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Leaked UN audit proves Oil-for-Food shambles (Kofi knew all along)
Mineweb ^ | May 4, 2K4 | Tim Wood

Posted on 05/23/2004 8:20:30 AM PDT by rdb3

Leaked UN audit proves Oil-for-Food shambles
Tim Wood
'19-MAY-04 03:00'

NEW YORK (Mineweb.com) -- A United Nations internal audit report leaked to Mineweb cracks open the door on hitherto secret details of the disgraced Iraq Oil-for-Food Programme. The report details irregularities that went on for years, with hundreds of millions of dollars not properly accounted for, hinting at disarray in the programme from start to finish. The report was never forwarded to the UN Security Council.

The leaked document is the first audit involving the Office of the Iraq Programme (OIP) to see the light of day. Despite intensifying US Congressional scrutiny, Oil-for-Food remains concealed and the Bush administration appears reluctant to embarrass the UN by pressing for answers.

Since the war in Iraq ended, the murky world of the OIP has been unravelling. The war voided the secrecy and ignorance that insiders and Saddam’s chums relied on to plunder billions of dollars in cash and goods under cover of UN humanitarian missions and even in plain site of the institution's bureaucrats.

Audit No. AF2002/23/1 offers a unique glimpse into the UN’s scandal-ridden “humanitarian” involvement in Iraq where $10 billion – nearly one year’s worth of Iraqi gross domestic product – may have been embezzled. Further exploitation occurred in expired medicines and food shipped to Iraq, or in missiles and other contraband smuggled into the dictatorship camouflaged by phony contracts. In fact, Iraq was even re-exporting OIP goods at times. Most worrying, some of the money may have made its way to terrorists.

The UN Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) addressed the April 2003 report to Benon Sevan, the quasi-retired but still diplomatically-immune Executive Director of the Office of the Iraq Programme. Sevan’s name cropped up in a list of recipients of oil-trading vouchers issued by Saddam Hussein’s regime. The vouchers have been linked directly to kickbacks to Saddam as one aspect of an elaborate sanctions busting and graft scheme tolerated by the UN.

The UN has wavered on coming clean about its corrupt program; initially appointing an internal team to assess allegations, then haltingly acceding to requests for independent scrutiny, only to regress by sending intimidating letters to contractors. Things improved somewhat last week when the UN agreed to sequester OIP documents for outside investigators to examine.

Sevan has steadfastly denied benefiting in any way from Oil-for-Food which he administered. He has also repeatedly insisted that multiple audits gave the OIP a clean bill of health, which seemed to be backed up by a tame reference to "further improvements are still needed in a number of areas" in the OIOS eighth annual report. Similarly, the ninth annual report cited Audit No. AF2002/23/1 indirectly, but made light of the identified problems and did not reference the most serious issues.

The detailed audit report shows something very different and suggests that the OIP barely kept up

appearances in fulfilling Security Council resolutions on Iraq.

Shocking revelations

The report is littered with hair-raising irregularities for which there were no serious consequences.

Cotecna Inspection S.A., a privately owned and managed Swiss "global trade facilitation" firm, won UN contract PD/CON/324/98 which was worth $40.9 million dollars between February 1999 and July 2002. Whereas UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, whose son, Kojo, worked for Cotecna, is now adopting a constructionist view of the contract disclosure clauses, the OIP was decidedly generous with Cotecna when it came to pecuniary and operating clauses.

For example, the audit report reveals that Cotecna over-billed the UN to the tune of $335,328 in just one year because it deployed less staff than obligated. The OIP shrugged off the loss and told its internal auditors that future invoices would be matched to actual staffing. Similar contracting abuses had been uncovered in audits from prior years involving the OIP, especially involving the oil services contract. Clearly, few of the earlier admonishments were taken seriously.

The most deplorable disclosure highlights why Kurdish leaders have insisted that half of all humanitarian supplies to the region were stolen, and why the OIOS found in a 1999-2000 audit that the UN was overpaying for supplies there by a margin of 61%.

For the first six phases of the Oil-for-Food Programme, the auditors say Cotecna simply never inspected goods under the “13%” programme – humanitarian supplies for Northern Iraq. When Cotecna did start superficial inspections on supplies flowing to Northern Iraq, the result was a cumulative discrepancy of $111.3 million dollars, or 36% of the total value of goods paid for by the UN in that period.

