Iraqi Port Weathers Danish Storm
by Lotte Folke Kaarsholm, Charlotte Aagaard and Osama
Al-Habahbeh, Special to CorpWatch
January 31st, 2006
http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=13196

-
photo:
cartoon by Khalil Bendib
http://www.corpwatch.org/img/original/Maersk.jpg
-

Khor az-Zubayr, a port in southern Iraq, did not seem
like a war prize when the Saddam Hussein's regime was
ousted in April 2003. Its waters were clogged with
ships wrecked in the Iran-Iraq war; it was much
smaller than the nearby port Umm Qasr; and much of it
was too shallow for ocean-going ships to navigate.

But Danish port operator and shipping giant
A.P.Moeller Maersk saw beyond the flaws. Maersk knew
that Khor az-Zubayr was one of just two outlets on
Iraq's short Gulf coastline that opens the country to
world trade. Across the wetlands that backed the port
town was a gigantic oil refinery with pipelines
leading straight to Khor az-Zubayr.

By May 2003, obscured by the fog of war, Maersk had
taken control of the port. There is no evidence on
whether this was legal or not but many have speculated
that the take-over was rigged to reward Denmark and
Maersk for their support of the United States invasion
of Iraq. What is known is that a senior Maersk
employee was also working for the government authority
that was in charge of the port at the time.

"Maersk had found themselves a jewel, if they could
get that port up and running," U.S. Ambassador Darrell
Trent told our reporting team in November 2005. Trent,
who had served under Presidents Nixon and Reagan, was
in charge of Iraq's transport ministry until the
summer of 2004.

"Lots of people were trying to make use of the chaotic
situation to get themselves lucrative contracts," said
Trent. "But Maersk were the most blatant of them all
and openly took advantage of the situation. (They)
presented us with a contract that had been signed by a
low-ranking officer of the U.S. military who had no
authorization to make such a deal."

He called the terms of the contract so favorable to
Maersk that it was "almost ridiculous." Maersk got 93
percent of all port fees plus almost $15,000 a day.

Shipping Giant

Maersk, Denmark's largest company, had positioned
itself well for that advantage. Starting in August
2002, Maersk's giant container ships had delivered a
third of all U.S. military equipment to the region, in
preparation for the invasion of Iraq.

The company had the connections, resources and
experience to develop the port: it owns large parts of
the Danish oil reservoirs in the North Sea, has very
close ties with the government as well as the Danish
royal family, and accounts for about 15 percent of the
Danish gross national product. Its global projects,
worth billions, include ports in China North Sea oil
fields, giant ships, and it controls much of the
world's container stock.

But Copenhagen remains Maersk's headquarters and
Denmark's membership in the "partnership of the
willing" has created close ties to Washington. On May
1, 2003, the same day President Bush declared an end
to the Iraq war, Danish ambassador in Damascus, Ole
Woehlers Olsen, was appointed as the governor and
regional chief of the American-led administration of
southern Iraq. Woehlers' appointment was widely seen
as payback for Denmark's participation in the U.S.
dominated coalition.

Maersk's claim on the port of Khor az-Zubayr soon
followed.

Spring 2003: Preperations, Then Chaos

Just when, how, or even if, Maersk took over the port
of Khor az-Zubayr is subject to much dispute. But
there is not much doubt that the giant shipping
company started jockeying for lucrative reconstruction
contracts well before Saddam Hussein's fall.

Maersk's Executive Vice President Knud Pontoppidan
told our reporting team that Maersk began managing the
port as early as May 2003. But Governor Ole Woehlers
Olsen, who was in charge of the area, said he was
"surprised" to hear Maersk's claim. "I myself did not
have the authority to sign such a contract but I
passed on the offer to Baghdad with my
recommendations," says Woehlers. When I left Iraq
again on July 18, Maersk's offer on the management of
the port had not yet made its way through the
bureaucracy in Baghdad.""

