They're saints I tell you........saints.
I'm shocked I tell you, shocked. /sarcasm
Koffi?
WOW! Whouda thunk.
Of Manhattan, yeah right.
An offical from the UN was actually arrested??
Wow .. that is news
Just keep doing it enough to where it isn't shocking news to anybody anymore.
The U.N. is getting to that point.
UNping
Crap. The governor of our fair state has this as his normal course of business. Let me tell you about Wisconsin and how you can buy our governor.....
Note:
Dog bites man- not news
Man bites dog- news
The man and his recored is here:
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://cgda.nic.in/cgda/pinknew/Sanjaya_Bahel.jpg&imgrefurl=http://cgda.nic.in/cgda/pinknew/Sanjaya_Bahel.html&h=109&w=86&sz=9&hl=en&sig2=2vxAxl_SoTk2ja2dnZSN-g&start=1&tbnid=1WZBFizx-35A_M:&tbnh=85&tbnw=67&ei=-XRJRZi4OKbGJKCGgaUM&prev=/images%3Fq%3DSanjaya%2BBahel%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26rls%3DGGLG,GGLG:2006-28,GGLG:en
Semper Fi
another article with more detail:
U.N. suspends Indian official for steering deals
By Nick Wadhams
ASSOCIATED PRESS
September 3, 2006
NEW YORK -- A U.N. official has been suspended after an internal investigation concluded that he steered millions of dollars in contracts to a company owned by the government of his native India in exchange for favors that included low-rent apartments.
The investigation claimed that Sanjaya Bahel, who was formally an official in the Indian government when he was working for the United Nations under contract, used his relationship with a wealthy Indian businessman and his son to steer the deals to the company they represented, Telecommunications Consultants India Ltd. (TCIL).
According to the probe, disclosed Thursday, Mr. Bahel also ignored evidence that TCIL wrongly withheld money from employees sent to U.N. peacekeeping missions in places such as Liberia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Kosovo to do communications work. While the workers claimed they were only getting a pittance -- sometimes as little as $5 for daily expenses -- the money enriched another company associated with the Indian businessman and his son.
The investigation's findings were detailed in a confidential report. Mr. Bahel vehemently denied the claims and said the United Nations only notified him of them just before making them public.
"All I can say to you is to me the allegations are not correct," he said. "I have good reasoning and valid reasoning to counter those."
Mr. Bahel was chief of commodity procurement for the United Nations from 1998 to 2003. From 1999 to 2004, TCIL received more than $100 million in U.N. contracts, the report said.
Details of the investigation were first reported in yesterday's editions of the Italian business daily Il Sole 24 Ore. They are the latest in a string of claims of fraud in the procurement department, which is responsible for awarding millions of dollars in contracts to do business with the United Nations worldwide.
After learning the details of Mr. Bahel's case were about to be made public by Il Sole 24 Ore, the United Nations issued a statement through spokesman Stephane Dujarric that it had suspended an unidentified male staffer and charged him with misconduct. Mr. Bahel confirmed late Thursday that he was that staffer.
Mr. Dujarric said evidence in the case "has also been shared with the prosecutorial authorities of the host country."
A U.N. diplomat speaking on the condition of anonymity confirmed that the evidence was shared with the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, which has been investigating claims of fraud in the procurement office for several months. A spokeswoman for the prosecutor had no immediate comment about the Bahel case.
Navtej Sarna, spokesman for the Indian Ministry of External Affairs, said he was not aware of Mr. Bahel's suspension or the accusations against him.
Mr. Bahel could face charges including wire fraud and conspiracy.
Page 1 of 2 next »
http://www.washtimes.com/world/20060902-113713-6233r.htm
FOXNEWS.COM
U.N. Procurement Scandal: The Case of the Official Who Never Was
Monday, January 23, 2006
By George Russell and Claudia Rosett
UNITED NATIONS Trouble in the United Nations Procurement Division is now well established as the world organizations successor scandal to Oil-for-Food.
Two U.N. officials have already been arrested, leading to one guilty plea so far. Hundreds of millions of dollars worth of contracts have been questioned, and earlier this week, an independent consulting report described the U.N. purchasing department which spends the bulk of taxpayer dollars contributed to the U.N. as inept, disorganized and ripe for malfeasance.
Amid that morass, one of the most intriguing mysteries to date involves the curious case of the senior official who did not take charge: Sanjaya Bahel. In a memo (pdf) issued by his superiors this summer, Bahel, 55, was announced as the new chief of procurement, just as major revelations of corruption began to surface. But Bahel did not end up in the job.
What happened?
One strong possibility is that Bahel is being targeted by at least some of the federal and U.N. investigators who are currently working their way through procurement, as part of an investigation announced by Secretary General Kofi Annan. But U.N. officials wont say. In a recent interview, the U.N.s new under-secretary for management, Christopher Burnham, noted that the United Nations does not disclose names when it is carrying out an investigation of its personnel.
(Story continues below)
http://tinyurl.com/yn3xwl
Did he forget to pass along 10% to Kofi?
GET OUT!!
(shoves CubaninMiami backwards)
I think you misunderstood this whole thing. Obviously it was just a botched joke about President Bush. ;-)
clearly a Haliburtonian plot... Rovvvvee!