Saddam, politicians, kickbacks & the $4.4bn UN Oil-for-Food scandal

The Times (London)
April 23, 2004, Friday

Saddam, the politicians, the kickbacks and the $ 4.4bn UN
Oil-for-Food scandal

by James Bone in New York

Investigations are under way to expose how the Iraqi dictator bought
influence around the world and broke sanctions, writes James Bone in
New York

Simultaneous investigations of the now-defunct United Nations
Oil-for-Food programme aim to expose how Saddam Hussein used Iraq’s
vast oil wealth to buy political influence around the world.

The Iraqi Governing Council, the US Congress and an independent panel
established by the UN have started to investigate allegations that
Saddam’s regime used oil to bribe politicians, political parties,
journalists and a leading UN official.

The inquiries are also examining Saddam’s system of kickbacks, which
he used to break sanctions, fund his military and sustain his regime.

The scale of the alleged corruption is staggering. The investigative
arm of the US Congress estimates that Saddam earned $ 4.4 billion
(£2.59 billion) in illegal “surcharges” and “after sale service fees”
on contracts overseen by the UN. Individual bribes allegedly ran into
millions of dollars.

The scandal has created an atmosphere of dread at the UN, which ran
the Oil for- Food scheme, just as the world organisation prepares to
play a larger role in the political transition in Iraq. But the
allegations have also sent shockwaves around the world because
hundreds of prominent figures in two dozen countries stand accused.

The fall of Saddam has made available a treasure trove of documents
that contain some of Iraq’s most closely guarded secrets. Few have
been made public, but coalition officials have taken steps to secure
the evidence.

The UN Oil-for-Food scheme was the largest UN humanitarian programme
in the organisation’s history, handling a total of $ 64 billion worth
of Iraqi crude from December 1996 until it was wound up last year.

The programme was established after the first Gulf War to mitigate
the effects of the UN economic embargo imposed after the 1990
invasion of Kuwait.

Britain and the United States played a leading role in its creation
because governments did not want to be accused of starving the Iraqi
people. At times, both powers had to bend to pressure from other
countries to turn a blind eye to corruption and mismanagement so that
Iraq continued to co-operate with the scheme.

The UN exercised oversight through its control of Iraqi oil revenues.
Money generated from approved Iraqi oil sales was deposited in a UN
escrow account. The UN then released funds to pay for approved
imports of food, medicine and other humanitarian supplies.

The oil price was set by a panel of UN “oil overseers” and all
contracts approved by the UN Security Council’s 15-member sanctions
sub-committee, operating by consensus so that any single member could
block a decision. But Iraq found ways to circumvent the UN
monitoring, enabling it to demand billions of dollars in kickbacks.

The first weakness of the UN system was the mechanism to set the oil
price.

Although there were originally three oil overseers, retirements and
resignations reduced this number to one -a relatively young former
Russian insurance executive. For more than a year, Russia blocked the
appointment of new overseers to replace those who had left.

Until late 2000, the UN’s price for Iraqi oil was set at the start of
each month.

That allowed Iraq to time its sales to exploit the ups and downs of
the world oil market.

A higher world price meant a higher margin over the price set by the
UN, allowing it a greater profit, which Iraq could then demand be
kicked back to Baghdad.

Congressional investigators estimate that Iraq levied an illegal
“surcharge” of between 10 cents and 35 cents a barrel on crude
shipped under the Oil-for-Food programme.

Iraq also made money by demanding kickbacks on contracts to supply it
with humanitarian goods under the UN scheme. US officials say that
the customary kickback was 10 per cent. A vendor selling Iraq $ 100
(£56) of goods would notify the UN that the shipment was worth $ 110
and give the $ 10 to Iraq.

The money generated was deposited in front companies, bank accounts
or Iraqi embassies abroad and transported back to Iraq as cash. But
some was also used to rebuild Iraq’s military and buy prohibited
equipment abroad.

