18. February 2006 · Comments Off on Cash-for-Kofi · Categories: General, World

More UN antics from Claudia Rosett at The Weekly Standard:

DESPITE FREQUENT DECLARATIONS OF REFORM, it seems that United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has learned nothing from the U.N.’s Oil-for-Food scandal, in which Saddam Hussein’s billions corrupted the U.N.’s entire Iraq embargo bureaucracy. Earlier this month, Annan accepted from the ruler of Dubai an environmental prize of $500,000–a fat sum that represents the latest in a long series of glaring conflicts of interest. Call this one Cash-for-Kofi.

[…]

So entwined were Annan’s own U.N. colleagues in the process that selected him for this award that it’s tempting to relabel the entire affair as one of the U.N.’s biggest back-scratching contests. Chairing the jury panel, which voted unanimously for Annan, was the executive director of the U.N. Environment Program, Klaus Toepfer, and among the jurors was the U.N. undersecretary-general for Economic and Social Affairs, José Antonio Ocampo. Both men owe their current jobs to Annan. Serving as an “observer” of the jury panel was Pakistan’s ambassador to the U.N., Munir Akram, who just finished a term as president of the U.N.’s Economic and Social Council, which works closely with Annan. On the
website for the Zayed prize, the public relations contacts include a U.N. staffer, Nick Nuttall, listed complete with his U.N. email account and phone number at the Nairobi headquarters of the U.N. Environment Program.

[…]

Not unaware of appearances, Annan announced at the Dubai award ceremony that he would be using his prize as seed money for a foundation he plans to set up in Africa, devoted to agriculture and girls’ education. To date, he has provided no information about what this promised foundation might be or who will run it, or what perquisites might go to its founder, or to anyone else associated with it. Asked recently for details, Annan’s spokesman replied, “When we have more information, we’ll pass it on to you.”

Hat Tip: Glenn Reynolds, who quips, “Note to Condi: Why don’t we give this sort of outright bribery a try? It seems to be all the rage.”

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