In Benin, a PPEA II bis right under the nose of Patrice Talon?
In Parakou, despite billions invested since 2016 to improve access to water and electricity, entire neighborhoods remain in short supply. Minister Paulin Akponna denounces a new “siphoning of the national budget,” reminiscent of previous disasters like the PPEA II scandal under Boni Yayi. Between internal score settle, political warnings, and crisis communication, his words reveal far more than a simple admission of failure.
affaire ppea 2
During a visit to Parakou on June 21, 2025, Minister Paulin Akponna denounced the mismanagement of public funds aimed at water and electricity during the tenure of former minister Séidou Adambi. He expressed sadness at seeing neighborhoods without water or electricity despite the “tens of billions” invested since 2016. He pointed to a “siphoning of the national budget” by certain local actors, accused of diverting several billion CFA francs intended for these essential projects. These officials, who had enjoyed the trust of the state, allegedly failed in their commitments by favoring their personal ambitions rather than collective interest. Akponna even calls the situation “criminal” and promises that these “siphoners,” now at large, will “answer for their management” before the law.
This discourse echoes the PPEA II scandal that happened during the term of former president Boni Yayi. The Multiannual Support Program for the Water and Sanitation sector (PPEA II) (2013-2015) was largely funded by the Netherlands, for a total amount of about 43.65 billion FCFA. In April 2015, an annual audit revealed a misappropriation of about 3 billion FCFA in this program. On May 6, 2015, in the face of the initial inaction by the Beninese government, Dutch Co-operation Minister Lilianne Ploumen suspended bilateral co-operation: Dutch aid was frozen until light was fully shed on the matter. Under pressure, the then Beninese Minister of Energy and Water, Barthélemy Kassa, suspected of being involved, had to resign on May 12, 2015 (while denying his involvement).
An international audit conducted by the Kroll firm in July 2015 confirmed the extent of the fraud: 2.6 billion FCFA of Dutch funds had been misappropriated in the PPEA II, and about an additional 5 billion had “disappeared” through other ministries. The Kroll report highlighted a fraud network involving senior managers of the General Directorate of Water, private operators, and mentioned that Barthélémy Kassa, then water minister, was aware of the shady deals but did not react. In response, the Yayi government took strong measures on paper: an extraordinary Council of Ministers on July 27, 2015, ordering legal proceedings against all the individuals named, the expulsion of the involved civil servants, the exclusion of the complicit companies from public contracts, and the referral of former minister Kassa to the High Court of Justice by Parliament. International arrest warrants were even announced against the fleeing perpetrators. These energetic actions convinced the Dutch side to resume co-operation. In September 2015, the Netherlands praised the measures taken while linking them to the gradual resumption of 95 billion FCFA of planned aid for 2014-2017.