Mallee,
Is this effectively the end of the AWB 'Single desk"?
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200609/s1752205.htm
An AWB letter tendered at the Cole inquiry says the Australian Government supported AWB payments of trucking fees which are now known to have been kickbacks to Suddam Hussein's regime.
The undated, unsigned letter bears the name of the wheat exporter's former chairman Trevor Flugge and is addressed to the Iraqi trade minister.
The letter was retrieved from AWB computers on Monday afternoon.
It was printed in April 2000, but it is not known whether it was sent to Iraq. It was one of a number of drafts.
It tells the minister, Mohammad Saleh, that the AWB chairman had met with the then agriculture minister, Warren Truss, about concerns about Iraqi/Australian trade.
It said Mr Flugge wanted to discuss with Iraqi officials, United Nations' concerns over allegations about trucking fees.
But it said AWB remained committed to the trade terms with the Iraqi grains board, and the Australian Government supported that commitment.
Mr Flugge denied any knowledge of the letter.
Earlier, Mr Flugge has told the Cole inquiry he did know about transport fees being paid to a Jordanian trucking company in 2002 but he did not know at that time the payments were made through an indirect process.
Incognito;
Won't the whole world point at the "single desk" and say absolute power corrupts absolutely?
Isn't this the end of the CWB "single desk" as well... as they knew exactly what the AWB was doing... EXACTLY... and did nothing to stop it?
Is this effectively the end of the AWB 'Single desk"?
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200609/s1752205.htm
An AWB letter tendered at the Cole inquiry says the Australian Government supported AWB payments of trucking fees which are now known to have been kickbacks to Suddam Hussein's regime.
The undated, unsigned letter bears the name of the wheat exporter's former chairman Trevor Flugge and is addressed to the Iraqi trade minister.
The letter was retrieved from AWB computers on Monday afternoon.
It was printed in April 2000, but it is not known whether it was sent to Iraq. It was one of a number of drafts.
It tells the minister, Mohammad Saleh, that the AWB chairman had met with the then agriculture minister, Warren Truss, about concerns about Iraqi/Australian trade.
It said Mr Flugge wanted to discuss with Iraqi officials, United Nations' concerns over allegations about trucking fees.
But it said AWB remained committed to the trade terms with the Iraqi grains board, and the Australian Government supported that commitment.
Mr Flugge denied any knowledge of the letter.
Earlier, Mr Flugge has told the Cole inquiry he did know about transport fees being paid to a Jordanian trucking company in 2002 but he did not know at that time the payments were made through an indirect process.
Incognito;
Won't the whole world point at the "single desk" and say absolute power corrupts absolutely?
Isn't this the end of the CWB "single desk" as well... as they knew exactly what the AWB was doing... EXACTLY... and did nothing to stop it?
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