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UN official(Cypriot) solicited oil deal from Iraq - report

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UN official(Cypriot) solicited oil deal from Iraq - report

Postby insan » Fri Feb 04, 2005 2:36 pm

UN official solicited oil deal from Iraq - report
04 February 2005

UNITED NATIONS: A senior UN official solicited and received allocations of oil from Iraq for a trading company while he was directing the UN oil-for-food programme, a key investigative report says.


The official, Benon Sevan of Cyprus, engaged in conduct that was "ethically improper and seriously undermined the integrity of the United Nations," said the report by Paul Volcker, the former US Federal Reserve chairman.

Volcker was appointed by the United Nations to lead a probe of the now-defunct $US67 billion ($NZ95.6 billion) programme and yesterday gave an interim report. The final analysis is expected in June.

The report did not say that Sevan received bribes but mentioned that he got $US160,000 in cash from 1999 to 2003 from his aunt in Cyprus, who has now died. The report said the aunt's lifestyle did not suggest wealth.


http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3177826a12,00.html



Now we've lernt who was that corrupt man in UN which caused many Cypriots to distrust Annan. ;)


Pantelis must have somethings to say about this.
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Postby brother » Fri Feb 04, 2005 2:46 pm

Naughty..naughty boy
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Postby insan » Fri Feb 04, 2005 2:53 pm

UN oil-for-food chief took Saddam bribes





04 February 2005 07:21

The United Nations suffered grave damage to its international reputation on Thursday after it emerged that the official who headed the oil-for-food programme for Iraq sought and obtained bribes from Saddam Hussein's regime.

In a highly critical report, Benon Sevan was rebuked for actions which were "ethically improper and seriously undermined the integrity of the UN".

"This is a painful episode for everyone in the UN," said the head of the investigation, former US Federal Reserve chief Paul Volcker.

He went on to accuse Sevan of offering to use his influence at the UN in return for the granting of vouchers to purchase Iraqi oil at favourable prices on behalf of a small Panamanian-registered firm. " Sevan created a grave and continuing conflict of interest," he said.

Sevan, a Cypriot who has spent 40 years as a career diplomat at the UN, has denied wrongdoing.


http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?ar ... eid=196801
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Postby insan » Fri Feb 04, 2005 3:02 pm

Annan "shocked" at report on UN's Iraq oil programme



UN Secretary General Kofi Annan was "shocked" by an independent enquiry that found unethical behaviour by the official who ran the oil-for-food programme in Iraq, his chief of staff said.

The enquiry said the official, Benon Sevan, solicited allocations of Iraqi oil from the Baghdad regime of Saddam Hussein and had got questionable cash payments but stopped short of saying he had taken bribes.

Mark Malloch Brown, Annan's chief of staff, said disciplinary proceedings had been started against Sevan, although it was unclear what measures could be taken because Sevan has already resigned from the United Nations.

"The secretary general is shocked by what the report has to say about Mr Sevan, terribly dismayed that a colleague of so many years' standing is accused of breaching the UN code of conduct and staff rules in the way he did," Malloch Brown told reporters.

"He very much doubts there can be any extenuating circumstances to explain the behaviour which appears proven in the report," Malloch Brown said.



http://sg.news.yahoo.com/050203/1/3qbvx.html
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Postby insan » Fri Feb 04, 2005 4:05 pm

Perhaps Tassos paid Benon to undermine UN efforts and Annan Plan. A corrupt UN image helped Tassos to spread his propaganda to the extend of "paid traitors", "Anglo-American games.", "Partition plan sponsored by US puppet, UN" :lol: :lol:
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Postby insan » Fri Feb 04, 2005 4:59 pm

Who's behind oil-for-food scandal?
By Jude Wanniski



"It may be there is no scandal at all. Just another trick of the neo-conservatives to blow away anyone who gets in the way of their plans for a global empire"

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/ ... A8E469.htm
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Postby brother » Fri Feb 04, 2005 6:24 pm

Its very worrying when you find out the global power on the planet is abusing its position for its own plans at the expense of human lives.
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Postby insan » Sat Feb 05, 2005 6:05 pm

Iraqi oil brought these girls food-and the UN its biggest scandal
From: "Katia M. Peltekian" <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 04 Feb 2005 23:07:09 -0800 (PST)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Times (London)
February 4, 2005, Friday

Iraqi oil brought these girls food-and the UN its biggest scandal

by James Bone

The head of the $ 64 billion aid scheme is accused of conniving with
Saddam, James Bone reports from New York.

