<< Volcker is examining cash payments Sevan received between 1999 and 2003
amounting to $160,000. Sevan has filed U.N. financial disclosure forms
saying the money came from his aunt, who died last year after falling into
an elevator shaft.

"Her lifestyle did not suggest this to be so," the report said. "She was a
retired Cyprus government photographer living on a modest pension." >>

Washington Post
Conflicts Cited in Iraq Oil Program
U.N. Report Says Chief Undermined Sanctions
By Colum Lynch
Washington Post Staff Writer
February 4, 2005

UNITED NATIONS, Feb. 3 -- The former director of the U.N. oil-for-food
program had serious conflicts of interest that violated the integrity of the
world body and helped undermine economic sanctions against Iraq,
U.N.-appointed investigators reported Thursday.

Benon Sevan repeatedly sought -- and received -- from Iraqi officials the
rights to purchase millions of barrels of discounted oil while he was
running the program, and then misled investigators about his relationship
with an Egyptian national who sold those rights for $1.5 million in profits,
the inquiry found.

The findings are the first to come from a panel appointed by U.N. Secretary
General Kofi Annan to investigate allegations that the $64 billion
oil-for-food program was corrupt and mismanaged. Those allegations have led
to calls for Annan's resignation by some members of Congress and have
spurred probes by five congressional committees. Those, like the probe by
the United Nations, are continuing.

In its preliminary report Thursday, the U.N.-appointed panel, led by former
Federal Reserve chairman Paul A. Volcker, also said that former secretary
general Boutros Boutros-Ghali was one of a few U.N. officials who improperly
helped steer contracts related to the program to selected companies, and
that two of his relatives were involved in the sale of the oil allocated to
Sevan.

Annan announced that he will pursue "disciplinary proceedings" against Sevan
and another U.N. official, Joseph Stephanides, who allegedly helped the
British government circumvent the United Nations' competitive bidding
process to steer a contract to a British company. Stephanides did not
respond to a request for comment.

Annan said Volcker's report contains "extremely troubling evidence of
wrongdoing" by Sevan.

"Should any of the findings of the inquiry give rise to criminal charges,
the United Nations will cooperate with national law enforcement authorities
pursuing those charges, and in the interests of justice I will waive the
diplomatic immunity of the staff member concerned," Annan said.

Annan noted that he is awaiting a report by Volcker probing possible
wrongdoing by Annan's son, Kojo, who received $150,000 over a five-year
period from a Swiss company while it profited from the oil-for-food program.
The company maintains that Kojo Annan, who had been an employee, had nothing
to do with its work in Iraq and that the payments were part of a standard
agreement that would bar him from working for a competitor.

Sevan's attorney, Eric L. Lewis, said that "Mr. Sevan never took a penny"
from the program. Volcker's commission has "succumbed to massive political
pressure and now seeks to scapegoat" Sevan, Lewis said.

"Mr. Sevan's goal throughout the life of the program was to expedite the
pumping of oil in order to pay for urgently needed humanitarian supplies" in
Iraq, he said.

Some in Congress viewed Volcker's report as vindication of their criticism
of the organization. Rep. Henry J. Hyde (R-Ill.), chairman of the House
International Relations Committee, said the findings "reinforce evidence we
have developed detailing lapses in program oversight, management, fiscal
controls and an absence of even the most rudimentary standards of
accountability."

Sen. Richard G. Lugar (R-Ind.), chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee,
said that "part of the blame for the current imbroglio lies with the U.N."
but that "we must recognize that those nations who sat on the Security
Council . . . another during the life of the program -- and this includes
the United States -- must also answer questions as to why they, too, did not
pay greater scrutiny to this program."

The United Nations established the program in December 1996 to allow Iraq,
which had been put under U.N. sanctions after its 1990 invasion of Kuwait,
to buy food, medicine and other humanitarian goods.

The program helped ease the plight of millions of undernourished Iraqis, but
it also provided the Iraqi government with at least $2 billion in illicit
kickbacks and payoffs, according to a report last year by CIA adviser
Charles A. Duelfer. Volcker said that the government received far more in
illicit funds from unauthorized oil sales outside the oil-for-food program
to Jordan, Turkey, Syria and Egypt.

Volcker's report also said U.N. auditors had "inadequate" resources and
staff to conduct a proper investigation of the program, and it charged that
the United Nations violated its own competitive bidding practices in 1996
when it selected three companies -- BNP Paribas of France, Saybolt Eastern
Hemisphere BV of the Netherlands and Lloyd's Register Inspection Ltd. of
Britain -- to monitor Iraq's trade.

Boutros-Ghali, of Egypt, acting on the instructions of the Iraqi government,
helped steer a banking contract to hold Iraqi's oil revenues to BNP, the
report said. "When provided with the short list, he contacted the government
of Iraq and asked for its choice," the report said. "Apparently the
Government of Iraq indicated a preference for BNP, and the secretary general
acquiesced."

Boutros-Ghali could not be reached at a number in Paris provided by the
United Nations.

Volcker said the "most disturbing finding" is that Sevan solicited oil for a
small company headed by an Egyptian relative of Boutros-Ghali's. A
brother-in-law of Boutros-Ghali "was a likely intermediary" between the two
men, the report said.

Shortly after he was appointed to run the oil-for-food program in October
1997, Sevan championed an Iraqi initiative to allow Iraq to use its oil
profits to buy $300 million worth of spare parts to repair its oil
infrastructure. Two days after the U.N. Security Council adopted the
proposal in June 1998, Sevan traveled to Baghdad and asked Iraq's oil
minister, Amir Rashid, to grant an associate rights to buy discounted oil,
the report said.

The Iraqi government granted the oil company headed by the Boutros-Ghali
relative rights to buy 1.8 million barrels of oil, which were sold for a
profit of $300,000.

The report continued with the following account:

Sevan subsequently made a similar request, but the Iraqis cut the oil
allocation to 1 million barrels to express disappointment with his failure
to counter U.S. efforts to block the export of some spare parts.

Sevan returned to Iraq in the summer of 1999 with a fresh proposal to expand
the spare-parts arrangement. Within five days of his departure, Iraq
approved the rights to buy 2 million barrels of oil, which the oil company
sold for $500,000 in profits.

Volcker's team has not proved that Sevan received money from the company's
oil deals. Volcker is examining cash payments Sevan received between 1999
and 2003 amounting to $160,000. Sevan has filed U.N. financial disclosure
forms saying the money came from his aunt, who died last year after falling
into an elevator shaft.

"Her lifestyle did not suggest this to be so," the report said. "She was a
retired Cyprus government photographer living on a modest pension."

"Mr. Sevan placed himself in a grave and continuing conflict of interest
situation," the report concluded. "The Iraqi government, in providing such
allocations, certainly thought they were buying influence."

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