Dipping My Toes Into Politics

Thoughts on current events with great help from FoxNews and its fair and balanced journalists. This blog will focus mainly on the current Presidential election and the United Nations Oil-For-Food scandal. Occasional bouts of folly and conspiratorial fun will abound. Links to the original articles are provided in the main title of each post. FoxNews Oil-For-Food documents have been posted here in chronological order for further study and examination of the unfolding scandal.

Sunday, October 03, 2004

Links to Oil-For-Food Documents

Oil-For-Food Documnets


Application Form to Request Approval of Contract
1 page
pdf


2002.10.02
Letter from Benon V Sevan to UN Exec Director
1 page
pdf


2002.10.02
Letter from Lakia Import/Export to State Oil Marketing Org
1 page
pdf


2002.10.08
Letter from Mohammed A Aldou
1 page
pdf


2003.04.08
UN Audit on Oil-For-Food Program
23 pages
pdf


2003.04.08
UN Audit of Cotecna
23 pages
pdf


2004.04.02
Letters from Sevan to Cotecna
2 pages
pdf


2004.04.07
General Accountability Office Congressional Testimony
22 pages
pdf


2004.05.19
Letter from Rep Hyde to Kofi Annan
1 page
pdf


2004.09.11
The 9/11 Commission Report
585 pages
pdf


2003.09.12
Defense Contract Audit Agency
201 pages
pdf

Saddam ‘Bought UN Allies’ With Oil

October 03, 2004
Saddam ‘Bought UN Allies’ With Oil
Robert Winnett

A LEAKED report has exposed the extent of alleged corruption in the United Nations’ oil-for-food scheme in Iraq, identifying up to 200 individuals and companies that made profits running into hundreds of millions of pounds from it.
The report largely implicates France and Russia, whom Saddam Hussein targeted as he sought support on the UN Security Council before the Iraq war. Both countries were influential voices against UN-backed action.

A senior UN official responsible for the scheme is identified as a major beneficiary. The report, marked “highly confidential”, also finds that the private office of Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, profited from the cheap oil. Saddam’s regime awarded this oil during the run-up to the war when military action was being discussed at the UN.

The report was drawn up on behalf of the interim Iraqi government in preparation for a possible legal action against those who may have illicitly profited under Saddam. The Iraqis hired the London-based accountants KPMG and lawyers Freshfields to advise on future action.

It details a catalogue of alleged bribery and corruption perpetrated by Saddam under the UN programme, revealing how the regime lined its pockets and those of influential politicians, journalists and UN officials.

The UN oil-for-food scheme was set up in 1995 to allow Iraq to sell controlled amounts of oil to raise money for humanitarian supplies. However, the leaked report reveals Saddam systematically abused the scheme, using it to buy “political influence” throughout the world.

The former Iraqi regime was in effect free to “allocate” oil to whom it wished. Dozens of private individuals were given oil at knockdown prices. They were able to nominate recognised traders to buy the cheap oil from the Iraqi state oil firm and sell it for a personal profit.

The report says oil was given to key countries: “The regime gave priority to Russia, China and France. This was because they were permanent members of, and hence had the ability to influence decisions made by, the UN Security Council. The regime . . . allocated ‘private oil’ to individuals or political parties that sympathised in some way with the regime.”

The report also details how the regime benefited by arranging illegal “kickbacks” from oil sales.

From September 2000, it is said Saddam made $228m (£127m) from kickbacks deposited in accounts across the Middle East. The analysis details only the export of oil — not the import of humanitarian supplies, also alleged to have been riddled with corruption.

The report is an interim analysis and therefore studies only a sample of oil contracts.

The other main allegations included in the report are that:

Benon Sevan, director of the UN oil-for-food programme, received 9.3m barrels of oil from the regime which he is estimated to have sold for a profit of £670,000. Sevan has always denied any improper conduct.

A former senior aide to Putin allegedly organised the sale of almost 4m barrels of oil at a profit of more than £330,000. At the time the oil was sold, Russia was blocking the UN from supporting America’s demands to attack Iraq. According to the report, the aide, who worked in the presidential office, received 3.9m barrels of oil between May and December 2002.

In the two months during the run-up to the war, the Iraqi regime illegally sold about £30m of oil to a Jordanian-based company with the money deposited in a Jordanian bank account established by the regime. This is suspected to have been an attempt to secure safe passage for Saddam’s family in the event of war.

A French oil company teamed up with the regime to bribe a UN-appointed inspector monitoring exports of Iraqi oil. The inspector, a Portuguese national working for Saybolt, a Dutch firm, was paid a total of £58,000 in cash to forge export documents.

The French firm is linked to a close associate of Jacques Chirac, the country’s president. A spokesman for Saybolt said it would be investigating the allegations.



Saddam imposed a surcharge of between 10 cents and 50 cents (5p to 27p) for every barrel of oil allocated by his regime between September 2000 and the end of 2002.
The money raised from this illegal surcharge was deposited in bank accounts in Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq and the United Arab Emirates. Iraqi embassies, including those in Moscow, Athens, Cairo, Rome, Vienna and Geneva, collected the money.

In total, 175 firms and individuals allegedly paid bribes to secure oil from the regime. According to the report: “The only way of enforcing the surcharge was through verbal personal guarantees and promises due to the sensitivity of the surcharge and the secrecy surrounding its imposition. However, after extensive efforts in collecting these amounts, a total of $228m (£127m) out of $263m (£146m) was eventually collected (87% of the total imposed).

