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  • MAIN PAGE: Ex-UN oil-for-food chief resigns

    Ex-UN oil-for-food chief resigns

    Benon Sevan addressing Kofi Annan: "The charges are
    false and you, who have known me all these years,
    should know they are false."

    BBC News
    2005/08/08

    The former head of the United Nations' oil-for-food
    programme has quit the UN, lashing out at Secretary
    General Kofi Annan for "sacrificing" him.

    Benon Sevan's decision comes a day before a third
    report on the scandal-plagued programme is published.

    It is expected to accuse Mr Sevan of receiving cash in
    return for allocating Iraqi oil contracts in the
    mid-1990s.

    The oil-for-food programme allowed Saddam Hussein to
    sell limited amounts of oil to buy humanitarian goods.


    Mr Sevan's lawyers have already said the report will
    falsely accuse him of receiving cash kick-backs for
    helping a company obtain lucrative oil contracts under
    the scheme.

    Mr Sevan, a Cypriot who had worked with the
    organisation for four decades, tendered his
    resignation in a letter addressed personally to Kofi
    Annan.

    'False charges'

    "I fully understand the pressure you are under [...]
    but sacrificing me for political expediency will never
    appease our critics or help you or the Organization,"
    he wrote.

    Mr Sevan was suspended in February but was retained an
    honorary post so that he could help the investigation,
    receiving a nominal annual salary of $1.

    The report is the third in a series produced by an
    independent inquiry committee established by the UN.

    In his letter he insisted he was innocent of any
    charges that would be made against him.

    "The charges are false and you, who have known me all
    these years, should know they are false," he wrote.

    In February, the independent panel investigating the
    allegations of corruption in the oil-for-food scandal
    had said that Mr Sevan had received payments of cash
    as well as oil allocations.

    Mr Sevan said the real oil-for-food scandal was the
    way the programme was misrepresented by those who were
    against the UN.

    He said he was disappointed by Mr Annan's "failure to
    defend the historic achievements of the oil-for-food
    programme."


    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/4130390.stm

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4130390.stm
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