Charles Duelfer, the former UN inspector who is leading the CIA
search for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, told Congress last
month that Iraq funnelled Oil-for-Food money to the Military
Industrialisation Commission (MIC), which worked with the Iraqi
intelligence service to set up front companies overseas to procure
arms. The MIC budget increased nearly a hundred-fold from 1996 to
2003, totalling $ 500 million last year alone.

Iraq’s demands for kickbacks were long known to British and US
officials, who tried to fix the UN system to counter them.
Eventually, Russia allowed the replacement of the departed “oil
overseers” and the sanctions subcommittee changed to “retroactive
pricing” to cut Iraq’s possible margin on oil sales.

But what has really ignited the scandal was the publication by the
Iraqi al Mada newspaper in January of a list of 270 politicians,
journalists, businessmen and even a UN official who were allegedly
given “vouchers” to buy Iraq oil.

There are some doubts about the veracity of the list, but it
nevertheless includes powerful figures in key UN powers, such as
Russia and France, as well as a range of Middle Eastern countries.
Among the alleged recipients are the Russian Peace and Unity Party of
President Putin, as well as the Russian Communist Party and companies
linked to the party of Vladimir Zhirinovsky, a Russian nationalist.

Charles Pasqua, the former French Interior Minister, and a former
French ambassador to the UN are also on the al-Mada list. Also named
was President Megawati of Indonesia, who is said to have received one
million barrels as “the daughter of President Sukarno”, and one
million barrels as Megawati.

Recipients of oil “vouchers” did not have to trade the oil
themselves. They could merely sell the vouchers to oil traders for 10
to 30 cents a barrel.

A good example of how the system was used to peddle influence is the
case of Shakir Khafaji, one of two Iraqi-American businessmen on the
list. Mr Khafaji admitted to the Financial Times last week that he
had been awarded oil allocations by the Saddam regime, and sold them
to an Italian firm on his family’s behalf. It was Mr Khafaji who
provided $ 400,000 to fund an anti-sanctions documentary by Scott
Ritter, the former UN weapons inspector.

The UN’s own investigation, led by Paul Volcker, the former Federal
Reserve chairman, is focusing initially on allegations against Benon
Sevan, the Cypriot Armenian UN official who ran the Oil-for-Food
programme.

A “Mr Sevan” who appeared on the al-Mada list was allegedly allocated
14.3 million barrels of crude, of which 7.291 million were actually
“lifted”.

But Mr Sevan, who has been asked to postpone his retirement while the
investigation is conducted, has denied the charge. “I should like to
state that there is absolutely no substance to the allegations made
in a local Iraqi newspaper…that I had received oil or oil moneys
from the former Iraqi regime,” he said.

The ABC television network reported this week, citing US and European
intelligence services, that three unnamed UN officials had taken
bribes from Saddam.

“The UN Oil-for-Food programme provided Saddam Hussein and his
corrupt and evil regime with a convenient vehicle through which he
bought support internationally by bribing political parties,
companies, journalists and other individuals of influence,” Claude
Hankes-Drielsma, a British consultant for the Iraqi Governing
Council, told Congress this week.

“This secured the co-operation and support of countries that included
members of the Security Council of the UN.”

Armenian parliament speaker invites opposition to talk

Associated Press Worldstream
April 23, 2004 Friday 3:43 PM Eastern Time

Armenian parliament speaker invites opposition to talk, says refusal
could worsen country’s tensions

YEREVAN, Armenia

The speaker of Armenia’s parliament on Friday called on opposition
representatives to meet with him next week in hopes of diminishing
the country’s tension and avoiding violence.

Artur Bagdasarian indicated that if the opposition refuses the offer,
Armenian authorities will take a tougher stance against the protest
rallies that the opposition has convened several times a week this
month in the capital.

In the event of a refusal to talk, “it could be considered, with
regret, that Armenia is rejecting democratic values in that the
authorities will be forced to use its resources of power,”
Bagdasarian said.

Police forcefully broke up a rally outside the presidential palace on
April 13, detaining more than 100 protesters and reportedly causing
injuries.

The opposition on Friday meanwhile called for a rally on Tuesday that
its leaders say will be “vast and decisive.”

The opposition rallies have focused on calling for President Robert
Kocharian’s resignation.

