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United in greed, divided it falls (Steyn takes the UN to the woodshed)
The Daily Telegraph ^ | August 16, 2005 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 08/16/2005 5:28:15 AM PDT by finnigan2

How many Annans does it take to change a light bulb? Well, if the replacement light bulb's being shipped to Uday Hussein's Iraqi Olympic Committee recreational basement as part of the UN Oil-for-Food programme, there's no telling how many Annans you'll need.

You'll recall that Kofi Annan's son Kojo - who had a $30,000-a-year job but managed to find a spare quarter-million dollars sitting around to invest in a Swiss football club - has been under investigation for some time for his alleged ties to the Oil-for-Food programme. But the investigators have now broadened their sights to include Kofi's brother Kobina Annan, the Ghanaian ambassador to Morocco, who has ties to a businessman behind several of the entities involved in the scandal - one Michael Wilson, the son of the former Ghanaian ambassador to Switzerland and a childhood friend of young Kojo. Mr Wilson is currently being investigated for suspected bribery over a $50 million contract to renovate the Geneva offices of the UN World Intellectual Property Organisation.

The actual head of the Oil-for-Food racket, Kofi sidekick Benon Sevan, has resigned, having hitherto insisted that a mysterious six-figure sum in his bank account was a gift from his elderly aunt, a lady of modest means who lived in a two-room flat back in Cyprus. Paul Volcker's investigators had planned to confirm with auntie her nephew's version of events, but unfortunately she fell down an elevator shaft and died. It now seems likely that the windfall had less to do with Mr Sevan's late aunt and more to do with his soliciting of oil allocations for another company.

Meanwhile, Alexander Yakovlev, a senior procurement officer for UN "peacekeeping" missions - and, if you're on a UN mission in Africa, no, he can't fix you up with a hot-looking eight-year-old from the local village; Mr Yakovlev apparently dealt with the non-child-sex aspects of UN procuring - anyway, Mr Yakovlev salted away just shy of a million bucks in kickbacks in his account in Antigua. He's just been arrested in New York and pleaded guilty to money laundering, wire fraud, etc.

Despite the current investigations into his brother, his son, his son's best friend, his former chief of staff, his procurement officer and the executive director of the UN's biggest ever programme, the Secretary-General insists he remains committed to staying on and tackling the important work of "reforming" the UN.

Unfortunately, his Executive Co-Ordinator for United Nations Reform has also had to resign. Officially, Maurice Strong, Under-Secretary-General, godfather of the Kyoto treaty and chief UN negotiator on North Korea, resigned because he'd put his step-daughter on the payroll - she's also quit - and because of his ties to Tongsun Park, a Korean businessman charged by the US Attorney's office with taking millions of dollars from Saddam to act as an unregistered foreign agent for Iraq. Mr Park allegedly invested a million of those Saddamite greenbacks in a business of Under-Secretary-General Strong's son - a now bankrupt Canadian petroleum company.

By happy coincidence, Under-Secretary-General Strong and Kojo Annan were both appointed, on the same day, to the board of a company called Air Harbour Technologies, a business registered in the Isle of Man and whose directors also included Michael Wilson, the guy under investigation for the UN office renovation contract in Geneva. It's a small world, at least at the UN. AHT was wholly owned by the son of Sheikh Yamani, the former Saudi oil minister. Yamani Jnr was putting together a $60 million oil deal with Saddam, and seemed to think the presence of UN officials and offspring on his board might help him.

But not to worry. To demonstrate his ongoing commitment to "reform", Kofi Annan has now put his Deputy- Secretary-General, Louise Frechette, another Canadian, in charge of the "reform agenda". In a February report by Mr Volcker's committee, Mme Frechette is said to have helped Mr Sevan block efforts to bring details of the Oil-for-Food boondoggle before the Security Council.

How do we know all the above? We only know because the US invaded Iraq and the Baathists skedaddled out of town leaving copious amounts of paperwork relating to the Baghdad end of Oil-for-Fraud, since when Claudia Rosett and a few other dogged journalists have been systematically unstitching the intricate web of family and business relationships around the UN's operations.

You'd think that by now respect for the UN would be plummeting faster than Benon Sevan's auntie down that lift shaft. After all, these aren't peripheral figures or minor departments. They reach right into the heart of UN policy on two of the critical issues of the day - Iraq and North Korea - or four, if you're one of those Guardian types who's hot for Kyoto and peacekeeping. Most of the Ghanaian diplomatic corps and their progeny seem to have directorships at companies with UN contracts and/or Saddamite oil options. I had no idea being a Ghanaian ambassador's son opened so many doors, and nor did they till Kofi ascended to his present eminence.

The other day I sat behind a car from Massachusetts bearing the bumper-sticker "War is Never the Answer". Well, it depends on the question. In this case, without the war, we wouldn't even be asking the questions. Without the paper trail in Baghdad, who would have mustered the will to look into Oil-for-Food and see it through to the point where it's brought down a clutch of career UN bigwigs? They're no great loss to humanity: Mr Strong's "legacy", the Kyoto treaty, is already seen as a joke that's likely to crash the economies of those few countries who've made the mistake of taking it seriously (New Zealand), and, as for his North Korean outreach, we should be grateful it ended before a full-fledged Kim Jong-Il Nukes-for-Food programme was up and running.

