AWB: Australia’s latest disgrace
A big, big story is unfolding this week at a Royal Commission being conducted in Sydney by Justice Terence Cole into “Certain Australian Companies in Relation to the UN Oil-For-Food Programme”. Australia’s biggest agribusiness company appears to be up to its neck in it, and so too the Howard Government.
In short, AWB (formerly the Australian Wheat Board), Australia’s monopoly wheat exporter, was named in the UN report as one of the companies alleged to have been giving kickbacks to the Iraqi government whilst sanctions were in place. Testimony before the Cole Royal Commission is supporting those allegations, with some extraordinarily bad attempts at arse-covering by AWB executives this week.
The most interesting revelations surround the evidence that AWB’s kickback activity began before July 1999. That was the date when the AWB was privatised - before that it was a Government-owned business enterprise.
I’m not going to attempt to analyse the nitty-gritty of this latest scandal to stain the Howard Government’s CV, rather give some links by which you can follow the development of this extraordinary story:
- The website of the Independent Inquiry Committee into the UN Oil-for-Food Programme, which handed down its findings on 27 October 2005 (press release in PDF)
- The UN news website’s coverage and official reaction to the Oil-for-Food Inquiry
- AWB’s reaction to being named in the report (press release in PDF)
- BBC Online’s coverage of the Oil-for-food Scandal
- The Australian Attorney-General’s Department’s website for the Cole Royal Commission.
- I have also set up a playlist of nine MP3 files from the ABC website covering news reports of the Royal Commission so far this week (about 36 minutes of listening all up). Here’s a link to today’s latest story on the ABC website.
- Here’s an op-ed by The Australian’s Mike Steketee in today’s edition, which also featured an extraordinary letter to the editor by Global Village Idiot Alexander Downer (he’s on holidays you see and therefore can’t issue an official press release).
In addition to AWB there were two other Australian companies named in the Volcker report commissioned by the UN: Alkaloids of Australia Pty Ltd and Rhine Ruhr Pty Ltd.
Significantly, the terms of reference for the Royal Commission only refer to investigating the role of “certain Australian companies” in the Oil-for-food program, not the role of the Australian government. The circumstantial evidence forthcoming from this hearing will, nonetheless, be dynamite. Federal Parliament resumes sitting on February 7.
Planning a distraction yet, JH?















July 18th, 2007 at 10:18 pm
[…] What else came to mind as we drove through the wheat belt was how all these peaceful towns with their grain elevators were all involved in the biggest UN corruption scandal in history. The UN Food for Oil Corruption Scandal had tentacles that reached all the way over here to the Australian wheat belt. The Australian Wheat Bureau or AWB for short was implicated in a massive kickback scheme to then dictator of Iraq, Saddam Hussein. Millions of dollars of hard cash was sent to Saddam in order to secure the UN wheat contract in Iraq. […]
July 22nd, 2007 at 6:35 pm
[…] What else came to mind as we drove through the wheat belt was how all these peaceful towns with their grain elevators were all involved in the biggest UN corruption scandal in history. The UN Food for Oil Corruption Scandal had tentacles that reached all the way over here to the Australian wheat belt. The Australian Wheat Bureau or AWB for short was implicated in a massive kickback scheme to then dictator of Iraq, Saddam Hussein. Millions of dollars of hard cash was sent to Saddam in order to secure the UN wheat contract in Iraq. […]
June 1st, 2008 at 9:47 pm
[…] What else came to mind as we drove through the wheat belt was how all these peaceful towns with their grain elevators were all involved in the biggest UN corruption scandal in history. The UN Food for Oil Corruption Scandal had tentacles that reached all the way over here to the Australian wheat belt. The Australian Wheat Bureau or AWB for short was implicated in a massive kickback scheme to then dictator of Iraq, Saddam Hussein. Millions of dollars of hard cash was sent to Saddam in order to secure the UN wheat contract in Iraq. […]