Kocharian won a second term in presidential elections a year ago that
sparked mass protests, including nearly daily demonstrations between
the first round and the runoff.

Opposition groups alleged widespread violations in both rounds of the
election, which was followed by a parliamentary ballot in which the
pro-government party won the most votes.

Also Friday, police reported that a dual Armenian-US citizen, Artur
Bardanian, had been arrested on charges including action to
forcefully seize state power. Bardanian was an active supporter of
Stepan Demirchian, the main opponent of Kocharian in last year’s
election.

Fast for Armenia marks inaugural international charity fast

PRESS RELEASE
Fast for Armenia
PO Box 19354
Stanford, CA 94309
Contact: Chris Guzelian
Tel: 650-725-9325
web:

April 23, 2004
Stanford, California

Tomorrow, April 24th, thousands of Armenians and their friends will
take part in the first annual Genocide Remembrance Day fast directed by
the new nonprofit organization Fast for Armenia
() from sunup to sundown in commemoration of the
Armenian Genocide. Simultaneously, these fasters are donating those
funds they would have otherwise spent on food toward one of two rural
Armenian charity projects. The theme of this year’s Fast is “Children
of Armenia,” and two ongoing, proven charity projects that will be
financial beneficiaries:

The MODEL VILLAGE PROJECT, directed by the Children of Armenia Fund
(COAF; ), a nonprofit 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization,
is completely modernizing Karakert, an agricultural village on the
Turkish border. Karakert has schools without functional plumbing or
heat, complete unemployment, and impassable roads. Most of the
village’s 5,000 citizens, of whom 1,200 are children, do not even have
access to clean drinking water.

The TEXTBOOK PROJECT is delivering textbooks and maps to
schoolchildren in Karakert and other rural Armenian regions. Few, if
any, of these children have access to textbooks. $10 alone is
estimated to be adequate to provide a rural Armenian child with access
to all necessary textbooks for an entire year.

Fast for Armenia was founded by two Stanford University graduate
students and the Stanford University Armenian Students Association,
and has widespread, grassroots support for its nonpartisan, effective
charitable mission. To learn more about Fast for Armenia’s 2004
projects, how to participate in the fast, or how to donate or engage in
the volunteer effort, visit

http://www.fastforarmenia.org.
www.fastforarmenia.org
www.fastforarmenia.org
www.coafkids.org

HH Aram I urges international action to prevent future genocide

Associated Press Worldstream
April 23, 2004 Friday 7:06 AM Eastern Time

Armenian spiritual leader urges international action to prevent
future genocide

by JOSEPH PANOSSIAN; Associated Press Writer

ANTELIAS, Lebanon

Commemorating the early 20th century death of hundreds of thousands
of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey, the spiritual leader of about 2
million survivors and their descendants on Friday urged international
action to prevent future genocide.

Aram I, head of the Armenian Orthodox Church in the diaspora, said
the world should impose economic sanctions, “and in extreme
situations, engage in humanitarian intervention” to stop mass
killings.

“These are the most efficient ways of preventing genocide,” he told a
two-day conference organized by his church.

Speaking at the opening session of the conference on Thursday, Aram I
also announced the establishment of an International Center for
Dialogue, Peace and Human Rights, to be based at his seat in the
northern Beirut suburb of Antelias.

The International Conference on Genocide, Impunity and Justice
brought together Lebanese Cabinet ministers, lawmakers, religious
leaders from other sects and foreign scholars and diplomats.

Speakers focused on the inadequacy of existing international criminal
laws in dealing with mass killings, which mostly go unpunished. The
speakers included U.N. human rights and world court officials, as
well as a presidential representative from Rwanda, where the world’s
latest genocide a decade ago killed nearly 800,000 people.

Armenians say they lost 1.5 million people in 1915-23 as Ottoman
Turkish authorities deported entire communities from various
provinces. Turkey says the number of deaths was fewer, and that they
resulted from civil unrest.

Starting Friday, Armenians around the globe mark the anniversary of
the start of the killings with marches, torch parades, sit-ins,
lectures and vigils.

