Iraq
oil-for-food inquiry blasts Annan
March 28, 2005
- By Associated Press:
I nvestigators have criticised UN chief Kofi Annan for not sufficiently
taking cognisance of his son's employment in a Swiss company that
won a contract for the UN oil-for-food programme.
The report of the investigators scrutinising the oil-for-food programme
is set to be formally released on Tuesday.
An official said the report has found that the UN secretary-general
didn't pay enough attention to the apparent conflict of interest
involving his son, Kojo.
Kojo worked for Cotecna Inspection SA at a time the Swiss firm
won a UN contract to certify the import of goods under the oil-for-food
programme, the official said.
The Independent Inquiry Committee, headed by former US Federal
Reserve chairman Paul Volcker, has also criticised the secretary-general
for failing to detect shortcomings in the UN's internal bureaucracy
that allowed problems in the oil-for-food programme to continue
until 2003, the official said in New York on Monday, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
Cotecna payroll
Kojo Annan worked for Cotecna in West Africa from 1995 to December
1997 and then as a consultant until the end of 1998 - when the oil-for-food
contract was awarded.
He remained on the Cotecna payroll until 2004 on a contract to
prevent him from working for a competitor in Nigeria or Ghana.
Oil-for-food investigators have been seeking to verify the Swiss
firm's claims that it paid Kojo Annan about $365,000 over eight
years.
The secretary-general, his son, and Cotecna all deny any link between
Kojo Annan's employment and the awarding of the UN contract to the
company.
UN spokesman Fred Eckhard has said there will be no UN comment
until the report is formally released.
Source Link: http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/6036C458-F4B2-4BFC-882F-C5C36D0E5460.htm
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