"By the year 2000, the imposition of kickbacks and surcharges by the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein brought about the emergence of illicit payments. This irrevocably changed the nature of the program."
The report said, "Oil surcharges were paid in connection with the contracts of 139 companies, and humanitarian kickbacks were paid in connection with the contracts of 2,253 companies," it said.
The largest single kickback came from the Malaysian firm Mastek, the report said. Iraq's oil marketing company, SOMO, received more than $10 million in illegal surcharges from Mastek in 2001-2002.
The activities of France's BNP-Paribas, which held the escrow account for the multi-billion-dollar program, were also scrutinized in the report.
The report said BNP did not disclose "fully the first hand knowledge it acquired of the true nature of financial relationships that fostered the payment of illicit surcharges."
The report alleges that Jean-Bernard Merimee, France's former U.N. ambassador, received $165,725 in commissions from oil allocations awarded to him by the Iraqi regime. He is under investigation by French authorities.
Thursday's report marked the end of the $30 million investigation that has uncovered widespread corruption and mismanagement in the U.N.'s largest humanitarian aid program.
The investigation has implicated the former head of the program, accusing him of accepting bribes from an Egyptian businessman who bought Iraqi oil.
The inquiry committee has also faulted Secretary General Kofi Annan, saying his son took advantage of his father's position to profit from the program, and it has criticized the U.N. Security Council for mismanaging the program.
"The program left too much initiative with Iraq," the letter said. "It was, as one past member of the council put it, a compact with the devil, and the devil had means of manipulating the program to his ends."
The report said Iraqi leaders denied American, British and Japanese companies the right to purchase oil because of their countries' opposition to lifting sanctions imposed on Iraq.
At the same time, though, Iraq gave preferential treatment to France, Russia and China, permanent members of the Security Council whose governments leaned toward lifting sanctions.
Senior investigators say they believe the report provides a starting point for prosecutors around the world to carry out their own criminal investigations.
The Bush administration has cited Volcker's findings in making its case in the U.N. General Assembly for establishing an independent auditor to oversee the organization's finances. But the United States has faced resistance from poor nations, who fear Washington is trying to exert too much control over the international organization.
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NOTICE THAT ABOVE SENTENCE ?
WILL THE UN ACCEPT AN INDEPENDENT AUDIT FROM ANYONE ?
IF THE US FAILED AT AUDITING AND ENFORCING THIS PROGRAM BACK THEN, IT MIGHT BE BECAUSE THE UN REJECTED AN AUDIT THEN AND REJECTS IT NOW.
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The oil-for-food program was created in December 1996 to provide assistance to Iraqis suffering under a U.N. trade embargo imposed after Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait. The program allowed Iraq to sell oil and use the proceeds to buy food and medicine.
The report said, "Oil surcharges were paid in connection with the contracts of 139 companies, and humanitarian kickbacks were paid in connection with the contracts of 2,253 companies," it said.
The largest single kickback came from the Malaysian firm Mastek, the report said. Iraq's oil marketing company, SOMO, received more than $10 million in illegal surcharges from Mastek in 2001-2002.
The activities of France's BNP-Paribas, which held the escrow account for the multi-billion-dollar program, were also scrutinized in the report.
The report said BNP did not disclose "fully the first hand knowledge it acquired of the true nature of financial relationships that fostered the payment of illicit surcharges."
The report alleges that Jean-Bernard Merimee, France's former U.N. ambassador, received $165,725 in commissions from oil allocations awarded to him by the Iraqi regime. He is under investigation by French authorities.
Thursday's report marked the end of the $30 million investigation that has uncovered widespread corruption and mismanagement in the U.N.'s largest humanitarian aid program.
The investigation has implicated the former head of the program, accusing him of accepting bribes from an Egyptian businessman who bought Iraqi oil.
The inquiry committee has also faulted Secretary General Kofi Annan, saying his son took advantage of his father's position to profit from the program, and it has criticized the U.N. Security Council for mismanaging the program.
"The program left too much initiative with Iraq," the letter said. "It was, as one past member of the council put it, a compact with the devil, and the devil had means of manipulating the program to his ends."
The report said Iraqi leaders denied American, British and Japanese companies the right to purchase oil because of their countries' opposition to lifting sanctions imposed on Iraq.
At the same time, though, Iraq gave preferential treatment to France, Russia and China, permanent members of the Security Council whose governments leaned toward lifting sanctions.
Senior investigators say they believe the report provides a starting point for prosecutors around the world to carry out their own criminal investigations.
The Bush administration has cited Volcker's findings in making its case in the U.N. General Assembly for establishing an independent auditor to oversee the organization's finances. But the United States has faced resistance from poor nations, who fear Washington is trying to exert too much control over the international organization.
------------------------------------------
NOTICE THAT ABOVE SENTENCE ?
WILL THE UN ACCEPT AN INDEPENDENT AUDIT FROM ANYONE ?
IF THE US FAILED AT AUDITING AND ENFORCING THIS PROGRAM BACK THEN, IT MIGHT BE BECAUSE THE UN REJECTED AN AUDIT THEN AND REJECTS IT NOW.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
The oil-for-food program was created in December 1996 to provide assistance to Iraqis suffering under a U.N. trade embargo imposed after Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait. The program allowed Iraq to sell oil and use the proceeds to buy food and medicine.