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UN Official Solicited Oil Deal from Iraq -Report

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  • UN Official Solicited Oil Deal from Iraq -Report

    UN Official Solicited Oil Deal from Iraq -Report
    Thu Feb 3, 4:44 PM ET World - Reuters

    By Evelyn Leopold and Irwin Arieff

    UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - A senior U.N. official solicited and
    received allocations of oil from Iraq (news - web sites) for a trading
    company while he was directing the U.N. oil-for-food program, a key
    investigative report said on Thursday.

    The official, Benon Sevan of Cyprus, engaged in conduct that was
    "ethically improper and seriously undermined the integrity of the
    United Nations (news - web sites)," said the report by Paul Volcker,
    the former U.S. Federal Reserve (news - web sites) chairman.

    Volcker was appointed by the United Nations to lead a probe of the
    now-defunct $67 billion program and on Thursday gave an interim
    report. The final analysis is expected in June.

    The report did not say that Sevan received bribes but mentioned that
    he got $160,000 in cash from 1999 to 2003 from his aunt in Cyprus, who
    has now died. The report said the aunt's lifestyle did not suggest
    wealth.

    But Volcker said Sevan solicited and received allocations of oil on
    behalf of the African Middle East Petroleum Company, a small trading
    firm, registered in Panama with offices in Switzerland, Monaco and
    elsewhere. It was run by Egyptian Fahkry, a cousin of former
    U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali, who left office at the
    end of 1996.

    It was "highly unlikely" that such a company would have been allowed
    to buy oil unless someone lobbied Baghdad. In return for the
    allocations, Sevan was expected to make a case for Iraq receiving cash
    to upgrade its deteriorating oil facilities, which he and several
    Security Council members did.

    "Mr. Sevan repeatedly solicited allocations of oil under the program,"
    the report said. Iraqi officials in return expected Sevan's support on
    such issues as funds for repairing Iraq's crumbling oil facilities, it
    said.

    The oil-for-food program, which began in December 1996 and ended in
    November 2003, allowed Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s government
    to sell oil in order to buy humanitarian goods. It was intended to
    ease the life of ordinary Iraqis under 1990 U.N. sanctions.

    But in his report of more than 200 pages, Volcker told a news
    conference that "we have not found a systematic misuse of funds
    dedicated to the administration of the oil-for-food program." He said
    the investigation was continuing.

    Since the U.S. invasion of Iraq, documents have emerged that show
    Saddam Hussein skimming funds from the program, selling oil illegally
    outside the program, often with the knowledge of big powers on the
    Security Council, and bribing a variety of officials around the world.

    Volcker also said that U.N. officials ignored procurement procedures
    and safeguards from the very start of the program.

    Investigators found "convincing and uncontested evidence" that the
    selection process was tainted by irregularities for each of the first
    three contractors selected -- the French bank Banque Nationale de
    Paris, the Dutch firm Saybolt Eastern Hemisphere BV and the British
    Lloyd's Register Inspection Ltd, the report said.

    A CIA (news - web sites) investigation last September found Saddam
    earned $1.7 billion through kickbacks and illegal surcharges on the
    program from 1996 to 2003. He got an additional $8 billion in illegal
    oil sales to Jordan, Turkey and Syria, which were known to the
    Security Council, including the United States, in its supervision of
    the program.

    Volcker said it was a matter of record that the United States, among
    others, have given Jordan and Turkey a waiver to receive Iraq oil
    outside of the U.N. program because they suffered hardships from the
    sanctions.

    Volcker said allegations of conflict of interest by Annan would be
    handled in a later report. Annan's son Kojo, had once worked in West
    Africa for a firm under contract to the United Nations in Iraq. Annan,
    who only became secretary-general in 1997, has said he had no hand in
    assigning contracts.

    The report also said that another senior official, Joseph Stephanides,
    who was involved in the program in 1996 and before Sevan took over the
    operation, intervened in procuring major contracts for large firms.

    "The evidence amply demonstrates that a tainted procurement process
    took place in 1996, when the program was just getting under way,"
    Volcker said, adding that political considerations came into play.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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