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Commonwealth faces uncertainty over leadership

Patricia Scotland, Baroness Scotland of Asthal tweeted a photograph of herself with Lord Patel in 2016

Secretary General Patricia Scotland under pressure over awarding a £250,000 commission to a firm owned by her friend

| THE INDEPENDENT | The Commonwealth is facing uncertainty over its leadership after its heads of government rejected calls for the secretary-general, Baroness Scotland, to be given an automatic second term, the BBC has learned.

A leaked letter from Boris Johnson suggests an alternative candidate could stand against her. Commonwealth diplomats held a meeting on Feb.06 to discuss the organisation’s future.

The Commonwealth Secretariat refused to comment.

Diplomats fear the intergovernmental organisation – comprising more than 50 countries, many of them former British colonies, encompassing almost a third of the world’s population – now risks a bitter internal battle over its future leadership.

Lady Scotland’s four-year term of office as secretary-general comes to an end next month. A number of supportive member states suggested before Christmas she should get an automatic second term.

Britain – which currently chairs the international body – asked all 53 heads of government for their views.

On 6 January, the prime minister reported back to Commonwealth leaders with the results of the survey.

In his letter – which has been obtained by the BBC – Johnson reveals that twice as many Commonwealth countries rejected the plan to offer Lady Scotland another four years in office.

The Commonwealth leaders instead agreed the future leadership of the organisation should be decided when they meet in Rwanda in June for their biennial meeting.

To that end, the Commonwealth has agreed to give Lady Scotland a short three-month extension to her contract which was due to expire on 31 March.

Crucially, in his letter, Johnson also suggests for the first time another candidate may come forward to challenge Lady Scotland.

The BBC has been told that Commonwealth diplomats are taking soundings to see if any member states might propose an alternative contender.

The Commonwealth Secretariat said that it “does not comment on leaked documents as a matter of principle”.

The questions about Lady Scotland’s future leadership of the Commonwealth come after she was criticised by internal auditors last November for awarding a lucrative consultancy contract to a company run by a friend.

The BBC revealed recently week that the Commonwealth’s Audit Committee accused her of “circumventing” usual competitive tendering rules by awarding a £250,000 commission to a firm owned by fellow Labour peer, Lord Patel of Bradford.

Lady Scotland’s lawyers insisted the decision to award the contract was fully justified. But New Zealand has since confirmed it put its £1.5m annual contribution to the Commonwealth Secretariat on hold as a result of the “significant weaknesses” in managing procurement identified in the KPMG auditors’ report.

Commonwealth high commissioners in London meeting on Feb.06 discussed the challenges currently facing the Commonwealth Secretariat, including the KPMG report.

Diplomatic sources suggested some developing countries could shift their support to an alternative candidate if they fear they could lose Commonwealth revenue streams under the current leadership of the Secretariat.

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