Summer 2003: The Contract

That June, while Woehlers was packing his bags in
Basra after an unusually short, three-month term as
governor, Ambassador Trent and his deputy, Frank
Willis, were arriving in Baghdad. For more than a
year, as part of Coalition Provisional Authority
(CPA), led by U.S. Ambassador Paul Bremer, Trent would
run Iraq's transport authority first as the de facto
transport minister in the U.S.-led administration,
then as the senior advisor to the U.S.-appointed
Transport Minister Benham Zayya Polis.

One of the first problems Trent encountered was a
complaint from Iraqi port employees in Khor az-Zubayr.
They charged that a Danish company, claiming CPA
authorization, was keeping them out of their
workplace.

Frank Willis said he couldn't believe his eyes when he
saw the Maersk contract. "The first thing that
surprised me was that it had not been signed by the
CPA. It was signed by a couple of low-ranking officers
that no one had heard of. It was very strange. They
certainly had no mandate to sign a contract like that.
It simply was not valid, and we made that clear to
Maersk soon after," said Willis, who took the document
to the CPA's lawyers.

But if the Americans were surprised by the contract,
they were aghast at its terms. "The contract gave
Maersk something like a monopoly in the port, and it
was binding for at least five years. We at the CPA
would never have signed an agreement like that. We
were responsible for the future of the Iraqi people,
and we would never have tied the country down for so
long or on such onerous terms even if we had had the
right to do so," Willis says.

Before long, the contract turned into a running joke
at CPA. "We would imagine the tall gentlemen from
Maersk stopping some random guy in a uniform and
having him sign the contract," Trent recalls. Willis
describes rumors "that CPA's regional chief in Basra
had given these guys a verbal authorization to sign.
Others said that one of the employees of CPA-Basra was
a former Maersk man and had secured the contract for
them."

It turns out that this version of events might be
close to the truth.

Allan Poul Rosenberg, a former employee of Maersk,
offered to help Woehlers with the administration of
southern Iraq in those early days of May 2003. Danish
sources describe Rosenberg as Maersk's "problem
crusher who speaks an entirely different and more
direct language than that usually spoken in Maersk's
corridors." Woehlers admitted that "certain
organizations and corporations lent employees to me,
among them ... Maersk. Allan Rosenberg arrived in
mid-May when I had been in Basra for a couple of
weeks," Woehlers said.

Initially Woehlers described Rosenberg as merely in
charge of personnel and having nothing to do with port
questions. When confronted with a document naming
Rosenberg as responsible for ports in the CPA,
Woehlers admitted that was the task for which he
originally hired Rosenberg.

Winter 2003-4: Communication Breakdown

By late summer 2003, the irregular arrangement was
causing consternation at the CPA. Frank Willis sent an
official letter to Maersk noting that the CPA wanted
to regularize the contract situation around the port.
A meeting in Baghdad was set for October, according to
Trent, but Maersk's management cancelled it at the
last minute, and then ignored all communications from
the transportation ministry.

Eventually, Trent's patience ran out. Toward the end
of 2003 he borrowed a helicopter from the British
forces and flew down to Khor az-Zubayr. By then
conditions were so dangerous that the helicopter
personnel refused to wait around the port while Trent
and his delegation had lunch with Maersk
representatives.

"The Maersk people told us at the time that they had
spent millions of dollars on the renovation of the
port," he says. Maersk assured Trent that it was
interested in getting things in order regarding the
contract, and a system for future communications was
set up.

That, however, was the last time the ambassador heard
from Maersk. The management in Khor az-Zubayr
systematically ignored all approaches by the CPA in
Baghdad while complaints about the corporation's
behavior kept coming in.

One reason might have been that the company was
overwhelmed by the size of the project. Maersk's port
director, Tony Maynard, says that Khor az-Zubayr was
larger than any other Maersk port and had the
potential to handle a million containers at a time.

Yet Trent says this still does not make sense. "I just
don't understand that a corporation with a good
reputation like theirs would behave like that with the
consent of their top management," he explains,
stressing his interest in signing a legal contract.
"We gave them every chance to regularize the agreement
in good faith but they ignored everything."