But in Lebanon for the second consecutive year, such public
manifestations by the vibrant Armenian community of nearly 100,000
were canceled because of the conflict in Iraq and the Palestinian
territories. Only a candlelit vigil will be held Friday at the seat
of the Armenian Orthodox Catholicosate in Antelias.

Armenians have been trying for decades to gain recognition of the
mass killings in Turkey as the 20th century’s first genocide. Turkey
has repeatedly opposed the measure.

Canada on Wednesday became the 16th country to label the killings as
genocide when its parliament backed a resolution 153-68 condemning
the actions of the Ottoman Turkish forces as a “crime against
humanity.” Turkey protested the Canadian vote.

Switzerland, France, Argentina and Russia – as well as 11 U.S. state
governments – have also called the killings genocide, and Armenians
are lobbying for similar action from the U.S. government.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian rights champ describes attack on himself as “state terror”

Armenian rights champion describes attack on himself as “state terror”

Mediamax news agency, Yerevan
23 Apr 04

YEREVAN

The chairman of the Armenian Helsinki Association, Mikael Danielyan,
said in Yerevan today that he regarded the recent attack on himself as
a manifestation of “state terror directed against the activities of
our organization”.

On the morning of 30 March, unknown people beat Danielyan up outside
his house. On 31 March Armenian President Robert Kocharyan instructed
Prosecutor-General Agvan Ovsepyan to examine all circumstances
regarding the attack on Danielyan and hunt down the perpetrators.

Danielyan told a briefing in Yerevan that Kocharyan’s directive “was
still in the air”. According to Danielyan, “it is no coincidence that
the Prosecutor-General’s Office is taking this case superficially
because the incident was a state directive”.

Danielyan said that “the Armenian authorities do not want to change
their approach to the protection of human rights and do not honour
their international commitments”.

Georgian authorities dismantle Armenian “genocide” monument

Georgian authorities dismantle Armenian “genocide” monument – agency

Arminfo, Yerevan
23 Apr 04

AKHALKALAKI

At about 2100 local time [1600 gmt] yesterday, employees of the
regional police of the town of Akhaltsikhe dismantled a khachkar
[cross-stone], which had been installed on top of a hill in the
vicinity of the town. According to A-Info news agency, the khachkar
was installed to commemorate the victims of the 1915 Armenian genocide
in Ottoman Turkey. A solemn ceremony to unveil it was to be held on
the genocide day – 24 April.

According to the report, before dismantling the khachkar, the
policemen detained the head of the organizational committee for
installing the khachkar, Lyudvig Petrosyan, and set him free after
holding him at the police station for four hours. According to
Petrosyan, the khachkar was dismantled on direct orders from the
Georgian president’s plenipotentiary representative in the
Samtskhe-Javakheti region, Nikoloz Nikolozashvili, “in connection with
the absence of permission to install it”. However, Petrosyan insists
that the Akhaltsikhe mayor’s office had earlier given permission to
install the khachkar.

Akhaltsikhe residents are planning to hold a protest rally on 23 April
in connection with the incident, A-Info news agency reports.

Protesters in Armenian capital condemn attack on politician

Protesters in Armenian capital condemn attack on politician

Noyan Tapan news agency
23 Apr 04

YEREVAN

Representatives of over a dozen human rights, youth and educational
public organizations staged a protest action outside the office of the
Forum of Intellectuals between 1300 and 1400 [0800-0900 gmt] on 23
April. Ashot Manucharyan, a member of the political council of the
Armenian Socialist Forces and the Union of Intellectuals, was brutally
beaten up outside the office yesterday [22 April].

The protesters condemned the act of violence and demanded that the
organizers and perpetrators be unmasked and punished. “If
law-enforcement agencies do not begin fulfilling their direct duties,
we consider it our duty to draw the public’s attention to the problem
of permanent violence through persistent actions and achieve the
restoration of justice,” the youth representatives said.

“This country is for all the citizens, not just for a group of people
who will decide who should be beaten today and who tomorrow. Until a
crime is not solved, this will continue,” the chairman of the Uys
(Hope) organization, Karen Akopyan, said.

