of doubt over the CCAFC's accounting and spending practices comes after it denied accusations of money laundering earlier this month. It said its accountants made a rounding error when it reported capital flow of 4.8 billion yuan. No other explanation was provided for the huge accounting error.

    Comments (0)

    Copyright ©1999-2011 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
    Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

    主站蜘蛛池模板: 青神县| 无为县| 和硕县| 通海县| 卫辉市| 彰武县| 林芝县| 门源| 句容市| 垫江县| 澄江县| 定结县| 尼玛县| 香格里拉县| 临邑县| 浠水县| 安溪县| 横峰县| 闻喜县| 密云县| 民丰县| 新龙县| 周口市| 车险| 三原县| 龙游县| 蓝田县| 尤溪县| 陇川县| 通河县| 长沙市| 乐都县| 东辽县| 濮阳县| 通海县| 民乐县| 潞城市| 舒兰市| 和林格尔县| 龙海市| 莲花县|