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International-UN-NGOs | |
Swiss launch corruption probe at UN weather body | |
2007-05-10 | |
![]() Spokeswoman Carine Richard-Van Maele was confirming a report in the NZZ am Sonntag newspaper that Geneva public prosecutor Daniel Zappelli was investigating alleged attempts to use embezzled U.N. funds for influence peddling in a 2003 vote for the post of secretary-general. "At the request of the Swiss authorities, the (WMO) secretariat has provided them with detailed information relating to election procedures in WMO and to the elections in 2003," she told Reuters. The probe comes as the 188 member states of the WMO gather in Geneva for a four-yearly congress at which Secretary-General Michel Jarraud of France is standing for a second term. Jarraud has denied any wrongdoing.
The probe into the WMO, whose aims include safeguarding the environment and water resources, adds to a series of probes hanging over various United Nations bodies. New U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has pledged to root out corruption. NZZ said that according to prosecution documents there was a "reasonable suspicion that in the runup to the election of a new WMO general secretary, there was an attempt to favour the election of a specific candidate." It cited a leaked internal agency memo as saying that WMO officials allegedly offered to pay travel costs and provide an allowance to some of the delegates from developing countries in return for their pledge to vote for a certain candidate. It did not say who the candidate was, but initially Kenya's Evans Mukolwe stood against then French official candidate Jean Pierre Beysson. Jarraud subsequently emerged when neither of the two won sufficient votes. Jarraud took over from long-serving WMO secretary-general Godwin Obasi of Nigeria. Obasi had earlier suspended without pay and then dismissed a Sudanese employee in charge of funds involved in the embezzlement probe. The WMO filed a criminal complaint with Swiss judicial authorities the same year and lifted diplomatic immunity from those implicated and implemented new internal controls. In January, the WMO said it had recovered some $300,000 of the $3.4 million believed to have been embezzled. | |
Posted by:Steve White |
#5 I'm sure we can find a corrupt probe or two at Roswell they can use to get answers with. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2007-05-10 12:49 |
#4 When Weathermen Go Bad, Chapter I... |
Posted by: mojo 2007-05-10 10:45 |
#3 Why do they waste their money with probes and investigations? You know damn well that they will find all sorts of evidence, but the UN won't do a thing about it. |
Posted by: bigjim-ky 2007-05-10 10:01 |
#2 But... but... this means everything we have been told about global climate change may be based on a lie for personal gain by a group of corrupt transnational bureaucrats! This scarcely seems possible. I question the timing. /leftard thought fart |
Posted by: Excalibur 2007-05-10 09:13 |
#1 They're corrupting the weather now? Will the UN stop at nothing?!? ;-) |
Posted by: trailing wife 2007-05-10 07:21 |