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Cyprus unlikely to extradite oil-for-food official

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  • Cyprus unlikely to extradite oil-for-food official

    Cyprus unlikely to extradite oil-for-food official

    Wed Aug 10, 2005 9:54 AM ET


    By Michele Kambas

    NICOSIA (Reuters) - Cyprus is unlikely to extradite the Cypriot former
    head of the U.N. oil-for-food program to face allegations of receiving
    bribes, a senior government official said on Wednesday.

    Benon Sevan, a Cypriot of Armenian descent known to be in Cyprus as
    recently as last Saturday, was accused by U.N. investigators of
    receiving nearly $150,000 in kickbacks for oil allocations under the
    program he headed from 1997 to 2003.

    Sevan has strongly denied any wrongdoing.

    It was not immediately clear whether the former diplomat, who waived
    his diplomatic immunity by resigning from the U.N last weekend, would
    voluntarily return to the United States if criminal charges were
    brought against him.

    "I am not even aware of him being here," Cypriot Foreign Minister
    George Iacovou told Reuters.

    However, asked how authorities would respond to any request, another
    official replied: "There is a constitutional prohibition on
    extraditing one of our nationals to another jurisdiction."

    If a formal extradition request was filed, a court could cite the
    constitution to block it, he said.

    A U.N. inquiry committee, headed by former U.S. Federal Reserve
    chairman Paul Volcker, recommended that Sevan, who ran the $67 billion
    humanitarian program for Iraq, and Alexander Yakovlev, a former
    U.N. purchasing officer, should be prosecuted.

    The report is the first to accuse U.N. officials of outright
    corruption in connection with the program.

    It accused Sevan of getting kickbacks after receiving oil allocations
    on behalf of a trading company run by a relative of former
    U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali.

    Sevan, 67, issued a statement last weekend saying he had been made a
    scapegoat.

    He said the sum represented remittances from an elderly aunt who
    raised him in Cyprus. The woman died last year. However, the report
    said the windfall coincided with debt obligations on the part of
    Sevan, stung by losses on the stock market and the costs of running
    two residences.Sevan keeps a low profile when visiting his native
    Cyprus, where Armenians represent less than five percent of the
    population."I have known him for such a long time. I refuse to believe
    that he would jeopardize 40 years of service for $150,000," said a
    friend. "He wouldn't be involved in such dirty business."
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