Private school fees for armed forces personnel cost £83m-a-year
MOD spent £8,500 on snacks and gave £25k in PPE to the Ukrainian army
Crumbs! £8,500 blown on nibbles to dunk in their tea
Hungry bosses at the Ministry of Defence upped spending on office biscuits by a third last year after plumping for a premium brand.
Officials snacked their way through more than £700 worth of Meredith and Drew chocolate chip, shortbread and oatmeal offerings during meetings every month.
Officials snacked their way through more than £700 worth of Meredith and Drew chocolate chip, shortbread and oatmeal offerings during meetings every month
Biscuits were reportedly banned from the main MoD office nearly a decade ago to help bring down the department’s ballooning budget. But they continued to be provided at Whitehall meetings.
Military chiefs scoffed £8,514 worth of biscuits in 2019, compared with £6,348 the previous financial year.
An MoD spokesman said: ‘Refreshments for meetings are part of the PFI contract. The biscuits are supplied by the contractor. Only when ordered, the biscuits are charged to the team.’
£25k PPE bill … for the Ukraine army
Military bosses gave £25,000 worth of PPE to the Ukrainian armed forces in May – when the NHS was having to rely on donations.
The Ministry of Defence sent 41,050 surgical face masks, respirators, and infrared thermometers to their Eastern European allies.
At the time, Helen Fazey, former deputy head of mission at the British embassy in Kiev, said: ‘Responding to Covid-19 is a challenge all countries share. This donation is one way in which we show solidarity between the UK and Ukraine.’
The £24,816 contract was won by British-based procurement specialists Crown Agents on May 20.
Military bosses gave £25,000 worth of PPE to the Ukrainian armed forces in May – when the NHS was having to rely on donations
A fortnight earlier a British Medical Association survey of 16,000 doctors in England found 48 per cent were having to source their own PPE or rely on a donation.
At the time, the UK had more than 2,500 new virus cases a day and the Ukraine had 260. An MoD spokesman said: ‘Following an emergency request for assistance… purchases were made in-country and had no impact on UK supply chains.’
£34,000 wasted on 17 cancelled flights
The Ministry of Defence lost £34,500 on plane tickets flying officials to the US after an event was called off at short notice, it can be revealed.
The department had bought 17 non-refundable tickets – at more than £2,000 each – because they were cheaper. There had been ‘no expectation’ the joint exercise would be cancelled, it said.
The wasted air fares were among several MoD spending errors totalling nearly £1million uncovered in Freedom of Information requests by the Taxpayers’ Alliance.
It is not known when exactly the joint exercise was cancelled during the most recent financial year, which ended nearly a fortnight after the first lockdown began.
However, several such events were called off as the pandemic began to take hold, including a military exercise in Norway involving 2,000 UK troops in March.