Send news tip to FOXNews.com

SUBMIT

U.N. to Give Notes to Oil-for-Food Probe

Tuesday, July 05, 2005

UNITED NATIONS —  The United Nations will give Oil-for-Food (search) investigators informal notes from Security Council meetings about the $64 billion program, having received no objection from the council's 15 members, a U.N. spokesman said Tuesday.

Secretary-General Kofi Annan (search) gave the council until Tuesday to voice opposition to his plan to turn over the potentially sensitive documents.

The Independent Inquiry Committee, headed by former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker (search), requested the documents as part of its probe into alleged corruption in the program, under which Iraq received food, medicine and humanitarian goods in exchange for oil.

The investigating committee collected thousands of documents from the Secretariat, but wanted the entire file of notes from closed meetings of the committee that monitored sanctions against Iraq and was responsible for overseeing the Oil-for-Food program, council diplomats said.

Last week, Annan told council diplomats of his intention to turn over the documents, but they refused to act without instructions from their home governments.

Related

  • Stories

    Video

    Links

    Background

    Oil-for-Food Stories 2005

    Oil-for-Food Stories 2004

    Video 2005

    Video 2004

    Raw Data

    Fox Fast Links

    FOXNews.com does not endorse content on external sites

    Info

    Reaction to FOX Coverage

They said they were worried about accuracy, sloppy translations and the inclusion of personal opinions in them. There was also a debate over whether the notes belonged to the Secretariat or to the Security Council.

Those fears were allayed and none of the 15 members blocked the move. U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the United Nations would now work closely with Volcker to make sure he gets all the notes.

The Oil-for-Food program aimed to help ordinary Iraqis suffering under U.N. sanctions imposed after Saddam Hussein's (search) 1990 invasion of Kuwait, but it has become the target of several corruption investigations since the Iraqi leader was ousted.

Fox News Video

Top Video

Price of Peace?

Tens of millions of dollars are being spent to keep the Republican National Convention secure

FOX News Flash

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

SOLDIER'S DIARY

VIDEO

Advertise on Fox News Channel, FOXNews.com and FOX News Radio. Advertising Specifications (PDF). Jobs at FOX News Channel. Internships At Fox News (Deadline for summer applications: Feb. 29, 2008)

Terms of use. Privacy Statement. For FOXNews.com comments write to foxnewsonline@foxnews.com; For FOX News Channel comments write to yourcomments@foxnews.com

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. © 2008 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. All market data delayed 20 minutes.