"All we could do was tell people that it was not true
when Maersk claimed they had the rights to the port.
We had our own disasters and emergencies to deal with
everywhere we looked. Maersk simply took advantage of
the chaos of war, and if they had been less greedy
about it they would have gotten away with it, too,"
says Frank Willis. Violence in Iraq was on the rise,
and CPA had trouble in all corners, including
internally: The coalition authorities were accused of
having spent far too much money and keeping too little
track of the reconstruction process. (Both Willis and
Trent put much of the blame on staff shortages.)

Spring 2004: Iraqis refuse Maersk Demands

In January 2004, when Maersk announced that it had
received a five-year contract to manage the port in
Khor az-Zubayr, the company's share value rose by over
four percent. The overall Danish KFX share index rose
5.5 percent that day, which several analysts
attributed to the new contracts.

Meanwhile, Ambassador Trent wondered why he was still
unable to get in touch with Maersk, but dropped the
matter when he returned to the U.S. in the summer of
2004.

If the Americans were content to ignore the port's
legal ambiguity and Maersk's profitable status, many
Iraqis weren't. Only four months after Maersk's
official January announcement, investors were
surprised when Mahmoud Salih Abdul-Nabi, the director
of Iraq's port authorities, made his own announcement:
Maersk did not have a monopoly on Khor az-Zubayr. The
Iraqis planned to invite bids for the ports of Khor
az-Zubayr and Umm Qasr as soon as they took over the
running of their country again.

A solicitation for new bids was announced on June 28,
2004, 13 days after Richard Nalwasky, a CPA official,
signed a four-month payment authorizing Maersk to keep
the port running until the Iraqis could decide on who
would win operating rights.

This team of reporters has obtained a copy of this
short-term agreement. In it the CPA agreed to pay
Maersk $1.87 million for the four months ending August
31, 2004. The document, which is numbered
DABV01-04-M-0101 and dated April 25, 2004, was signed
on June 15, 2004 by CPA's officer Richard M. Nalwasky
and Maersk's Middle East manager in Dubai, Hans Peter
Glipman.

Maersk's comments to the press took on a new, urbane,
tone saying the company hoped to bid on the contract.

Maersk was well aware that the Americans' access to
the rebuilding funds from Iraq's oil exports would be
cut off when they turned the country over to the
Iraqis on June 30th, 2004. From then on the Iraqis
themselves would control of the money as well as Khor
az-Zubayr's future.

The transition from U.S. to Iraqi control created
problems for Maersk. Iraq's vice transport minister
Nabil Atta, began negotiations soon after he was
appointed in April 2004 and continued them after Paul
Bremer's administration left.

"I told Maersk that we were prepared to give them the
port as a long-term investment but that these fees
were unacceptable. If they would equip and modernize
the port we would give them the rights to run it for
10-15 years," Atta explains. But Glipman continued
Maersk's demand for 93 percent of all port fees as
well as a daily payment of $15,000 and Atta sensed
growing resistance to the project itself.

"They were beginning to look for an excuse to get out
of Iraq," he says and explains that the local chief of
the port was "a very nervous kind of guy who kept
telling the headquarters that things were dangerous in
Iraq."

In early 2005 the excuse arrived. Iraq's new unions
for oil and port workers had been pressuring Maersk
for a long time. Among other things they wanted jobs
for the many workers laid off at Maersk's arrival. The
unions and the port authorities, just like the
Americans, tried to pressure Maersk into presenting a
valid contract, says Haidar Abdul Zahra, who is the
financial manager in UPW, the port workers' union.

"Maersk kept telling us that they had a valid contract
till the end of March 2005 but they refused to produce
it even though they were demanding thousands of
dollars from the port authorities for the operation
and securing of the port. They also refused to let me
and the port chief into our offices to work, and they
prohibited, all union activities in the port," Zahra
says.

The unionists were not the only people getting angry
with Maersk. Nationalist and religious leaders were
demanding an end to the occupation and the exit of the
multinational corporations from Iraq.

