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Scandals Engulf the United Nations
by Thomas P. Kilgannon
It
is a scandal of major proportions and an historic breach of trust
by an institution which portends to be the world's best hope for
the advancement of human rights. Yet, the multi-billion dollar scandal
involving the United Nation's Oil-for-Food program is receiving
only scant attention from the media. That will change once investigations
by the UN, the Iraqi National Congress (INC) and the House International
Relations Committee commence. 
After
years of UN sanctions adversely affected the people of Iraq instead
of the intended target -- Saddam Hussein's regime -- the Oil-for-Food
program was implemented in 1995. Through it, the UN was entrusted
to sell Iraqi oil and use the proceeds to buy food and medicine
for Iraqis who were being starved and neglected under Saddam's rule.
Instead, humanitarian needs were ignored and the program -- either
through ineptness, corruption or both -- became a magnet for terrorists,
criminals, and people of ill repute of all stripes.
Charges
of corruption in the program lingered for years, but it wasn't until
the Iraqi newspaper, al Mada published a report two months ago exposing
the scam and listing 270 individuals, companies and former politicians
who were allegedly in on it, that anyone noticed.
Benon
Sevan, who ran the Oil-for-Food program, and reported to UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan, is among those believed to have profited from illegal
oil sales. Sevan has denied any wrongdoing. There have also been
questions raised about a possible conflict of interest involving
Kojo Annan and Cotecna, a Swiss firm which employed the Secretary-General's
son and which was contracted by the UN to do work on behalf of the
Oil-for-Food program. Kojo Annan has denied any conflict.
The
corruption of the Oil-for-Food program is immense. The General Accounting
Office reports that through a combination of smuggling and illegal
surcharges on oil sales, Saddam's regime stole over $10 billion
under the watchful eyes of UN managers. Last year, the Pentagon's
Defense Contract Audit Agency examined a sample of the Oil-for-Food
contracts and found nearly half of them were overpriced to the tune
of $656 million.
The
Iraqi Governing Council is conducting its own review of the program.
Kofi Annan has assented to an "independent" investigation,
and the U.S. Congress will hold hearings in April.
While
the UN and the INC will confine their investigations to the corruption
surrounding the Oil-for-Food program, Henry Hyde's International
Relations Committee would do well to use the Oil-for-Food scandal
as a starting point for investigating the broader charges of corruption
and mismanagement at the United Nations.
This
week, while Kofi Annan tried to downplay the fallout of the Oil-for-Food
scandal, he was forced to address the lack of security which allowed
the August 19, 2003, car bombing at UN headquarters in Iraq which
killed 22 people. A report on the incident reveals that UN security
"lacked due care and diligence"; was "seriously deficient"
and managers on the scene "displayed profound lack of responsibility
and ineptitude…bordering on gross negligence."
Sounds
pretty bad -- and it is. Yet, Kofi Annan saw fit to only fire one
person -- Tun Myat, the head of global security. The head of security
in Baghdad, Ramiro Lopes da Silva, was allowed to transfer to the
World Food Program. Annan also refused to accept the resignation
of Louise Frechette, his deputy secretary-general, and laid much
of the blame for deficient security at the feet of somebody who
is no longer able to defend himself -- Sergio Vieira de Mello, Kofi
Annan's personal representative in Iraq, who was killed in the blast.
Over
the years, the United Nations and its various programs have been
accused of mismanagement or corruption. In part it is because the
United Nations maintains bloated staff levels with over-paid bureaucrats
and refuses to submit to an independent audit. Though the United
States provides nearly a quarter of the UN budget, only about seven
percent of the UN's staff are Americans. Much of the organization
operates secretly, drags its feet before releasing information to
the press and the public and has little accountability.
The
press corps are like a flock of sheep, largely writing what they
are fed by Kofi Annan and his spokesman. They do not hold the same
healthy skepticism of power, government and bureaucracy that the
Washington, D.C. press corps does.
There
is little or no oversight in the UN. Though Kofi Annan will say
he reports to the General Assembly, too many of those countries
are lead by dictators, terrorists, human rights abusers, or petty
thugs -- hardly a constituency that demands excellence in government.
Yes,
Henry Hyde's committee should ask how the Oil-for-Food program was
corrupted and who is to blame, but the more important question is,
"How much more money do American taxpayers have to invest in
this corrupt institution and for how long?"
Hopefully,
the answers to those questions are "none" and "not
for long."
Thomas
P. Kilgannon is the President of Freedom Alliance an educational
and charitable foundation dedicated to the promotion of the American
heritage of freedom and the preservation of American sovereignty.
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