AN EXPLOSIVE report by the UN's own inquiry into the Oil-for-Food
scandal charged yesterday that the head of the programme secretly
received oil allocations from Saddam Hussein. The report also raised
questions about the role of relatives of the former UN
Secretary-General Boutros Boutros Ghali.

The revelations threw the UN into crisis by adding credence to
allegations of widespread corruption in the largest humanitarian
effort in the organisation's history.

The three-member commission of inquiry, led by Paul Volcker, the
former Chairman of the US Federal Reserve, accused Benon Sevan, the
head of the programme, of "a grave and continuing conflict of
interest" and said that it was "basically improper" for him to have
solicited oil allocations from Iraq.

"He was positioned to affect matters of substantial interest to the
Government of Iraq, and the Government of Iraq hoped that he would
act favourably in return for the allocations that he was granted,"
the report said.The panel also provided previously unknown details
about the part played by the brother-in-law and a cousin of Dr
Boutros Ghali.

The commission did not, however, answer questions about alleged
pay-offs to political leaders in Russia, France and other countries,
or offer a verdict about the role of Kofi Annan's son, Kojo.

The investigation found that Mr Sevan had requested and received
allocations of millions of barrels of oil on behalf of a
Panama-registered trading company called African Middle East
Petroleum Co (AMEP), owned by Dr Boutros Ghali's cousin Fakhry
Abdelnour.

The report stopped short of accusing Mr Sevan of having taken a
bribe, but it did report unexplained cash transfers of $ 160,000 that
he said came from an elderly aunt, who was a retired Cyprus
government photographer living on a modest pension until her death in
Nicosia last year. Mr Volcker's team said that Mr Sevan was "not
forthcoming" when he denied approaching Iraqi officials to request
oil allocations. Although Mr Sevan originally claimed that he had met
Dr Boutros Ghali's cousin only once, investigators found phone logs
of numerous conversations and even discovered two of Mr Abdelnour's
business cards in a search of his UN office.

Mr Sevan and Mr Adbelnour acknowledged having a friendship with Fred
Nadler, Dr Boutros Ghali's brother-in-law.

Mr Sevan said that he met Mr Nadler at UN receptions or meetings
where Dr Boutros Ghali spoke. Records show that Mr Sevan was in
"close contact on an almost weekly basis" with Mr Nadler from at
least 1998 until last year.

Mr Abdelnour described himself as a "good friend" of Mr Nadler and
said one of his uncles was the Nadler family lawyer.

"On multiple occasions, at key periods in the programme and in AMEP's
dealings with SOMO (Iraq's state oil marketing organisation), the
phone records show calls between the numbers for Mr Sevan and Mr
Nadler within a few minutes of calls between the numbers for Mr
Nadler and Mr Adbelnour," the report said.

The commission said it was continuing to investigate "the full scope
and nature of the involvement of Mr Sevan, Mr Abdelnour and other
individuals".

At a press conference, Mr Volcker said that Dr Boutros Ghali, who was
UN Secretary-General from 1991 to 1996, had been interviewed by
investigators on several occasions.

Responding to the report, Mr Sevan issued a statement yesterday
denying wrongdoing and asserting that he "never took a penny".

Mr Annan, the UN Secretary-General, reacted to what he called
"extremely troubling evidence of wrongdoing" by initiating
disciplinary proceedings against Mr Sevan, a retiree who continues to
serve the UN on a dollar-a-year contract.

Mr Annan also plans to discipline a UN official called Joseph
Stephanides, who is accused by the Volcker panel of shortcutting a
competitive bidding process to award a 1996 UN border inspection
contract to the British firm Lloyd's Register.