But this is how the transnational jet set works, and those sensitive flowers who don't have the stomach to look under the rock could at least do us the favour of ceasing to bleat about, in Clare Short's marvellously loopy phrase, the UN's "moral authority". In The Times the other day, Matthew Parris demanded to know whether I could now admit the Iraq war had been a mistake. No. I'm still in favour of it 100 per cent - and these rare shafts of light on the sewers of transnationalism are merely one more benefit.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS:
In this article, Steyn's anger seems to have overpowered his usual satire.
1 posted on 08/16/2005 5:28:16 AM PDT by finnigan2
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To: finnigan2; Pokey78

Hard not to let your anger run free, when examining the rot of the UN. When I think of our tax dollars supporting this kleptocracy............

Steyn ping!


2 posted on 08/16/2005 5:37:41 AM PDT by Rummyfan
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To: Rummyfan

How I wish the President would tell these bloodsuckers they have three months to get out of New York, and the building will be razed to the ground!


3 posted on 08/16/2005 5:39:02 AM PDT by Rummyfan
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To: finnigan2

Steyn-o-mite! Kabooom! Great post. Thanks.


4 posted on 08/16/2005 5:43:40 AM PDT by PGalt
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To: finnigan2

Excellent as usual.


5 posted on 08/16/2005 5:44:50 AM PDT by Dustbunny (The only good terrorist is a dead terrorist)
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To: Rummyfan
How I wish the President would tell these bloodsuckers they have three months to get out of New York, and the building will be razed to the ground!

Wasn't the UN trying to get us to build them a new building or asking us to build one.

6 posted on 08/16/2005 5:47:22 AM PDT by Dustbunny (The only good terrorist is a dead terrorist)
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To: finnigan2

But, but, but, we need time to let sanctions work....


7 posted on 08/16/2005 5:50:16 AM PDT by kidd
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To: finnigan2
have overpowered his usual satire.

But lines such as

You'd think that by now respect for the UN would be plummeting faster than Benon Sevan's auntie down that lift shaft.

tell us its the same old Steyn!

8 posted on 08/16/2005 5:53:59 AM PDT by agere_contra
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To: Dustbunny

We should build it, in Baghdad.


9 posted on 08/16/2005 6:12:25 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks (Scratch a Liberal. Uncover a Fascist)
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To: agere_contra
It is easier for the MSM to cover a Bush-hating wacko in Crawford or the Aruba story than to do some serious investigative reporting on the UN.
As Glenn Beck says: Get out the duct tape, this will make your head explode.
10 posted on 08/16/2005 6:18:23 AM PDT by Burf
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To: finnigan2

And you wonder why bill clinton wants to be General Secretary?


11 posted on 08/16/2005 6:42:15 AM PDT by Wil H
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To: finnigan2

keep your friends close and your enemies closer...


12 posted on 08/16/2005 7:19:39 AM PDT by kellynla (U.S.M.C. 1st Battalion,5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Div. Viet Nam 69&70 Semper Fi)
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To: finnigan2
Paul Volcker's investigators had planned to confirm with auntie her nephew's version of events, but unfortunately she fell down an elevator shaft and died.

This not only got rid of her as a witness it also served as a warning to others that might talk. This is classic methods used by the Mobs to scare those that may talk. The UN is a MOB.

13 posted on 08/16/2005 8:16:13 AM PDT by cpdiii (Oil Field Trash, Rough Neck, Geologist, Pilot, Pharmacist, Iconoclast (Oil Field Trash was FUN))
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To: finnigan2

"In this article, Steyn's anger seems to have overpowered his usual satire."

Sometimes the material just writes itself - no need for wit here; the bare facts are scabrous enough on their own.


14 posted on 08/16/2005 4:48:15 PM PDT by decal ("The Republic was not established by cowards, and cowards will not preserve it")
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To: finnigan2
How do we know all the above? We only know because the US invaded Iraq and the Baathists skedaddled out of town leaving copious amounts of paperwork relating to the Baghdad end of Oil-for-Fraud, since when Claudia Rosett and a few other dogged journalists have been systematically unstitching the intricate web of family and business relationships around the UN's operations.

Recall that all those records were stored at the Oil Ministry Building, which was put under US military guard the day Baghdad was occupied. Remember the whining and knashing of teeth by people who were complaining that we were guarding the Oil Ministry Building instead of the Baghdad Museum? Does anybody have any doubt anymore of why they were all so eager to have the Oil Ministry Building sacked and the records burned?

15 posted on 08/17/2005 9:19:39 AM PDT by gridlock (IF YOU'RE NOT CATCHING FLAK, YOU'RE NOT OVER THE TARGET...)
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