Oil-For-Food Chief Accused of Kickbacks
Former chief of the Oil-For-Food program Benon Sevan will be the first UN fall guy: Oil-For-Food Chief Accused of Kickbacks. (Hat tip: zulubaby.)
NEW YORK - Investigators probing claims of wrongdoing in the Iraq oil-for-food program accused its former chief, Benon Sevan, of corruption for taking illegal kickbacks and recommended his immunity be lifted for prosecution.
The investigators said a former U.N. procurement officer sought a bribe and should have his immunity lifted as well. Alexander Yakovlev also was accused of collecting nearly $1 million in kickbacks outside the oil-for-food program.
The third report by the Independent Inquiry Committee, led by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, was a new blow to the scandal-tainted $64 billion program. For the first time, it gave a motive for Sevan’s actions, saying his finances were “precarious” shortly before his alleged misdeeds.
Some critics have accused the United Nations of squandering millions — and even billions — of dollars in its mismanagement of the program. Yet Volcker’s team found that Sevan appeared to have received kickbacks of just $147,184 from December 1998 to January 2002.
The report touched briefly on U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and his son, Kojo. It said new e-mails suggesting Annan knew more than he said about his son’s involvement in the program raised questions that would be answered in the committee’s final report, expected in September.