Cotecna was responsible for authenticating the following categories of imports as they arrived in Iraq: food, medicine, water & sanitation, electricity, agriculture, primary and higher education, and settlement & rehabilitation.

If the discrepancy between UN and Cotecna figures is indicative, then $363.4 million may be unaccounted for from prior years though it is probably much higher because controls were non-existent. It is likely that discrepancies in the Northern Iraq programme top $800 million, of which only 20% might be explained away by administrative foul ups. The audit does not detail probable discrepancies in the other regions Cotecna was responsible for.

The auditors say they have no idea how the OIP reconciled its regular reports to the Secretary General, especially early on when there were no records of inspections. The suggestion is that the Security Council and General Assembly were being fed fictitious information. According to the US Defense Contract Audit Agency, OIP contractors like Cotecna were able to inspect just 7-10 per cent of approved deliveries.

Even when Cotecna did inspect goods, the results are doubtful because the auditors found the company did not have the necessary equipment on site to do the work. Instead of offloading trucks, unpacking boxes and professionally sampling goods as contracted, Cotecna staff accepted truck cargo manifests at face value. The contract required thorough verification.

Incredibly, the OIP defended the lack of inspections by claiming compliance would have caused “delays” that might “bring the organization into disrepute.” What then was Cotecna hired for if the primary objective was delivery rather than verification?

In fact, the OIP persistently defends Cotecna which had also had improper free use of UN facilities such as offices and medical services. The OIP, responding to audit recommendations, goes to incredible lengths to get Cotecna off the hook, especially when it comes to financial clawbacks.

It is clear that there was little, if any, sincere verification of goods entering Iraq under the OIP as required by several Security Council Resolutions. Sanctions busting started in Turtle Bay, New York.

Nice work if you can get it

The audit reveals a contract that was fluid to the unfailing benefit of Cotecna.

The company was reprimanded, not sent packing, when it committed serious breaches. One of those was an inexcusable conflict of interest where Cotecna attempted to be accredited as a supplier to Iraq. It also appointed a sub-contractor, even before the contract with the UN was signed, in clear violation of the organisation’s rules on sub-contracting.

Independent investigators will undoubtedly focus on the curious circumstances of Cotecna’s remuneration.

The firm won the contract by being the lowest bidder at $400 per-man-per-day. Within a year, Sevan’s office had approved an increase in the price to $600pmpd – exactly matching the next lowest bidder, InterTrek Testing of the UK. Cotecna also scored with the addition of 8 more staff, costing the UN another $4,800 per day.

The increase should automatically have triggered a rebid. Suspicions were further aroused by a subsequent contract rebid where Cotecna lowered its price to $520pmpd and won again.

Cotecna’s $600pmpd price was a result of blending operating costs with the per man per day fee structure. It was not the only time the OIP bent over backwards to accommodate operating cost issues.

In violation of the contract and even before a single service had been provided, Cotecna received $356,000 to cover communications equipment and associated operating costs. A further $150,000 was provided for the communications operating costs later on, for total excess spending of $506,000.

In one of the most bizarre exposures, the OIP agreed that Cotecna could own the communications equipment within 6 months in exchange for a “residual” payment of $95,000. The payment was never made, and the OIP could not explain how the residual payment was calculated although it promised to collect the debt.

These are just some irregularities among dozens in the audit.

Modus operandi

A Mineweb source says the UN’s internal auditing capacity and authority is pitiful. When the auditors do try to dig in their heels, they are easily railroaded because they are on 6-month contracts and there is a history of recalls and firings.

The OIP’s power surfaces in its response to the audit recommendations which have a formulaic quality to them. Where the OIP agreed, there was usually a pledge to implement reforms in future with no concern to address past problems, especially when money is involved. Promises to recover funds are undermined by the lack of an independent collections authority or accountability to an investigative staff. The glib OIOS annual reporting is a further concern.

Where the OIP disagreed, it simply resorted to steamrolling the auditors with circumlocutions and outright rejections.

For example, even though the contract with Cotecna was clearly all inclusive, the OIP implies that there was a fixed margin in effect. The OIP consistently refused to make Cotecna comply with its obligations on staffing and equipment because it would “incur costs for the organization [the UN].” In other words, the only way the OIP would make Cotecna perform according to the contract was by passing on costs to the UN.

