Firms accused of bribing Saddam to be investigated by fraud office
The Serious Fraud Office has launched an investigation into
allegations that a number of major UK-based firms paid bribes to Saddam
Hussein's regime in Iraq. The firms being targeted include the drug
giants GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), AstraZeneca and Eli Lilly. The
international oil traders and UK bridge-builders Mabey and Johnson are
also to be investigated.

Saleh Armouti, a member of the former Iraqi leader defense team
speaks during a rally to mark the passage of former Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein, in Amman, Jordan, Thursday, Feb. 8, 2007. -AP |
They are on a long list of international companies accused in a UN
report of paying kickbacks under the discredited oil-for-food sanctions
regime, which enabled Saddam to illicitly amass an estimated $1.8bn.
Ministers have agreed to fund the investigation with o22m over three
years.
The inquiry was ordered last week by the SFO director, Robert Wardle.
Yesterday the agency confirmed: "The director of the SFO has opened
an investigation centred on alleged breaches of sanctions in respect of
the UN oil-for-food programme." Under their wide-ranging powers,
investigators from the SFO can order companies to disclose documentation
and call witnesses for questioning. Ultimately, the SFO could launch
criminal prosecutions.
The investigation - the first official inquiry into the oil-for-food
scandal - was urged on the British government by Paul Volcker, a former
chairman of the US Federal Reserve, who compiled a UN report, delivered
two years ago, into abuses of the programme after investigating the
sanctions regime that enabled Saddam to survive for so long.
Trade exchange
Mr. Volcker said the programme - in which Iraq was only allowed to
sell limited amounts of oil abroad to buy food and medicines - had
become corrupted as the Saddam regime demanded kickbacks from foreign
companies in return for the contracts. He identified French and Russian
politicians as the chief culprits.
Mr. Volcker said the kickbacks were disguised by various subterfuges.
Contracts were inflated, usually by 10% to cover so-called "after-sales
services" fees. More than 2,200 companies were listed, using evidence
drawn from banking records and Iraqi government documents.
The inquiry will draw on Mr. Volcker's evidence. He accused GSK of
paying kickbacks worth $1m to win nine contracts valued at $11.9m to
supply medicines. Yesterday GSK denied any wrongdoing.
It said: "The UN oil-for-food programme was run in the UK by the
Department of Trade and Industry and GSK operated entirely within DTI
guidance in this area. Indeed, GSK had a regular dialogue with officials
at the DTI in order to ensure that all its dealings under the
oil-for-food programme were transparent and in accordance with the
regulations."
AstraZeneca was named as having paid bribes of $162,000 to secure
three contracts worth $2.9m. The company said: "We deny any allegation
of unethical behaviour on our part in our trading relationships with
Iraq. AstraZeneca sent a consignment of medicines originally requested
by the Saddam government under the UN oil-for-food programme.
Most of the consignment was delivered after the coalition forces of
the US and UK had taken control of the country.
Oil-for-Food
"The consignment was sent with all relevant United Nations
permissions and UK government Department of Trade and Industry export
licences in place."
Another company, Eli Lilly, was accused of securing a $3.2m contract
with a bribe of $343,000. It said: "Eli Lilly and Company ... denies any
wrongdoing with regard to the oil-for-food scheme. As the report
highlights, we deny that payments were made to the government of Iraq or
its agents in violation of the programme."
The Volcker report, citing banking records, alleged that the
Berkshire-based bridge-builder Mabey and Johnson paid a $202,000
kickback between 2001 and 2003 and in return was given a $3.6m contract
by the Iraqis. The company said there was no truth in the allegations.
The report identified a number of UK-linked oil companies and
individuals accused of profiting from backdoor deals with Saddam
Hussein. One was Taurus Petroleum, run by an American oil trader, Ben
Pollner, from an address in Knightsbridge, west London.
It was alleged that his front companies paid illicit kickbacks to
Baghdad in return for consignments that could be sold on world markets.
A contract with one of his Liechtenstein front companies was discovered
to contain the phone number of the Taurus office in Princes Gate,
central London.
Taurus was also alleged to have marketed shipments of Iraqi oil on
behalf of a Jordanian associate of the Respect MP George Galloway.Taurus
denied all the allegations.
Another company named by Mr. Volcker was Trafigura, the London end of
a prominent Dutch-registered firm. Trafigura was accused of complicity
in an oil-smuggling scheme in which tankers loading UN-sanctioned cargos
at an Iraqi port were illicitly "topped up" with extra oil. Trafigura
denied that the oil was smuggled.
The Volcker report said that because a firm was named it "does not
necessarily mean that the company - as opposed to an agent or secondary
purchaser with an interest in the transaction - made, authorised or knew
about an illicit payment".
Guardian
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