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Corruption among UN senior staff, says inquiry |
2005-09-07 |
![]() The five-page preface contained no details of the investigation into Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary-General, and his predecessor, Boutros Boutros Ghali, or other UN officials. But its conclusion that stronger executive leadership is required will add to pressure on Mr Annan to stand down. âThe reality is that the Secretary-General has come to be viewed as chief diplomatic and political agent of the UN,â the panel said. âThe present Secretary-General is widely respected for precisely those qualities. In these turbulent times, those responsibilities tend to be all-consuming. The record amply reflects consequent administrative failings.â Mr Annan, who was in London yesterday for a meeting of the Global Fund on HIV/Aids, planned to fly to New York last night and has asked to address the Security Council after Mr Volcker presents his report today. The preface confirmed that there were âinstances of corruption among senior staff as well as in the fieldâ. The panel noted that the Oil-for-Food programme, set up in 1996 to allow Iraq to sell oil and buy humanitarian supplies while under UN sanctions, did succeed in staving off a potential crisis. But it said that the programmeâs âreal accomplishmentsâ were marred by âwholesale corruptionâ by private companies, manipulated by Saddam Husseinâs Iraq. It criticised UN member states that it said had âaided and abetted grievous weaknesses in administrative practices within the (UN) secretariat.â The âpoliticisation of decision-makingâ, âmanagerial weaknessâ and âethical lapsesâ were all symptomatic of systemic problems at the UN, it said. âWhen troublesome conflicts arose between political objectives and administrative effectiveness, decisions were delayed, bungled, or simply shunned.â The Volcker committee, which spent more than $30 million (£16 million) of Iraqâs oil money on its investigation, proposed that the UN appoint a chief operating officer, nominated by the 15-nation Security Council and approved by the 191-state General Assembly. |
Posted by:Fred |
#6 The Volcker inquiry into the Oil-for-Food scandal called for a significant overhaul of the UN... Is 'significant overhaul' a polite way of saying 'line them up against the wall"? |
Posted by: Pappy 2005-09-07 20:17 |
#5 Gee whiz, "serious instances of illicit, unethical and corrupt behaviourâ from the toadys and hangers-on of the world's kleptocrats? Wotta surprise! Quick, notify Inspector Gadget! Then toss 'em all out and burn the buildings. It's the only way to sterilize the area. Even the rats in Manhattan have some standards... |
Posted by: mojo 2005-09-07 10:37 |
#4 30mill??? Sheesh,that's a hell of a tab. |
Posted by: raptor 2005-09-07 09:39 |
#3 I believe it was Claudia Rosett who pointed out that while Kofi's now whining that the UN should never have been involved in the first place, he was originally whining for the expansion of the program and had a personal hand in installing everyone who's been rousted for corruption so far. And has anyone seen Mikey? Odd that he's not commenting on this stuff. I would have thought it would be important to him, considering the regard he has for the UN. |
Posted by: Robert Crawford 2005-09-07 07:54 |
#2 THE Volcker inquiry into the Oil-for-Food scandal called for a significant overhaul of the UN yesterday as it prepared to reveal details of âserious instances of illicit, unethical and corrupt behaviourâ at the world body. Keelhauling would be even better. |
Posted by: gromgoru 2005-09-07 04:13 |
#1 report should be called "Cover Up for Kofi" |
Posted by: Captain America 2005-09-07 00:22 |