The UN chief reiterated his pledge to lift diplomatic immunity in the
event of any criminal charges against UN staff. "No one found to have
broken any laws will be shielded from prosecution," he said.

Mr Annan has himself been interviewed three times as part of the
commission's investigation of his son, Kojo, who was employed by a
Swiss company, Cotecna Inspection SA, that won a UN contract in Iraq.

Mr Volcker said that the investigation of Kojo Annan was well
advanced. Kofi Annan said that he awaited its outcome "with a clear
conscience".

The Volcker commission plans to issue an update on Kojo Annan soon
and to ready its final report by mid-summer.

Lacking subpoena power, Mr Volcker's team has been struggling to keep
up with rival congressional and criminal inquiries in the United
States.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan recently made a breakthrough in the
case when they secured a guilty plea and a promise of co-operation
from Samir Vincent, an Iraqi-American businessman who acted as a
go-between for Saddam and had been paid off by Iraq for a role in
drafting the original Oil-For-Food scheme so that it favoured Saddam.

THE KEY MEN

BENON SEVAN

A Cypriot of Armenian descent, Mr Sevan recently retired after a
four-decade career at the UN. He ran the Oil-For-Food programme
throughout its six-year existence, but stands accused of receiving
millions of barrels of "oil allocations" on behalf of a trading
company run by a cousin of the former UN Secretary-General Boutros
Boutros Ghali.

BOUTROS BOUTROS GHALI

A former Egyptian Foreign Office minister who served as UN
Secretary-General from 1991-96. Often outspoken, he fell out with the
United States and was vetoed for a second term. During his tenure,
the UN negotiated the terms of what was to become the Oil-For-Food
programme, including allowing Saddam Hussein to choose which
companies he did business with.

FAKHRY ABDELNOUR

An Egyptian cousin of Boutros Boutros Ghali, Mr Abdelnour is an
oil-trader based in Switzerland. He owns a Panama-based trading
company called African Middle East Petroleum (AMEP). According to the
report, Mr Abdelnour went to Iraq to handle "oil allocations" for Mr
Sevan. It accuses AMEP of lifting about 7.3 million barrels of oil at
a profit of more than $ 1.5 million.

FRED NADLER

The brother-in-law of Boutros Boutros Ghali and a friend of Mr Sevan
and Mr Abdelnour. Mr Nadler was related to Mr Boutros Ghali, a Copt,
through the former UN chief's Jewish wife, Leah, whose father owned
the Nadler sweets factory Alexandria. Mr Sevan said that he met Mr
Nadler at UN receptions at which Mr Boutros Ghali spoke. Mr Abdelnour
describes him as a "good friend".

One of Mr Abdelnour's uncles is the lawyer for the Nadler family. The
report describes Mr Nadler as "the likely intermediary between Mr
Sevan and Mr Abdelnour."


http://groong.usc.edu/news/msg102401.html
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Postby insan » Sun Feb 06, 2005 9:12 pm

Would you trust these men with $64bn of your cash? Of course not
By Mark Steyn
(Filed: 06/02/2005)

At tough times in my life, with the landlord tossing my clothes and record collection out on to the street, I could have used an aunt like Benon Sevan's. Asked to account for the appearance in his bank account of a certain $160,000, Mr Sevan, executive director of the UN Oil-for-Food programme, said it was a gift from his aunt. Lucky Sevan, eh? None of my aunts ever had that much of the folding stuff on tap.



And nor, it seems, did Mr Sevan's. She lived in a modest two-room flat back in Cyprus and her own bank accounts gave no indication of spare six-figure sums. Nonetheless, if a respected UN diplomat says he got 160,000 bucks from Auntie, we'll just have to take his word for it. Paul Volcker's committee of investigation did plan to ask the old lady to confirm her nephew's version of events, but, before they could, she fell down an elevator shaft and died.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main ... wstop.html
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Postby brother » Mon Feb 07, 2005 1:37 am

What a stroke of unluckiness, just when auntie would have cleared his name. :lol: :lol: :lol:
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