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Mandy
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faceless admin
Joined: 25 Apr 2006
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Posted: Mon Mar 26, 2007 11:00 am Post subject: |
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George Galloway will not face a criminal investigation by Scotland Yard into allegations he broke United Nations sanctions by taking oil money from Saddam Hussein, The Herald can reveal. The Metropolitan Police, after liaising with the Crown Prosecution Service, has dropped any idea of investigating claims of corruption against the 52-year-old anti-war Respect MP, or anyone else, and has handed the file back to the Serious Fraud Office (SFO).
It is thought it would be better for a single agency to investigate allegations involving the discredited UN oil-for-food (OFF) programme. While the SFO has decided to expand its £22m probe into alleged fraud concerning humanitarian aid contracts to take in oil contracts, it made clear Mr Galloway, who has consistently denied any wrongdoing, would not figure in investigations.
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A spokesman for the SFO said: "For us to get involved, it would have to involve a complex fraud inquiry. In relation to Mr Galloway, he does not come within the scope of our inquiry." He explained this was because the claims against the MP did not involve complex fraud - but corruption.
The SFO, however, did reveal that, following talks with Scotland Yard, its inquiry, the existence of which was exclusively revealed in The Herald last month, has now been "expanded to include not just the humanitarian contracts but oil contracts as well". No individuals were being investigated - only companies.
Last night, Mr Galloway, the MP for Bethnal Green and Bow in east London, was unavailable for comment. However, Ron Mackay, his spokesman, said the decision not to investigate the back bencher came as no surprise. "He's had no contact or e-mail, not a visit, not an inquiry by anyone in an official position - be it the SFO or Scotland Yard. It's a complete utter non-event," he said.
In May 2005, Mr Galloway testified before the US Senate investigations subcommittee and denied the OFF programme allegations against him, declaring: "I have never seen a barrel of oil, never bought one, never sold one, and neither has anyone on my behalf."
The former Glasgow MP will not be investigated by either Scotland Yard or the SFO, but Sir Philip Mawer, Westminster's parliamentary commissioner, is still looking into whether, in light of the OFF programme allegations, Mr Galloway breached any Commons rules.
Furthermore, the Charity Commission is continuing its inquiry into the Mariam Appeal, the £1m political fund set up by the Respect leader, to see if it received any funds via the OFF programme and, if so, whether they were right and proper. It's thought the SFO will target those companies whose names appeared in the UN report of 2005, which accused various organisations of taking kickbacks under the OFF programme.
The report by Paul Volcker, a former chairman of the US Federal Reserve, claimed the OFF programme, under which Iraq could sell oil to buy food and medicine, had become riddled with corruption as Saddam's government demanded kickbacks totalling £1bn from foreign firms in return for the oil contracts. Almost 2400 companies worldwide were linked to allegations of bribery, including 11 from the UK, all of which have denied any wrongdoing. |
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faceless admin
Joined: 25 Apr 2006
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Posted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 10:06 pm Post subject: |
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Met rejects Galloway Iraq case
David Leigh and Rob Evans
Tuesday March 27, 2007
The Guardian
The MP George Galloway is neither to face a police investigation nor an inquiry by the Serious Fraud Office into his dealings with Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq, it was announced yesterday. The Metropolitan police said it would not take up a request from the SFO to investigate possible UN sanctions-busting by the Respect MP. The SFO, which passed the file to the police, said the MP's behaviour was not going to be part of its new investigation into oil-for-food allegations. The SFO is investigating separate allegations that British companies paid kickbacks to Saddam, to get oil and humanitarian contracts.
A Scotland Yard spokesman said: "We were considering a request to investigate whether there had been a breach of UN sanctions. The Met was in discussion with the Crown Prosecution Service about this but it was superseded by the SFO who were investigating alleged breaches of sanctions and as such these matters will be considered as part of the Serious Fraud Office inquiry." An SFO spokesman said: "Mr Galloway is not included in the SFO inquiry in relation to the oil-for-food allegations."
It was alleged in a UN report by Paul Volcker, former chairman of the US Federal Reserve, that Mr Galloway's anti-sanctions campaign benefited from donations which ultimately came from Iraqi oil sales. The MP said he was unaware of the source of the contributions made by a Jordanian businessman.
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Took their time really eh? |
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