Rudd to push for new AWB bribes inquiry
Josh Gordon
May 25, 2008
LABOR is set to relaunch investigations into the AWB wheat-for-weapons scandal.
The Government is believed to be concerned that the Cole Commission failed to properly examine whether the previous government was aware the company siphoned hundreds of millions of dollars of kickbacks to Saddam Hussein's Iraqi regime.
The Sun-Herald understands that Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is pushing ahead with plans to reopen the inquiry, although a public statement is unlikely until the courts have dealt with former AWB chairman Trevor Flugge and five other executives embroiled in the affair.
The Cole Commission concluded in late 2006 that AWB was knowingly paying kickbacks to Saddam Hussein's regime between 1999 and 2004, funnelling an estimated $US224million disguised as trucking fees to avoid UN sanctions.
But it found no evidence that any government officer - from senior ministers down to departmental officials - had any knowledge that the payments were being made in exchange for lucrative wheat deals.
Mr Rudd indicated in December that he would be instructing his department to provide advice on "how these things could be taken further".
"I still for the life of me cannot understand ... whereby Australia became the largest source of illicit foreign funding to Saddam Hussein's regime, that no minister - no minister - was held accountable or responsible for that gross failure of public administration," he said at the time.
Mr Rudd's spokesman, George Wright, yesterday said: "We will consider the [departmental] advice when we receive it."
Source: The Sun-Herald
http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/rudd-to-push-for-new-awb-bribes-inquiry/2008/05/25/1211183200580.html
Could we yet learn the CDN CWB connections?
Josh Gordon
May 25, 2008
LABOR is set to relaunch investigations into the AWB wheat-for-weapons scandal.
The Government is believed to be concerned that the Cole Commission failed to properly examine whether the previous government was aware the company siphoned hundreds of millions of dollars of kickbacks to Saddam Hussein's Iraqi regime.
The Sun-Herald understands that Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is pushing ahead with plans to reopen the inquiry, although a public statement is unlikely until the courts have dealt with former AWB chairman Trevor Flugge and five other executives embroiled in the affair.
The Cole Commission concluded in late 2006 that AWB was knowingly paying kickbacks to Saddam Hussein's regime between 1999 and 2004, funnelling an estimated $US224million disguised as trucking fees to avoid UN sanctions.
But it found no evidence that any government officer - from senior ministers down to departmental officials - had any knowledge that the payments were being made in exchange for lucrative wheat deals.
Mr Rudd indicated in December that he would be instructing his department to provide advice on "how these things could be taken further".
"I still for the life of me cannot understand ... whereby Australia became the largest source of illicit foreign funding to Saddam Hussein's regime, that no minister - no minister - was held accountable or responsible for that gross failure of public administration," he said at the time.
Mr Rudd's spokesman, George Wright, yesterday said: "We will consider the [departmental] advice when we receive it."
Source: The Sun-Herald
http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/rudd-to-push-for-new-awb-bribes-inquiry/2008/05/25/1211183200580.html
Could we yet learn the CDN CWB connections?
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