“Some companies were afraid to pay the amounts through the banking system, in order not to be exposed or face possible legal sanctions overseas, and therefore preferred to pay in cash.”

The report claims that Russians had a prominent role. They received “unprecedented priority” and were allocated a third of all Iraqi oil — most of which was resold to other nations. Besides Putin’s private office, those named as having received oil include political parties, Russian oil firms and the foreign ministry.

A section of the report on Russian involvement says Saddam and his henchmen furthered “their political and propagandist cause through companies, individuals and political parties that have no relation to the oil industry. Through their activities, they have gained the indebtedness of the Russian Federation and with that, its weight and leadership on the world stage as well as its permanent membership of the UN Security Council”.

Last week Claude Hankes-Drielsma, an Iraqi government adviser who worked on the investigation, confirmed the report as genuine. “The records demonstrate that the UN oil-for-food programme provided Saddam with a vehicle to buy support internationally by bribing political parties, companies, journalists and other individuals,” he said. “This shows the need for a complete review of the UN.”

Shays Leading Hearing Into U.N.'s Oil-For-Food Program



By DESMOND BUTLER
Associated Press Writer

October 3, 2004, 4:07 PM EDT

NEW YORK -- U.S. investigators working in parallel to a U.N.-commissioned probe into allegations of corruption in its oil-for-food program said they hope to use public hearings to lift a curtain of secrecy obscuring the United Nations' finances and management.

While congressional investigators have demanded for months that the head of the independent U.N. inquiry, former Fed chairman Paul Volcker, release records from internal U.N audits, they now say they will use the probe to push for more openness and broader U.N. reform.

"Democratic institutions only work when their work is done in front of the public eye. I'm a huge supporter of the U.N., but they must become more transparent," Rep. Christopher Shays, R-Conn., who is conducting one of the hearings, said in a statement to The Associated Press.

Shays has scheduled a hearing Tuesday in Washington, partly to answer questions about whether European companies hired by the United Nations to audit and certify business deals carried out under the oil-for-food program may have overlooked corruption. Shays chairs the House Committee on Government Reform's Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats and International Relations, one of four congressional panels investigating oil-for-food.

The oil-for-food program, which ran from 1996 to 2003, was created to permit the former Iraqi government under Saddam Hussein to sell limited amounts of oil in exchange for humanitarian goods as an exemption from sanctions in place since the Gulf War ended in 1991.

The hearings also will examine questions of whether profiteering at the oil-for-food program influenced members of the U.N. Security Council _ including France, Russia and China _ on votes concerning Iraq, Shays' office said.

"As the program developed, it became increasingly apparent the French, Russian, and Chinese had much to gain from maintaining the status quo," the committee staff said in a briefing memo on the hearing released Friday. "Their businesses made billions of dollars through their involvement with the Hussein regime and the OFFP," referring to the oil-for-food program.

Shays said the program should have received closer oversight so it would have been "a successful humanitarian program and not a multibillion-dollar sanctions-busting scheme."

"There has to be a full accounting of all oil-for-food transactions, even if that unaccustomed degree of transparency embarrasses some members of the Security Council," he said.

A U.N. spokesman declined to respond to calls for broader reform of internal U.N. policies and referred questions about oil-for-food-related documents to Volcker's staff.

"There is an independent inquiry chaired by Paul Volcker and we believe they are the ones who should receive all of the relevant information," spokesman Farhan Haq said. "It is up to Mr. Volcker and his inquiry to decide how the information should be disseminated."

A message left with the independent inquiry's staff was not returned.

U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan appointed Volcker in April to head a three-member panel looking into allegations of corruption at the world body. Volcker said in August that his investigation would maintain exclusive access over U.N. documents for now.

Congressional investigators have expressed particular interest in 55 internal audit reports produced by the Office of Internal Oversight Services, the U.N. watchdog agency responsible for monitoring the oil-for-food program.

Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill., who chairs one of the other investigating panels at the House International Relations Committee, wrote to Annan in May asking for the reports but was rebuffed. He also met with Volcker in June and reiterated the request.

After Annan began his first term in 1997, he put through a series of reforms partially in response to demands from Congress, which had been withholding U.S. funding to the United Nations. Prior to that, the Office of Internal Oversight Services was created in 1994.

Now, lawmakers say they ought to have greater access to U.N. internal reports.

"The U.N. has become a Bermuda Triangle for the truth about corruption allegations surrounding the oil-for-food program," Hyde told AP in a statement. "The failure to publicly release audit reports _ even to member nations _ reveals an absence of the most elementary principle of accountability so essential in a functioning democracy."

A spokesman for Annan said the U.N. chief had repeatedly called for transparency.

"Transparency is the only way to deal with such allegations, and by far the best way to prevent corruption from happening in the first place," Annan said in April.

An April report by the General Accounting Office, now called the Government Accountability Office, estimated that the Iraqi government skimmed $4.4 billion through oil-for-food program kickbacks and another $5.7 billion through oil smuggling.

Investigators are probing allegations that several hundred companies and individuals from more than 50 countries may have profited through illicit oil-for-food deals, including prominent politicians from France, Russia, Britain, Indonesia and Gulf states and the program's executive director, Benon Sevan, who has denied wrongdoing.

Critics also have alleged that the Iraqi government, which had the authority under the program to approve deals to sell oil and to import humanitarian goods with the proceeds, manipulated prices to afford kickbacks from those awarded contracts.

UN Office of the Iraq Programme - Oil-For-Food


The Official Website