Buyers of Iraq U.N. Oil May Be Implicated
By SAM CAGE
http://www.appeal-democrat.com/articles/2005/02/06/ap/headlines/d88379a00.txt
GENEVA - Companies that bought Iraqi oil from traders who allegedly spent
billions of dollars to bribe Saddam Hussein for contracts under the U.N.
oil-for-food program now could be implicated in the vast web of corruption
uncovered in the investigation by former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker,
a Swiss criminal lawyer told The Associated Press on Sunday.
The alleged payoffs to win Iraqi contracts amounted to as much as $2.5
billion, Mark Pieth said in an AP interview.
"We are trying to find out who paid the surcharges eventually," said Pieth,
one of three commission members leading a probe into allegations of corruption
in the program. Volcker heads the investigation and issued an interim report
last week in New York. Pieth was interviewed by telephone in New York where he
joined Volcker for the release of the report.
The United Nations' oil-for-food program was its largest humanitarian aid
operation and ran from 1996 to 2003 when it ended. It was designed to allow
the former Iraqi government to sell limited amounts of oil in exchange for
humanitarian goods as an exemption from sanctions put in place in 1991 after
Saddam invaded Kuwait.
Pieth said companies that bought the oil from traders could face prosecution
or penalties if they were aware that the middlemen had paid illegal
surcharges, Pieth said.
"If the final buyer is aware of what is going on, they were in the role of
guarantor, knowing that they were involved in paying the surcharge," Pieth
said. "There is a risk to the end buyer."
Pieth said it would be up to national authorities to carry out any legal
proceedings against firms which paid illegal kickbacks. The Swiss State
Secretariat for Economic Affairs, which has already imposed a fine on a
Swiss-based firm for paying an illegal surcharge, has said it will investigate
the Iraqi dealings of several more trading firms, and punish any found to have
paid kickbacks.
Pieth said he was not now able to disclose names of any companies, but
insisted that investigators were certain some oil buyers had made illegal
payments and tried to circumvent U.N. sanctions.
Because so many companies were involved in the program, the investigators'
final report _ which is due to made public this summer _ will focus on naming
those who committed the most serious offences, Pieth said.
But investigators are still encountering some problems in obtaining records
from offshore tax havens, Pieth added.
"We're seeking help from places like Lebanon, Monaco, Jordan, Liechtenstein,"
Pieth said. "I'm very optimistic that we will get help from them, but the
difficulty is that we need help soon."
Volcker's panel will continue to look into allegations against Benon Sevan,
the director of the U.N. program, Pieth said. Sevan was singled out by Volcker
for the appearance of engaging in a conflict of interest.
Sevan solicited oil allocations from Iraq on behalf of an oil trading company,
Africa Middle East Petroleum, or AMEP, between 1998 and 2001, and it raised
concerns he may have received kickbacks for the help, the Volcker
investigators said.
"We are going to continue also on Mr. Sevan, especially on the money angles,"
Pieth said. "We believed the general public needed some information on what
we're doing."
AMEP president Fakhry Abdelnour told the investigation that he paid an illegal
surcharge of $160,000 to an Iraqi-controlled bank account in Jordan in October
2001, using some of the proceeds he had received from the sale of oil to the
Royal Dutch/Shell Group.
Shell has denied knowing that Sevan was involved or of the payment of
kickbacks on any Iraqi oil it purchased.
Pieth also said the Volcker panel will investigate potential improprieties
committed by other United Nations officials.
"It's not just Benon Sevan," he said.
Regarding the employment of U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan's son by the
Swiss firm Cotecna Inspection SA, Pieth said the only issue was whether there
had been a "conflict of interest."
Cotecna had a U.N. contract to certify deals for humanitarian supplies
imported by Iraq under the oil-for-food program. The company is under
investigation in connection with suspected corruption.
Annan's son Kojo worked for Cotecna until 1998 and received $30,000 a year for
over five years after that from the Geneva-based company. The United Nations
hired the company on Dec. 31, 1998 to certify that food, medicine and other
goods entering Iraq corresponded to a list of goods approved for import under
the oil-for-food rules.
"There are certainly allegations, and we're certainly looking into them,"
Pieth said. "There's a potential conflict of interest, that's why we're
looking at him and his father."
=========================
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==========================
The following are contact points for the Independent Inquiry Committee into
the Oil for Food Programme:
General Inquiries:
Telephone: +1-212-842-2500
Fax: +1-212-842-2555
Email: info@iic-offp.org
Media Inquiries:
Mike Holtzman
Telephone: +1-212-486-7186
Toll Free: +1-866-486-7186
Fax: +1-212-486-7091
Email: media@iic-offp.org
IIC Hotline:
If you have information regarding the United Nations Oil-for-Food Programme,
which you would like to share with the Independent Inquiry Committee, you can
also call the IIC Hotline:
Toll Free: +1-877-442-3500
http://www.iic-offp.org/contact.htm
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