The leaked audit has implications not only for Benon Sevan and his office, but the OIOS and the UN Board of Auditors and, perhaps, the Secretary General himself. The Board, which is made up of General Assembly members South Africa, the Philippines, and France, was supposed to keep an eye on things on behalf of the member states and shares the responsibility for auditing UN operations with the OIOS.

There will be questions about why the OIOS did not investigate the audit findings given the hints of fraud, especially since Sevan previously indicated that the OIOS and Security Council were aware of a Saddam Hussein surcharge on contracts. Indeed, Saddam was openly boasting that sanctions were being violated. The SC delegated the administration of the OIP funds to the Secretary-General and with that the oversight functions.

Mineweb shared the documents with Claudia Rosett who has written about them for the Wall Street Journal. Fred Eckhard, Spokesman for the UN Secretary-General, told her that the UN will no longer comment on Oil-for-Food now that it is being investigated by the Volcker panel. The office of Cotecna Chief Executive, Robert Massey, said the firm was in full compliance with its UN contract.
 

--0--

The following documents are available to download / view:

· Office of Internal Oversight Services Audit No. AF2002/23/1
   
(4.4MB, PDF)
·
Mineweb summary of AF2002/23/1
   
(218kb, PDF)
·
Distribution of proceeds from oil sales as of 23 October 1998
     (2.5MB, PDF)

·
Cartoon illustrating how the oil voucher scam worked
   
(139kb, PDF)
· Excel Spreadsheet of Al-Mada oil vouchers list
   
[External Web site - Friends of Saddam]

 



TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: annan; caught; corruption; cotecna; hussein; iraq; kojo; liar; oilforfood; scam; sevan; thief; un
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To: rdb3

"Whereas UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, whose son, Kojo, worked for Cotecna,
is now adopting a constructionist view of the contract disclosure clauses, the OIP
was decidedly generous with Cotecna when it came to pecuniary and operating clauses."

Just another example of the truism: Repulicans/conservatives are the
only people who recuse themselves in investigative matters.


21 posted on 05/23/2004 9:34:45 AM PDT by VOA
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To: VOA
Ain't that a fact.


22 posted on 05/23/2004 9:36:48 AM PDT by rdb3 ($710.96... The price of freedom.)
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To: tiamat

It is unfortunate that the mainstream media is engrossed with the "torture" of the Iraqi prisoners and not this story. The fun is going to be in seeing all the left wing bozos who showed us the starving children of Iraq with no medicine because of the sanctions eat crow. Sounds like CNN might have to explain their reporting and maybe their stories about Sadam. Now, that would be FUN


23 posted on 05/23/2004 9:46:46 AM PDT by Burf
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To: rdb3; Eagle9; freedox; chesty_puller; GRRRRR; MouthOfTheSouth; Memother; joan_30; dixie sass; ...

I promise to steal cheat and lie all in the name of human decency

Kev-Head heres one to archive on the website

24 posted on 05/23/2004 9:56:27 AM PDT by ATOMIC_PUNK (Let your opponent point to you the way to overcome him.)
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To: ATOMIC_PUNK

Get us out of the UN and the UN out of the US!

This is what the Ketchup Boy wants us to cede our sovereignty to? I don't think so.

Relegate the UN to a minor foot note next to the League of Nations on the pages of history.


25 posted on 05/23/2004 10:04:43 AM PDT by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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To: rdb3

Good catch. I read Tim Wood's reports in Mineweb fairly often. He's a good man, and I'm sure this is an honest report of what he was given.


26 posted on 05/23/2004 10:46:18 AM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: rdb3

You mean the UN is corrupt? No, no say it isn't so.


27 posted on 05/23/2004 10:47:28 AM PDT by McGavin999 (If Kerry can't deal with the "Republican Attack Machine" how is he going to deal with Al Qaeda)
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To: Burf

I'd love to see it happen, but I'm not holding my breath....


28 posted on 05/23/2004 11:17:30 AM PDT by tiamat ("Just a Bronze-Age Gal, Trapped in a Techno-World!")
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To: zip; BOBWADE

ping


29 posted on 05/23/2004 11:24:02 AM PDT by Mrs Zip
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To: rdb3
Money for Nothing and New World Order and Corruption"

Surrender Monkey in Saville Row like Suits


30 posted on 05/23/2004 11:26:59 AM PDT by Helms (Rick Kaplan, MSNBC's new honcho, is a New Grandfather To the First Homely Baby)
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To: SandRat

It's amazing to watch Kerry and the Dems call Bush incompetent and a liar when the very organization they put so much faith in is guilty of all those attributes. Is it any wonder why these people didn't want to remove Saddam? Between this scandal..France and Russias future oil contracts, continual breeches in the trade embargo, and the debt owed to them by Saddam, they obviously put their financial interests above those of the security of, not only the USA...but of everybody threatened by this monster.