Several local newspapers accused Maersk of smuggling
oil and misusing the port among other things. Part of
the campaign targeted Maersk security chief Jacob
Bentsen, who called it a smear campaign. A former
Danish police sergeant deputy, Bentsen came to Iraq to
help train the officers preparing to become the core
of the future Iraqi police force. Instead, he hired on
as Maersk's head of security in the new port.

Toward the end of February 205, three of the port's
Iraqi employees were taken as hostages by an unknown
group. According to Al-Manarah, a Basra newspaper, the
hostage-takers were mostly interested in information
on Bentsen. After a short while the three were
released.

Today Bentsen says he doesn't know what to make of the
incident and finds it is strange that none of the
port's employees were kidnapped before, seeing that it
was impossible to protect people once they were
outside the port area.

March 2005: Last Person out, Turn off the Lights

A couple of days after the kidnapping, on March 1, the
situation between Maersk and local Iraqis grew
critical. Outside the port several hundred Iraqis
gathered to protest. Some were unionists denouncing
Maersk's treatment of former port workers and with the
fact that they were not allowed to organize present
employees. Others were nationalist Iraqis who wanted
multinational companies out of the country.

But among the protesters was the head of the
Iranian-supported Islamic organisation Tha'r Allah
(Revenge of Allah). Yusif al-Musawi is suspected of
masterminding the murder of several former members of
Saddam Hussein's Baath party, and on that day in
March, he had appeared along with his security guards
to make Maersk give up the port. The religious leader
requested a talk with Bentsen.

"Musawi wanted to talk to me. 'You are a Jewish spy
who should have been killed a long time ago,' he said.
'But we will let you live because we want you to be
our messenger,'" Bentsen recalls. "The situation was
very tense. Our security guards had their guns pointed
at Musawi's people and vice versa, while we were
talking through an interpreter." To avoid a direct
confrontation, Bentsen pulled his people back to a
safe area in the port.

"Maersk's management were in Kuwait at that point so
we called them and told them what was going on. At
night there were shootings in the port area between
different Iraqi groups and the Iraqi guards
disappeared one by one. I told them to. In the end I
myself was left in the central part of the port along
with two people from my staff. There was heavy
shooting between the various Iraqi groups, and looting
took place," he says.

By March 4, 2005, Maersk's Iraqi adventure was over.
"I was the last person to leave the port. I turned off
the lights and closed it off," says Bentsen who is now
back in Denmark as a high ranking official in the
police force.

Like the Iraqi unionists, deputy transport minister
Atta interprets Maersk's departure in a different way:
"It was a peaceful demonstration. Maersk had been
looking for an excuse to run off and they jumped at
it."

All that was left was an empty port, a pending
lawsuit, and anger on all sides.

Epilogue

Maersk's Executive Vice President Knud Pontoppidan has
refused to comment on Rosenberg, and declined requests
to be interviewed, name the signatories, or make any
of the contracts public. He referred our reporting
team to an August 2005 statement issued by Maersk's
Copenhagen communications department.

In it Pontoppidan's defends Maersk's financial
arrangement as necessary "because of the wish of the
port authorities to keep port fees at a minimum, which
could not cover expenses." But while confirming the
favorable terms, the letter carefully avoids any claim
that Maersk actually had a valid contract in 2003.

Rather, it simply asserts that the company began
managing the port "at the wish of the American
administration in Iraq." The word "contract" is
introduced only when referring to a later document:
"Maersk Iraq Limited signed a contract last year
[2004] with the American administration in Iraq for
the continued management of the port."

Former Iraqi deputy minister of transportation Nabil
Atta says: "Maersk ruined everything for themselves.
We were ready to give them a long-term contract for
the port but the Maersk people ... kept making demands
that were completely unreasonable."

Atta's opinion is shared by a number of the union
leaders. "Maersk behaved in an inhumane and
threatening manner towards workers who were
dissatisfied with their working conditions. Their
morals were beneath contempt," says Faraj Rabat
Mizbhan from GUOE, the Iraqi oil workers' union.

