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  • Oil-for-food: Annan's job on the line

    BBC News

    Last Updated: Monday, 28 March, 2005, 13:32 GMT 14:32 UK

    Oil-for-food: Annan's job on the line

    By Paul Reynolds
    World Affairs correspondent, BBC News website

    The future of UN Secretary General Kofi Annan will be on the line with the
    publication on Tuesday of a report into the connections between his son,
    Kojo, and a company monitoring the Iraqi oil-for-food programme.


    The UN leader is already vulnerable

    If the report, by a panel headed by Paul Volcker, a former chairman of the
    US Federal Reserve, criticises the secretary general, he will come under
    renewed pressure to resign, though there is no mechanism to sack him.

    His second term runs until the end of next year and he has indicated that he
    will not seek an unprecedented third term.

    But his aides are hoping that the report will reveal no wrongdoing on Mr
    Annan Sr's part - and that he will survive this episode and go on to lead a
    plan to reform the UN laid out in his speech on 21 March.

    The issues to be examined by the report, an interim one pending collection
    of final figures, are the relationship between Kojo Annan and Swiss company
    Cotecna Inspection, and whether Mr Annan himself played any role. He has
    denied doing so.

    'Disappointed and surprised'

    Cotecna was awarded a contract by the UN in 1998 to monitor the oil-for-food
    programme under which Iraq, then under Security Council sanctions, was
    allowed to sell oil in order to buy food and medicine.

    Cotecna replaced Lloyd's Register Inspection Ltd as the monitoring agency
    checking that only humanitarian supplies were allowed into Iraq.




    Interim report into oil-for-food Programme (3.26 MB)
    Q&A: Oil-for-food scandal
    Annan reform speech


    Mr Annan Jr worked for Cotecna before it won the contract, though both he
    and the company say that his work was in West Africa and had nothing to do
    with Iraq.

    A Cotecna spokesman, Seth Goldschlager, was quoted by the Associated Press
    on 25 March as saying that Kojo Annan became a consultant to the company
    after it was given the UN contract - but that again, this had nothing to do
    with oil-for-food.

    Kojo Annan was paid the consulting fee, Mr Goldschlager said, after agreeing
    not to work for a competing firm in West Africa.

    One problem was that Kojo Annan did not tell his father about the continuing
    arrangement. Mr Annan himself has said that he was "very disappointed and
    surprised" when he learned that his son had continued to be paid by Cotecna
    after 1998.

    The total amount earned by Kojo Annan was said by the Cotecna spokesman to
    be about $365,000.

    So far, the revelations about his son have been an embarrassment to Mr Annan
    - but the report will indicate whether they become something more serious.

    'Less lynch mob'

    The UN leader is already reeling from an earlier report in February by Mr
    Volcker that detailed the corruption in the oil-for-food programme.


    The report said Benon Sevan's conduct was "ethically improper"


    The Volcker team concluded that the UN official in charge of the programme,
    Benon Sevan, from Cyprus, "solicited and received on behalf of AMEP [African
    Middle East Petroleum] several million barrels of allocations of oil" from
    Iraq and that this "presented a grave and continuing conflict of interest."

    Mr Sevan denied any wrongdoing but Mr Annan said he was "shocked" by the
    finding.

    It later transpired that funds for Mr Sevan's legal defence, to the moment
    when the Volcker report came out, had themselves come from the residue of
    the oil-for-food-project.

    The accumulation of scandal and allegation has undermined Mr Annan's
    position.

    Some Republicans in the US have been calling for his resignation for some
    time. These calls were heightened when Mr Annan, in an interview with the
    BBC, called the Iraq invasion "illegal".

    Minnesota Senator Norm Coleman has chaired a Senate committee investing
    oil-for-food and said in December: "One conclusion has become abundantly
    clear: Kofi Annan should resign."

    Senator Coleman said that his investigation found that "Saddam turned this
    programme on its head. Rather than erode his grip on power, the programme
    was manipulated by Saddam to line his own pockets and actually strengthen
    his position at the expense of the Iraqi people. All of this occurred under
    the supposedly vigilant eye of the UN."

    Among Mr Annan's defenders has been the former British UN ambassador, Lord
    David Hannay.

    "The United States has many traditions, some good and some bad," he said.

    "The worst of the bad is the lynch mob. The best of the good is due process.
    We need more due process and less lynch mob."
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