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International-UN-NGOs
U.N. Official Held On Charges Of Bribery
2007-02-04
This isn't connected to Oil-for-Food, but it does show how pervasive the corruption is at Turtle Bay.
UNITED NATIONS — A central figure in Turtle Bay's procurement scandal, Snjya Bahel, was ordered held without bail yesterday, pending a federal trial on bribery charges.

District Judge Denise Cote agreed with federal prosecutors that Mr. Bahel – who was fired by the United Nations last month and whose family lives in his homeland of India — presents enough of a flight risk to keep him remanded.

A U.S. attorney for the Southern District, Jacob Buchdahl, presented the changes that occurred since a $900,000 bail was set after Mr. Bahel's arrest last November. His firing by the U.N. last month left Mr. Bahel without a diplomatic visa, Mr. Buchdahl said. More important, a co-defendant, Nishan Kohli, pleaded guilty in December to charges involving a bribe paid to Mr. Bahel and is expected to be the star witness.

In the hearing yesterday, Mr. Bahel's attorney, Richard Herman, said the prosecution asked Mr. Bahel "what he knew about Andrew Toh, others." Mr. Toh, who is Mr. Bahel's former U.N. boss, is currently suspended from his procurement department job, but he continues to draw a full salary.

The procurement scandal emerged when U.N. staffers complained about senior officials in the procurement department, alleging preferential treatment had been given to certain companies.
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International-UN-NGOs
UN corruption probe ‘at full throttle’
2006-11-04
A day after a senior UN official was indicted on bribery charges, the United Nations management chief said on Thursday an investigation into corruption was “at full throttle” and he urged anyone with relevant information to cooperate. “The dominoes are beginning to fall,” the undersecretary-general for management, Mr Christopher Burnham told the Associated Press. “Anyone with information about corruption anywhere in the UN needs to come forward now before the dominoes reach them,” he added.

Mr Burnham, who has been instrumental in pressing investigations into corruption especially in UN procurement activities, said the corruption probe goes beyond the procurement department. “This investigation is as serious as a heart attack and is at full throttle,” he said.

The warning from Mr Burnham followed Wednesday’s indictment and arrest of former UN procurement official, Mr Sanjaya Bahel. In an indictment unsealed in US district court, Mr Bahel of Manhattan was accused of using his influence to steer contracts worth more than $50 million to a man who rewarded him with valuable real estate. The man, Mr Nishan Kohli, was arrested Wednesday in Miami.

Mr Bahel pleaded not guilty on Thursday and was freed on $900,000 bail. Defence lawyer, Mr Raymond A Levites said Mr Bahel, an Indian diplomat and the former head of the UN commodity procurement section, “looks forward to the trial and being acquitted and then getting some apologies.”

Mr Bahel was one of eight staff members put on paid leave by the UN in January while a new procurement task force pursued allegations of fraud and mismanagement in purchasing for UN peacekeeping operations. In 2005, the UN procurement department handled almost $2 billion in purchasing for the department of peacekeeping, almost double the amount in 2003, UN officials said.

On August 31, the UN charged Mr Bahel with misconduct and suspended him without pay after an investigation concluded that Mr Bahel used his relationship with a wealthy Indian businessman and his son to steer deals to the company they represented. The UN Office of Internal Oversight Services, the UN’s internal watchdog, provided its final report to US and Indian authorities and the US Attorney’s office in the southern district launched its own investigation, the UN spokesman, Mr Stephane Dujarric said.

Mr Dujarric was grilled by reporters on Thursday on why Mr Bahel was initially cleared by the UN watchdog, and why anyone should have faith in the supposedly independent body to rout out criminal activity. “There may have been issues with previous audits that were not followed through on, that were not acted upon,” Mr Dujarric said.

But he pointed to the reforms instituted after a sweeping year-long probe led by former US Federal Reserve chairman, Mr Paul Volcker concluded last year that the UN allowed “illicit, unethical, and corrupt behaviour” to overwhelm the $64 billion oil-for-food program in Iraq. “One of the great lessons learned from the Volcker report is the fact that we do need to tighten up our procedures, in terms of audits that have taken place, audits that have to be followed up on,” Mr Dujarric said.

After the Volcker report and the guilty plea in August 2005 by UN procurement officer, Mr Alexander Yakovlev to wire fraud and money laundering, The Secretary-General, Mr Kofi Annan transferred authority for procurement from the assistant secretary-general, Mr Andrew Toh to the UN controller.

Mr Dujarric said two of the eight people suspended in January are still under investigation. UN officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing probe, said one of them is Toh.

The US ambassador, Mr John Bolton on Thursday praised Mr Burnham, an American, for being the driving force in the creation of the procurement task force which assisted in the case against Mr Bahel and is playing an important role in uncovering UN fraud.
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International-UN-NGOs
U.N. Finds Waste in Peacekeeping Work
2006-01-24
UNITED NATIONS, Jan. 23 -- An internal U.N. probe of the department that runs international peacekeeping operations has uncovered extensive evidence of mismanagement and possible fraud, and triggered the suspension of eight procurement officials pending an investigation, according to U.N. officials and documents.