US citizen arrested in Armenia for participating in opposition ralli

US citizen arrested in Armenia for participating in opposition rallies

Noyan Tapan news agency
23 Apr 04

YEREVAN

US citizen Artur Vardanyan was arrested on 22 April on suspicion of
committing crimes under Article 300 (misappropriation of state power)
and Article 329 (illegal crossing of the state border) of the Armenian
Criminal Code.

According to a report received from the press service of the Armenian
Prosecutor-General’s Office on 23 April, “the active participant in
rallies, Vardanyan” was summoned to the Prosecutor-General’s Office on
22 April as a witness to testify about insults against representatives
of the authorities, as well as about public calls and actions directed
at the forcible seizure of state and constitutional power.

During the interrogation, it was discovered that Vardanyan, who has
been living in the USA since 1991 and has been a citizen of that
country since 2002, illegally crossed the state border several times,
using an Armenian passport. On 11 April, he arrived in Yerevan again,
“actively participated in opposition rallies and actions directed at
the forcible seizure of state power”. The Prosecutor-General’s Office
has informed the Armenian Foreign Ministry about these facts.

US envoy tries to be impartial in assessment of situation in Armenia

US envoy tries to be impartial in assessment of situation in Armenia – paper

Haykakan Zhamanak, Yerevan
23 Apr 04

Text of Hayk Gevorkyan report by Armenian newspaper Haykakan Zhamanak
on 23 April headlined “The ambassador tried to seem neutral”

US Ambassador to Armenia John Ordway held a regular news conference
yesterday. Naturally, its main theme was the domestic political
situation in Armenia after the 13 April events [opposition rally].

The keynote of the ambassador’s answers was that the events should
develop in a way that would rule out violence and ensure a
constructive dialogue between the authorities and the opposition.

“It is obvious that there are many different views regarding Armenia’s
future and those differences should be resolved only in a democratic
and civilized way, exclusively by means of political dialogue,” the
ambassador said.

However, his words concerning the dialogue were more directed to the
authorities: “It is very important that the authorities create a basis
for political discussions and the opposition takes part in these
discussions.” It was evident that it was a principled task for US
Ambassador to Armenia John Ordway not to make any statements
expressing a preference for either party. So, he noted several times
that actions of the authorities did not promote dialogue. The
ambassador asked a rhetorical question: is it realistic to wait for
the opposition to enter the dialogue when, for example, police starts
acting in front of their parties’ offices?

According to Ordway, it is no good if the parties think that they are
in a deadlock. He especially stressed that all the actions aimed at
coming out of the current situation should be decided “in Armenia and
by Armenians”.

He said that in the last 10 days he had had numerous meetings and
telephone talks with party leaders, including [Armenian President
Robert] Kocharyan. But he declined to specify the details of the
meeting with Kocharyan.

As for the recognition of the Armenian genocide by the USA, the
ambassador believes that the USA has not changed its position
regarding this issue. “But I am expecting that in two days we shall
have the US president’s statement dedicated to 24 April [marked in
Armenia as “genocide day”] and it will then be clear how he decides to
form our policy,” John Ordway said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Duma not to push Interior Ministry for probe into racial assault

Russian parliament not to push Interior Ministry for probe into racial
assault

Ekho Moskvy radio, Moscow
23 Apr 04

The State Duma has declined to forward to the Russian Interior
Ministry a request for an inquiry into skinheads’ assault against an
Armenian boy in Kostroma, [independent] Duma MP Vladimir Ryzhkov has
said.

The skinheads splashed petrol over the 11-year-old boy and set him
alight in Kostroma on 22 April.

Ryzhkov said that his proposal that the Interior Ministry should
provide the State Duma with the information on this crime and the
steps taken to detain and punish the culprits, quote – due to
technicalities had been voted on and the majority of the Duma, which
is the One Russia faction, has voted down this procedural request –
unquote.

In doing so, the State Duma showed that it sees nothing terrible in
crimes of this sort and is unwilling to demand that the Interior
Ministry take emergency steps to this effect, Ryzhkov said.