Hard-pressed British taxpayers funding a £4.5 million scheme to alleviate climate change in Malawi are instead setting up locals as loan sharks and paying for the illegal migration of others to a better life in South Africa, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.
About 8,800 villagers around Chikwawa in Malawi are receiving the equivalent of £433 each – and the Foreign Office insists the best way to send the money is directly to each of them. They even give each recipient a mobile phone to facilitate the online transfer.
The hope is they will use the windfall to ‘reduce the impact of climate extremes’ through stronger homes, better farming practices and improved communications. Officials claim financial and business training will help ‘beneficiaries make informed choices on what is likely to be the largest amount of cash they have ever seen’.
But the Foreign Office explicitly leaves it up to them to decide how to spend the windfall, which is distributed through its partner GiveDirectly – known to villagers as ‘Givie’. It is a fabulous sum in a poverty-stricken country where 70 per cent live on just £1.60 a day – and the MoS can reveal much of the money is squandered.
The two-year Chikwawa project is part of a ramping-up of UK overseas aid for climate resilience with ‘at least £1.5 billion’ spent in 2024-25, according to the Foreign Office. It defends the cash transfers, and says it monitors all programmes to ensure ‘value for money for the British taxpayer’.