U.N. investigators have uncovered rampant waste, price inflation and suspicion that employees colluded with vendors in awarding contracts for a variety of peacekeeping programs, said a confidential report presented to several governments Monday.
The only surprise is that the news became public.
Peacekeepers, for example, spent $10.4 million to lease a helicopter for use in East Timor that could have been secured for $1.6 million, and paid $2.4 million to buy seven aircraft hangars in Congo that were never used, the report said. An additional $65 million or more was spent for fuel that was not needed for missions in Sudan and Haiti, said the report, which called for an investigation into whether U.N. staff members improperly "colluded to award" one U.N. supplier an $85.9 million fuel contract for the Sudan mission.
Gee, what do you think?
The failure of U.N. managers to enforce basic standards has led to a "culture of impunity" in U.N. spending, according to the report. Together, it says that there are "strong" indications of fraud involving contracts whose value totaled about $193 million, nearly 20 percent of the $1 billion in U.N. business examined by the auditors.
Procurement runs about $2 billion a year, including the peacekeeping. I think the over/under for fraud and corruption is 50% of that.
"We have no idea yet as to the scope of this, but I believe that we have significant evidence of fraud and corruption," the U.N. undersecretary for management, Christopher Burnham, told reporters Monday.
Oh, do you really think so?
Burnham, a former Bush administration official, went further than other U.N. officials in characterizing the seriousness of the wrongdoing. Burnham, however, said that the decision to suspend the eight officials -- including Andrew Toh, who recently oversaw the U.N. procurement department, and Christian Saunders, the director of the U.N. procurement division -- did not represent a finding that they had done anything wrong. The two have both denied any wrongdoing.

The U.N. findings come as the organization is struggling to recover from a financial scandal involving abuse of the $64 billion oil-for-food program in prewar Iraq and reports of widespread sexual abuse by U.N. peacekeepers.
Who says they're recovering? The Oil-for-Palaces and Food-for-Nookie scandals are a terrible blot on the UN. It makes it nearly impossible for a reasonable person to want to have anything to do with the organization.
U.S. prosecutors, meanwhile, are conducting their own investigation into criminal wrongdoing in U.N. contracting. The U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York in August charged a former U.N. procurement officer, Alexander Yakovlev, with receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes on behalf of companies doing business with the United Nations. Yakovlev pleaded guilty to three counts of wire fraud and agreed to cooperate with the ongoing investigation.

Monday's revelations came as U.N. peacekeeping operations are expanding rapidly, with more than 70,000 uniformed police and blue-helmeted troops posted in 18 missions around the world. The United Nations is gearing up for a new peacekeeping mission in Darfur, Sudan, and has asked the Security Council to authorize an increase of 4,000 peacekeepers in Ivory Coast.
Because the Ivory Coast is a French quagmire.
"We know that we have some areas of difficulty that have to be strengthened," said Jane Holl Lute, a senior peacekeeping official, noting that U.N. officials alerted the investigators to possible wrongdoing. "We are operating in a highly complex, highly volatile operating environment in places around the world that are difficult, austere and, as evidenced by the killing of eight Guatemalan peacekeepers today in the Congo, dangerous."

John R. Bolton, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said the procurement scandal would not prompt a retreat from U.N. peacekeeping. But he said it underscored the need for far-reaching administrative changes in the world body. "It is very disturbing. It shows the sad record of mismanagement that we are trying to deal with through the reform process," he said.
"I find their lack of management disturbing."
The U.N. Office of Internal Oversight, which conducted the inquiry, cited several cases in which they found "fraud indicators," or cause for suspicion. The helicopter deal in East Timor was one of them. U.N. procurement officers had been offered a $1.6 million lease for an Mi-26 helicopter, the report said, but the procurement documents did not reflect that offer. The U.N. report called for an investigation into why officials paid $8.8 million too much and into their dealings with vendors.

The report did not name individuals or companies suspected of breaking U.N. procurement rules. But an earlier draft, made available to The Washington Post, included some names of companies and U.N. staffers. For instance, it identified SkyLink Aviation Inc., a Canadian firm, as the company that supplied fuel to the U.N. mission in Sudan. A spokesman for SkyLink, Jan Ottens, confirmed that his company had that contract and he denied any wrongdoing. He said SkyLink actually lost "bundles" of money from the fuel contract. Ottens said the problem was that the United Nations overestimated the amount of oil it would need because it anticipated the deployment of tens of thousands of peacekeepers that never arrived.
Never arrived? Where were the mighty Uruguayans?
He also said auditors failed to note that his company billed the United Nations only for the oil that was used, representing about half the cost envisioned by the fuel contract. He said his company, meanwhile, had to absorb the costs of setting up the infrastructure for delivering far greater quantities of oil than the United Nations eventually bought. "We were misled" by the United Nations, he said. "We are very unhappy with that fuel contract."
Misled by the UN? Now there's a defense I can believe.
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