Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Iraq food aid chief 'sought oil quotas'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Iraq food aid chief 'sought oil quotas'

    Iraq food aid chief 'sought oil quotas'

    Financial Times
    February 4 2005

    By Mark Turner at the United Nations and Claudio Gatti in New York

    Benon Sevan, head of the United Nations office that administered
    Iraq's multi-billion dollar oil-for-food programme, "repeatedly
    solicited" oil allocations from Baghdad, a UN-appointed inquiry said
    yesterday.

    "Iraqi officials provided such allocations for the purpose of
    obtaining Mr Sevan's support on several issues, particularly their
    desire for funds to repair and rebuild the Iraqi oil infrastructure,"
    it found.

    The conclusions, in an interim report from an independent committee
    led by Paul Volcker, deal a severe blow to the United Nations and to
    Kofi Annan, its secretary-general.

    Critics of the international body in the US Congress and elsewhere
    accuse it of allowing Saddam Hussein's regime to develop illicit
    sources of funding as a result of corruption in the programme.

    The Volcker report identified failings in the way the programme, set
    up in 1996 to alleviate shortages created by international sanctions,
    was administered and audited.

    Mr Volcker also noted that the most serious violations of the
    sanctions occurred outside the programme, and involved oil smuggling.

    But the "most disturbing" findings concerned Mr Sevan's role, which
    "created a grave and continuing conflict of interest".

    "His conduct was ethically improper and seriously undermined the
    integrity of the United Nations."

    The Financial Times revealed on Tuesday that the UN investigation was
    targetting Mr Sevan's efforts to steer lucrative contracts for Iraqi
    oil to African Middle East Petroleum, a Panama-registered company
    owned by a Swiss-based oil trader.

    The report says Mr Sevan "was not forthcoming to the committee when he
    denied approaching Iraqi officials and requesting oil allocations on
    behalf of AMEP". He also "failed to disclose the full nature and
    extent of his contacts" with Fakhri Abdelnour, AMEP's boss.

    The report also queries declarations made by Mr Sevan about the source
    of additional cash income - disclosed in a UN disclosure form -
    between 1999-2003. Mr Sevan said the $160,000 (123,000,
    £85,000)received over that period came from an aunt in Cyprus.

    The woman, the Volcker report says, was "a retired government
    photographer living on a modest pension". Mr Sevan's explanation was
    "not adequately supported" by the information reviewed by the
    committee.

    A separate line of inquiry, into investigations into the procurement
    of a contractor that employed Mr Annan's son, Kojo Annan, were "well
    advanced" and would be the subject of a further interim report.

    Writing in The Wall Street Journal yesterday, Mr Volcker said UN
    procurement procedures were "tainted, failing to follow the
    established rules of the organisation" and that "political
    considerations intruded in a manner that was neither transparent nor
    accountable".


    http://news.ft.com/cms/s/1cc6e03c-7654-11d9-8833-00000e2511c8.html
Working...
X