When Kerry and the Dems talk about the failure of this war, one must remind them that we may not have had a war if Saddam didn't feel emboldened and enabled by these countries who never had the intention of supporting his removal. And this is important because these are the same countries who voted 15-0 to support "whatever means necessary" to remove Saddam if he didn't adhere to the UN resolutions...or if he breeched those resolutions.

Saddam's belligerence with regards to unhindered access to scientists, U2 flyovers, etc., was a direct result of him knowing that there were certain countries who would never support the use of force against him. This was further corraborated with France's duplicity, were Chirac and DeVillian had given personal, private assurances to both Bush and Powell that they would, indeed, support the use of force if necessary (re: Timmerman's, France Lied).

Unfortunately, to Powell's dismay, DeVillian announced to the world that France couldn't participate in the use of force against Saddam. This announcement took Powell by so much surprise that he was angered beyond belief. And it wasn't enough that France had to withdrawal; Chirac and DeVillian proceeded to travel the world coercing others to do the same...which even makes me wonder if Turkey's last minute pullout may have been a result of French pressure, relating to their EU status.

Instead of providing a truly unified front to force Saddam to acquiesce...and to potentially avoid war, Saddam knew (or, so he thought) that he would never be removed because he had these countries in his hip pocket. It wasn't Bush who lied or mislead anybody...it was the very people and countries that Kerry and the Democrats put so much credibility in. But instead of condemning them for their lies, fraud and abuse, they attack the president of our own country who's been the only straight shooter throughout.

If they want to call it a war for oil...let 'em. But just remind them who were the one's doing the profiting from this tyrant over the last decade as they even broke their own embargo and traded with this enemy. Sure, this war hasn't gone as smoothly as some would've hoped, but let's remember that right from the very beginning there have been those (not even Muslims) who have done their best to see to that.


31 posted on 05/23/2004 12:36:33 PM PDT by cwb (Liberals: Always fighting for social justice in all the wrong places.)
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To: rdb3
MASTER LIST UN OIL/SEX FOR FOOD SCANDALS
32 posted on 05/23/2004 4:36:49 PM PDT by GailA (hanoi john kerry, I'm for the death penalty, before I impose a moratorium on it.)
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To: rdb3
The leaked audit has implications not only for Benon Sevan and his office, but the OIOS and the UN Board of Auditors and, perhaps, the Secretary General himself. The Board, which is made up of General Assembly members South Africa, the Philippines, and France, was supposed to keep an eye on things on behalf of the member states and shares the responsibility for auditing UN operations with the OIOS.

So...France had it's hands in the Board of Auditors...

Nice to see the evil, lying, scheming, socialist, pro-Islamazi SCUMBAGS not only were on the take, but were in position to C.Y.A. when they get caught, and also were able to stall our efforts against Saddam to maximize their profits and allow his WMD's to be smuggled to OTHER scummy countries and Terrorists!!

I say screw Syria and N. Korea....take out the duplicitous FRENCH first!!!

Kick them OUT of NATO...kick them OUT of the UN...then kick the UN OUT of the USA!

Finally, take the French out before they can surrender!!!

Oh, and sieze all French assets in the US...sieze their accounts, and Nationalize all their companies and holdings here! That should help recover the costs on the War on Terror that their actions FORCED us to incur!

33 posted on 05/23/2004 5:28:07 PM PDT by Itzlzha (The avalanche has already started...it is too late for the pebbles to vote!)
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To: cwb

Haven't heard the phrase war for oil since the French Connection broke and gas prices started to climb. Now it's a war of colonial imperialism.

Don' these commies have anyone that can write new scripts. Geez their recycling the lines from the Korean War for the Second time.


34 posted on 05/23/2004 6:13:53 PM PDT by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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To: rdb3

datum.

& thanks.


35 posted on 05/23/2004 7:55:15 PM PDT by King Prout (the difference between "trained intellect" and "indoctrinated intellectual" is an Abyssal gulf)
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