Posted on 08/08/2005 9:37:51 AM PDT by NormsRevenge
NEW YORK - Investigators probing claims of wrongdoing in the Iraq oil-for-food program accused its former chief, Benon Sevan, of corruption for taking illegal kickbacks and recommended his immunity be lifted for prosecution.
The investigators said a former U.N. procurement officer sought a bribe and should have his immunity lifted as well. Alexander Yakovlev also was accused of collecting nearly $1 million in kickbacks outside the oil-for-food program.
The third report by the Independent Inquiry Committee, led by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, was a new blow to the scandal-tainted $64 billion program. For the first time, it gave a motive for Sevan's actions, saying his finances were "precarious" shortly before his alleged misdeeds.
Some critics have accused the United Nations of squandering millions and even billions of dollars in its mismanagement of the program. Yet Volcker's team found that Sevan appeared to have received kickbacks of just $147,184 from December 1998 to January 2002.
The report touched briefly on U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and his son, Kojo. It said new e-mails suggesting Annan knew more than he said about his son's involvement in the program raised questions that would be answered in the committee's final report, expected in September.
Yakovlev resigned earlier this year and Sevan announced his resignation on Sunday. He criticized investigators, Annan, the U.N. Security Council and the U.N. critics who have cited oil-for-food as emblematic of perceived bungling and outright corruption.
"As I predicted, a high-profile investigative body invested with absolute power would feel compelled to target someone and that someone turned out to be me," Sevan wrote. "The charges are false, and you, who have known me for all these years, should know that they are false."
Though both men have quit, diplomatic immunity would cover their actions when they were employed. Volcker's recommendation that Annan waive that immunity was a strong indication of his conviction about the claims against them.
Sevan, a Cypriot citizen believed to be in Nicosia, was being investigated by the Manhattan District Attorney's office. There is no known criminal probe against Yakovlev so far.
The oil-for-food program, launched in December 1996 to help ordinary Iraqis cope with U.N. sanctions imposed after Saddam Hussein's 1990 invasion of Kuwait, was one of the largest humanitarian programs in history. By most accounts, it achieved what it set out to do, becoming a lifeline for 90 percent of the country's population of 26 million.
Under the program, Saddam's regime could sell oil, provided the proceeds went to buy humanitarian goods or pay war reparations. Saddam allegedly sought to curry favor by giving former government officials, activists, journalists and others vouchers for Iraqi oil that could then be resold at a profit.
The program has become the subject of several Congressional investigations, as well as probes by a federal grand jury and the Securities and Exchange Commission.
On Thursday, Sevan's lawyer Eric Lewis revealed that the committee would find conclude that Sevan got kickbacks for steering contracts under oil-for-food to a small trading company called African Middle East Petroleum Co. Ltd. Inc.
The report largely confirmed that, but went further. It described how Sevan and his wife repeatedly had overdrawn their bank accounts before Sevan first sought to steer oil allocations to AMEP.
It also found that two men helped Sevan: Fred Nadler, an AMEP director and brother-in-law of former U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali; and Fakhry Abdelnour, the president of AMEP.
Volcker's team recommended that the United Nations assist in their possible prosecution as well.
As for Yakovlev, investigators also found that he secretly tried to bribe a company called Societe Generale de Surveillance S.A., which was seeking an oil inspection contract under oil-for-food.
They said Yakovlev passed secret bidding information along to a friend in France, Yves Pintore, who then approached SGS to check if it would "work with" him and "influential people in the U.N. in New York."
Volcker's team found no evidence that the company agreed to the bribe. However, it noted that Pintore essentially agreed to its characterization of his involvement.
The committee found "persuasive evidence" that Yakovlev took some $950,000 from other U.N. contractors outside oil-for-food.
Carolyn
Paul Volcker was just on Fox laying it down..
Benon Sevan and a few others..You are the weakest links..
Buh BYe!!
Gee, why not Eliot Spitzer's office? Paging the AG...
Hope so...
How about the 661 Committee? Anyone talked to those people yet?
A real surprise, huh? I wonder if they're going to get Kofi and his son before it's all over?
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I sure hope so --- they are dirty criminals. What more can you say? Kickbacks for starving Iraqis...great bunch of murderers in their own right.
LOL.. Not if Volcker can help it. (/whoknows?) ;-)
More reports about Kofi and Kid to come out this fall..
Could be a lot of lumps of coal in UN Xmas stockings this Yule Season. :)
What? Not Halliburton? I'm shocked!
The UN-appointed panel probing the scandal-tainted oil-for-food program for Iraq, headed by Paul Volcker, seen here, was expected in a new report to accuse the former head of the aid scheme of receiving kickbacks and refusing to cooperate with the investigation(AFP/File/Don Emmert)
What a despicable organization.
Benon Sevan, head of the oil-for-food program, speaks to reporters after Security Council consultations on the Iraq oil-for-food program at United Nations headquarters in New York on Tuesday, April 22, 2003. Sevan, the former chief of the Iraq oil-for-food program, resigned from the U.N. Sunday, Aug. 7, 2005, a day before investigators were to release a report that is expected to accuse him of taking kickbacks under the $64 billion humanitarian operation. (AP Photo/Osamu Honda, File)
Really??????? I am shocked, shocked I say.
Next thing, we will be reading that the French have been taking kickbacks too.
Oh! That would just be all to shocking!
(did i mention that i would be shocked? )
:)
Hope he stays away from elevator shafts...
Before this is over a lot of former UN officials will be living in Tunis.
That statement is just so... so... uh, 'Clintonian' is the word that I was searching for.
I hope so.
Carolyn
No more UN for US-list
If people want on or off this list, please let me know.
Corruption @ the UN? Reeeeaalllly???
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