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U.N. Big lost sweet oil deal

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  • U.N. Big lost sweet oil deal

    U.N. BIG LOST SWEET OIL DEAL
    By NILES LATHEM

    New York Post
    Oct 13 2004

    October 13, 2004 -- WASHINGTON — An angry Saddam Hussein stopped
    giving the head of the U.N. oil-for-food program sweetheart oil deals
    after fuming that the honcho was not doing enough to earn his money,
    according to new information uncovered by investigators. The Post has
    learned that former Iraqi government officials have told congressional
    investigators that oil-for-food chief Benon Sevan was ordered to be
    removed from Saddam's special oil voucher list in June 2001 after
    five years of secret dealings.

    The ex-regime officials have told investigators from the House
    International Relations Committee that government higher-ups believed
    Sevan, the Armenian Cypriot who administered the $64 billion program,
    wasn't "doing enough" to help Saddam in his relentless quest to end
    global sanctions, according to a congressional investigator.

    "We were told the Iraqis were expecting certain things [from Sevan]
    and they didn't get what they wanted. From their perspective, they
    were getting screwed," the investigator said.

    Saddam's government had another reason to remove Sevan from its
    oil-for-food gravy train.

    CIA weapons inspector Charles Duelfer said in a report last week that,
    at about the same time Sevan was cut off, an Egyptian middleman for
    one of the companies linked to Sevan's Iraq oil deals was informed
    by Oil Ministry officials that Sevan's company was behind in its
    payments to Saddam's kickback program.
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