Advertising
anchor link to jump to start of content

The Seattle Times Company NWclassifieds NWsource seattletimes.com
seattletimes.com Nation/World Home delivery Contact us Search archives
Your account  Today's news index  Weather  Traffic  Movies  Restaurants  Today's events
  NWCLASSIFIEDS
  NWSOURCE
  SHOPPING
  SERVICES






Thursday, July 15, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.

House committee seeks records on oil

By Colum Lynch
The Washington Post

E-mail E-mail this article
Print Print this article
Print Search archive
Most read articles Most read articles
Most e-mailed articles Most e-mailed articles
UNITED NATIONS — A House committee has issued a subpoena for financial records from a French bank that managed billions of dollars in Iraqi oil revenue through a U.N.-administered humanitarian program.

The move represented an escalation in a campaign by congressional Republicans to obtain documents related to an investigation of alleged corruption in the United Nations' largest humanitarian program.

Democrats, meanwhile, are pressing to expand the investigation to cover the U.S.-led coalition's stewardship of Iraq's oil revenue, particularly its decision to award $1.4 billion in contracts without competitive bidding to Halliburton, a Texas oil services company that was once run by Vice President Dick Cheney.

The U.N. Oil-for-Food program was set up in late 1996 to allow Iraq to sell oil to purchase food, medicine and other humanitarian goods. But it also provided wide latitude for corruption, allowing Saddam Hussein's government to pocket more than $4.4 billion in illegal payoffs before the United Nations relinquished control of the program to the United States-led coalition in May 2003, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., chairman of the House Committee on Government Reform, ordered Banque Nationale de Paris to turn over "all records relating" to its handling of Iraqi money. Because of confidentiality agreements, U.N. officials have limited the release of documents to a U.N.-appointed investigator, Paul Volcker, the former chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank, who is investigating alleged corruption and U.N. mismanagement.

Robert Bennett, a lawyer at the firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom who is acting as BNP Paribas' lead counsel, said the French bank has received the subpoena and is prepared to begin discussions with congressional staff members on the release of their documents. "We are going to fully cooperate and give them whatever they want," Bennett said. "We are not the target of any investigation."

U.S. and U.N. officials have concluded that Iraq profited illegally from the Oil-for-Food program by requiring companies to deposit illegal payoffs into secret government bank accounts in exchange for the opportunity to purchase discounted Iraqi oil or to sell humanitarian goods to the government.

Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., ranking Democrat on the Committee on Government Reform, urged Davis in a July 9 letter to "investigate potential mismanagement" of Iraq's oil revenue by the United States. He also pressed Davis to subpoena documents from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which was hired by the U.S.-led coalition to handle Iraq's oil revenue.

"Over the past year, the United States, as the occupying authority in Iraq, has spent a monumental sum of Iraqi funds — approximately $20 billion," Waxman wrote. "Yet there has been virtually no oversight of how these funds have been spent."

Waxman cited a preliminary audit by the accounting firm KPMG charging that the coalition's management of Iraq's oil revenue was "open to fraudulent acts" and that its accounting practices were "prone to error."

The final audit, which was commissioned by the International Advisory and Monitoring Board, is scheduled for release today. The auditing board was established by the U.N. Security Council in May 2003.

But the preliminary findings noted that KPMG's auditors "encountered resistance" from coalition authorities, particularly their refusal to turn over "special audit reports" related to contracts awarded without competitive bidding to Halliburton and other companies.

Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company

E-mail E-mail this article
Print Print this article
Print Search archive

More nation & world headlines...

advertising
 NATION/WORLD NEWS
 SEARCH

Today Archive

Advanced search

 
advertising

seattletimes.com home
Home delivery | Contact us | Search archive | Site map | Low-graphic
NWclassifieds | NWsource | Advertising info | The Seattle Times Company

Copyright

Back to topBack to top