Former U.S. ambassador Darrell Trent's remains
bewildered. Why, he continues to wonder, would Maersk
never cooperate?

"Lots of people were trying to get their hands on
lucrative contracts in Iraq but Maersk was the company
that tried the most blatantly to take advantage of the
situation," says Trent.

Frank Willis agrees: "Maersk were their own worst
enemy. They were brazen, greedy, untruthful and
aggressive. Maersk is a company with a very good
reputation but they behaved like a colonial power and
tried to make use of the situation for their own
benefit," he says.

Allan Rosenberg and Hans Peter Glipman are back at
work for Maersk in Dubai. After his tenure as Danish
ambassador to Syria, Ole Woehlers Olsen took a job at
the Danish Institute for International Studies.

When the information on the mysterious contracts was
published in the Danish newspaper Information in
December 2005, opposition parliamentarians posed a
series of questions to Danish ministers, including
Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller, but no responses
have been forthcoming so far on the role of Woehlers
and other Danish authorities in giving Maersk access
to Khor az-Zubayr.

Maersk has since published a statement calling the
article "misleading" and claiming that Maersk always
"seeks to follow the rules." The company, however, has
refused to present documentation on its contracts at
the port. The company also refused to translate its
statements into English for this article, saying that
the statements were made for Danish readers only.

In January 2006, the Danish parliament renewed the
mandate for the Danish military presence in Iraq for
another six months

Iraqis now run the port of Khor az-Zubayr. The Iraqi
government lawsuit against Maersk was settled in
December 2005 with both sides agreeing not to pursue
each other. Maersk's Dubai office says the outgoing
Iraqi government signed a new agreement in late 2005
for the company to return to the port, but that the
company wants to wait until a new government takes
over, and proper security and international insurance
can be arranged.

Meanwhile Maersk had a record year in 2005, investing
$10 billion in companies, ships, and oil. It capped
off the year in December with a contract on Shanghai's
future megaport Yangshan which the world's largest
port.. Also in late December, Maersk became Qatar's
largest foreign oil producer when it signed a $5
billion oil exploration contract.

Kaarsholm and Aagaard write for Information, the
newspaper that printed the Danish version of this
article. Al-Habahbeh is Al Jazeera's correspondent in
Denmark.

http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=13196

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
http://mail.yahoo.com 




------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Join modern day disciples reach the disfigured and poor with hope and healing
http://us.click.yahoo.com/lMct6A/Vp3LAA/i1hLAA/TXWolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

***************************************************************************
{Invite (mankind, O Muhammad ) to the Way of your Lord (i.e. Islam) with wisdom 
(i.e. with the Divine Inspiration and the Qur'an) and fair preaching, and argue 
with them in a way that is better. Truly, your Lord knows best who has gone 
astray from His Path, and He is the Best Aware of those who are guided.} 
(Holy Quran-16:125)

{And who is better in speech than he who [says: "My Lord is Allah (believes in 
His Oneness)," and then stands straight (acts upon His Order), and] invites 
(men) to Allah's (Islamic Monotheism), and does righteous deeds, and says: "I 
am one of the Muslims."} (Holy Quran-41:33)
 
The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said: "By Allah, if 
Allah guides one person by you, it is better for you than the best types of 
camels." [al-Bukhaaree, Muslim] 

The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)  also said, "Whoever 
calls to guidance will have a reward similar to the reward of the one who 
follows him, without the reward of either of them being lessened at all." 
[Muslim, Ahmad, Aboo Daawood, an-Nasaa'ee, at-Tirmidhee, Ibn Maajah] 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

All views expressed herein belong to the individuals concerned and do not in 
any way reflect the official views of IslamCity unless sanctioned or approved 
otherwise. 

If your mailbox clogged with mails from IslamCity, you may wish to get a daily 
digest of emails by logging-on to http://www.yahoogroups.com to change your 
mail delivery settings or email the moderators at [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the 
title "change to daily digest".  
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/islamcity/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to