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Major Firms Named in Iraq Oil for Food Scandal
Haider Rizvi
UNITED NATIONS, Oct 27 (IPS) - Some of the world's richest nations have come under fire from a leading corruption watchdog group for failing to take action against the companies that illegally profited from a United Nations-sponsored humanitarian programme in Iraq.
"It is sheer hypocrisy if high-income countries demand stringent accountability conditions from low-income countries in development cooperation without holding their companies to those same standards," said Peter Eigen, chairman of Transparency International, an independent group that tracks corrupt practices by government officials and private firms worldwide.
His harsh remarks came hours after independent investigators revealed Thursday that more than 2,000 companies were involved in bribes and surcharges to the Iraqi government during the time the U.N. ran its Oil for Food Programme.
A staggering 50 percent of the 4,500 companies involved are being investigated for making an illegal payment under the programme, according to the Independent Inquiry Committee's 623-page report.
The committee, led by Paul Volcker, a former chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, said it discovered nearly two billion dollars in bribes from prominent companies, including German manufacturing giant Siemens and the German-U.S. carmaker Daimler Chrysler.
Volcker, however, made it clear at a news conference Thursday that the "identification of a particular company's contract does not necessarily mean that company made, authorised or even knew about the illicit payment."
In their previous reports, investigators reprimanded U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, other U.N. officials and the Security Council for mishandling the 62-billion-dollar programme, which was set up to minimise the impact of harsh sanctions imposed on Iraq as a punishment for attacking neighbouring Kuwait in 1990 and for trying to develop weapons of mass destruction.
Under the programme, which began in 1996, Saddam Hussein's government sold Iraqi oil worth over 64 billion dollars to 248 companies. In turn, more than 3,600 companies sold over 34 billion dollars of humanitarian goods to Iraq, according to the Volcker committee.
The investigators said they found that companies purchasing the oil at reduced prices would funnel extra money to Iraq through "surcharges", while those receiving money from Iraq for humanitarian goods and services would return a part of the kickbacks.
Noting that the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) is bound by a treaty obligation that prohibits the bribing of foreign nationals, Transparency International says there is no excuse for the behaviour of companies from the wealthiest countries.
"We thought that the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention represented a watershed," Eigen said, "but we must sadly conclude that there is still a very long way to go."
Reacting to the findings of the report, a spokesperson for Annan told reporters that the U.N. chief would like to see governments take action against companies falling within their jurisdiction and adopt measures to prevent such lapses in the future.
Though supportive of the U.N. call for action, Eigen and others wonder if governments will demonstrate the necessary political will.
"With all the recriminations flying," said Cobus de Swardt, Transparency's director of global programmes, "it should not be forgotten that the Oil for Food Programme was meant to feed hungry children and prevent needless deaths."
"Punitive sanctions will not undo the human suffering that has been caused," de Swardt added.
In the 1990s, hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children died from disease and malnutrition caused by shortages of food and medicine resulting from the economic sanctions.
Volcker said he and his colleagues were not in the business of "law enforcement", but that they would provide information to countries interested in taking legal action against companies or individuals named in the report.
While a response from other governments is still awaited, Switzerland's economic ministry has declared its readiness to launch criminal proceedings against four people in connection with the Volcker report.
For its part, Transparency International suggests that countries employ "the full arsenal" of punitive measures at their disposal to ensure that bribery "does not pay" for companies. Such measures can include financial penalties and debarment from public contracting.
"There is a great deal of scepticism as to whether prosecutions will actually follow," said Eigen. "But we and other civil society voices will not let the transgressions of these companies be forgotten, nor will we let national governments back away from the promises they have made."
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