View Full Version : US and UK blamed for oil scandal


alphaxion
April 15th, 2005, 10:48 AM
US and UK blamed for oil scandal

Mr Annan has become embroiled in the oil-for-food scandal
The US and Britain are partly to blame for the scandal enveloping the UN oil-for-food programme, Secretary General Kofi Annan has said.
Former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein made billions of dollars smuggling oil in defiance of sanctions policed by the US and Britain, the UN chief said.

Mr Annan was recently criticised over his son's work with the programme.

A UK government minister told the BBC that an interim report had criticised the UN, not national governments.

The $60bn (£32bn) UN programme allowed Iraq to sell oil in order to buy civilian goods and ease the impact of UN sanctions.

The bulk of the money Saddam Hussein made out of smuggling was on the American and British watch

Kofi Annan
UN Secretary General
US Senate investigators have alleged that the Iraqi regime received some $4bn (£2.13bn) in illegal payments from oil companies involved in the programme.

The BBC's Michael Voss in New York says this figure is dwarfed by the $14bn (£7.5bn) that allegedly came from "sanctions-busting" - illegally selling oil to neighbouring states such as Jordan and Turkey.

Kickbacks

"The bulk of the money that Saddam [Hussein] made came out of smuggling outside the oil-for-food programme, and it was on the American and British watch," Mr Annan said.


Iraq made billions of dollars from illegal oil sales and bribes

"Possibly they were the ones who knew exactly what was going on, and that the countries themselves decided to close their eyes to smuggling to Turkey and Jordan because they were allies."

Oil shipments were openly sent from Iraq to Jordan and Turkey during the 1990s and were not intercepted, despite the US maintaining forces in the Gulf area.

Mr Annan partly excused the smuggling to Jordan and Turkey, accepting that countries not under sanctions had a right to be compensated for any loss of trading income.

Allegations of kickbacks and illegal trading under the oil-for-food programme are being investigated by an independent committee headed by former US Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker.

In two interim reports, the committee has questioned the ethical conduct of the programme's head, Benon Sevan, and the involvement of Mr Annan's son, Kojo Annan, in a company linked to the oil-for-food deals.

UK Foreign Office Minister Bill Rammell said the UK took "vigorous actions" to ensure that the sanctions regime was not undermined.

Pointing to the criticism of the UN in the two interim reports, he added: "I think the UN has to learn those lessons.

"I know Kofi Annan wants to do that and we want to work with him to achieve it."

On Thursday a Texan, a Briton and a Bulgarian were indicted for bribery.

Texan David Chalmers Jr, Bulgarian Ludmil Dionissiev and British oil trader John Irving are accused of paying bribes to Saddam Hussein's regime.

Zim Flyer
April 15th, 2005, 11:02 AM
Kofi Annan should sort his son and the UN out, something he is responsible for and has the power to achieve rather than criticise the UK and US.

Annan you are not in Ghana now - get it sorted and shup up trying to blaim everyone else.

DonQui
April 15th, 2005, 11:14 AM
Ahh, the usual bit of Anti-Americanism courtesy of the UN. I am a supporter to the UN, but honestly, there are times I almost (ALMOST being the operative word) agree with Bush's view of the UN: Fuck 'em!

Englishman
April 15th, 2005, 01:08 PM
So would the illegal smuggling of oil be grounds for war? What exactly can the US and UK do if they find oil smuggling? Ididn't htink the US and UK could do anything other than police the no fly zones?

gothicform
April 15th, 2005, 03:14 PM
the reports didnt criticise the uk and american govts because they were allowed to edit the reports to say what they wanted before they were published. a big long list of british firms breaking the sanctions were removed along with various american names, the company with the biggest deal with saddam was halliburton.

ReddAlert
April 16th, 2005, 01:56 AM
if I made a movie about the UN, I would cast Morgan Freeman as Kofi Annan.