LOS ANGELES – A charitable group backed by pop star Madonna has scrapped its plan to build a school for impoverished girls in Malawi due to mismanagement. The organisation, Raising Malawi, has ousted its board of directors and replaced its members with a new set of officials that includes Madonna and her manager. “A thoughtful decision has been made to discontinue plans for the Raising Malawi Academy for Girls, as it was originally conceived,” Michael Berg, co-founder of Raising Malawi, said Thursday in an e-mail to the center’s members who had contributed to the project.
Sources revealed the effort to build the Malawi school had collapsed after spending $3.8 million on the project and its executive director left in October amid criticism of his management style and cost overruns. Madonna lent $11 million of her money to the organization. She has been a frequent visitor to Malawi and has adopted two children from the country.
On Thursday, the singer issued a statement to the newspapers saying she was still intent on working with Raising Malawi. “There’s a real education crisis in Malawi,” she said in the statement. “Sixty-seven percent of girls don’t go to secondary school, and this is simply unacceptable.” A spokeswoman for Madonna could not be reached on Thursday night.