NEW YORK: Kofi Annan, struggling to survive as the UN Secretary-General, plans to blame his son for embroiling him in the oil-for-food scandal when a UN inquiry issues a harsh report today. UN officials are hoping to deflect criticism of the UN chief by insisting that his son, Kojo, 29, misled him about payments that Kojo Annan received from a UN contractor. "But, well, if you lose a son, its possible to get another. There's only one Maltese Falcon Secretary-Generalship." | The inquiry, led by former chairman of the US Federal Reserve Paul Volcker, is expected to criticise the UN Secretary-General's management lapses, in particular his failure to perceive the apparent conflict of interest of his son working for a company that was awarded a UN contract. It will also confirm that Mr Annan repeatedly met senior representatives of the company, Cotecna Inspection SA. 
The Volcker commission is expected to say that it has found no evidence that Mr Annan rigged the UN bidding process to help Cotecna win a 1998 border inspection contract in Iraq, nor that he personally received any financial benefit. The report will, however, detail previously unknown payments by Cotecna to Kojo Annan after he resigned from the company shortly before it won the UN contract, which was worth almost $US10million ($13million) a year. Cotecna acknowledges now that it paid Kojo Annan about $US365,000 over eight years -- twice what it previously admitted.
The oil-for-food scandal has overshadowed all other business at UN headquarters. A much-touted report on UN reform last week disappeared from the headlines the next day when it was revealed that the UN plans to use Iraqi oil money to pay for the legal defence of Benon Sevan, the accused former head of the oil-for-food program. Colleagues describe Mr Annan as despondent over the Volcker commission.
A recent foreign trip by Louise Frechette, his Canadian puppet deputy, prompted speculation at UN headquarters that she was raising her profile in case she had to take over from him. Aides say Mr Annan plans to mount a "Billy Carter defence", arguing that he should not be held accountable for any transgressions by his son, just as Jimmy Carter, the former US president, was not forced from office when it emerged that his brother, Billy, was lobbying for Libya.
Mark Malloch Brown, the UN Secretary-General's chief of staff, said last week that Mr Annan expected to be exonerated by the commission, but added that his son's situation might be "very different". Watch out for those elevator shafts, Kojo. And I wouldn't go fishing with Dad, either. | The Volcker commission has already described how Fred Nadler, the brother-in-law of former UN secretary-general Boutros Boutros-Ghali, apparently helped Mr Sevan, the head of the program, to set up an Iraqi oil deal with Fakhry Abdelnour, a cousin of Mr Boutros-Ghali. It's another Family Affair moment | The former UN chief has refused to take the blame for the oil-for-food scandal, saying oil was smuggled outside the program by Baghdad, which had direct dealings with Syria, Turkey and Iran.
Mr Boutros-Ghali was UN secretary-general at the start of the program, which was designed to allow Iraq to buy food and medicines to ease hardships caused by UN sanctions. "The members of the UN Security Council and members of the UN share equal responsibility. (A) quantity of oil was smuggled outside the oil-for-food program through direct contact between Iraq and Syria, Iraq and Turkey, and Iraq and Iran," he said last month. |