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Bombastic brit defies senate charges

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   http://abcnews.go.com/International/UnitedNations/story?id=1249179&page=1

http://abcnews.go.com/International/UnitedNations/story?id=1249179&page=1

Bombastic Brit Defies Senate to Charge Him With Perjury
On the Trail of U.N. Oil-for-Food Profiteers
By CHARLOTTE SECTOR

Oct. 25, 2005 — - The fiery Brit George Galloway defied the U.S. Senate once again, denying claims that he lied under oath during his testimony last May on the U.N. oil-for-food program in Iraq.

The Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs released a report Monday saying it has fresh evidence that Galloway and his wife benefited from illegal oil money from the regime of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.

The new allegations call into question Galloway's vehement denials that he profited from the 1996 to 2003 oil-for-food program, which is the subject of investigations by both the U.S. Congress and the United Nations.

The oil-for-food program set up by the United Nations enabled Iraq to sell limited quantities of oil to meet its people's needs for food and medicine as economic sanctions were imposed against Saddam's regime. The investigations have focused on various political figures and oil middle men who bought under-priced Iraqi oil and got kickbacks as traders pumped up the price before selling it on the open market.


Looking for Kickbacks
The committee, led by Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., alleges that the Labor Party lawmaker and now British member of parliament received eight oil vouchers from Saddam's regime between 1999 and 2003 and that wire transfers of $446,000 from oil allocations enabled him to pay for his political campaign. According to the committee report, his now-estranged Jordanian wife, Amireh Abu-Zayyad, also raked in some cash, purportedly receiving $150,000 in oil money.

"We have what I think we call the smoking gun," said Coleman in a written statement. "The additional evidence clearly demonstrates the testimony Mr. Galloway provided the sub-committee was false and misleading."

Galloway disagrees.

Galloway told BBC Radio, "The specific allegation against me is that I lied under oath in front of a Senate committee. In this case, the remedy is clear -- they must charge me with perjury and I am ready to fly to the U.S. today, if necessary, to face such a charge because it is simply false."

Fiery Defiance in May
During sworn testimony in mid-May, the mustachioed Galloway voluntarily came to the United States to defend himself against accusations of corruption in the scandal-plagued oil-for-food program. Galloway didn't mince his words in attacking the Senate oil-for-food subcommittee. He charged the committee was simply looking for a scapegoat in what he described as the United State's failed war in Iraq.

"I am not now, nor have I ever been, an oil trader and neither has anyone on my behalf," he said, staring down senators red-faced and gravelly voiced. He accused the Senate committee of being "cavalier with any idea of justice." saying that the panel had accused him without ever questioning him.

Galloway denounced the charges that he received anything from Saddam, calling the inquiry the "mother of all smokescreens."

Coleman has indicated that the committee plans to send the new evidence to the U.S. Department of Justice as well as to British authorities, at which time criminal proceedings may be undertaken.


Copyright © 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures



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All players gained from oil for food { February 3 2005 }
Annan accepts criticism of united nations programs { September 8 2005 }
Annan refuses to quit over UN report
Annan son took payments through 2004 { November 26 2004 }
Australia wins iraqi wheat deal despite allegations { March 3 2006 }
Bombastic brit defies senate charges
Bremer office hampering oil for food corruption inquiry
Bush expresses confidence in annan
Case against sanctions { October 6 1996 }
Chalabi used oil for food to subvert grain contract { March 25 2006 }
Charges filed against two texas oilmen { October 27 2005 }
Congressman visits iraq { April 17 2000 }
Documents say US condoned iraq oil smuggling
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Hussein used oil to dilute sanctions { October 7 2004 }
Indian minister resigns over iraq oilforfood
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Kofi critizes US and british role in scandal
Lawmakers deny oil for food accusations { May 17 2005 }
Report blames france russia and china
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Saddam blames child deaths on sanctions { June 21 2003 }
Saddam subverted double oil for food theft { November 15 2004 }
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Senator coleman calls for annan resignation
Texas businessman indicted in oil for food program { April 14 2005 }
Texas oilman pleads not guilty in oilforfood probe { October 28 2005 }
Three indicted for giving sadam kickbacks { April 14 2005 }
Treasury department oil for food violation { February 17 2005 }
Un council backs probe of oil for food { April 22 2004 }
Un responsibility suffering iraq { August 20 2003 }
United nations official subverted oil for food inquiry { November 14 2004 }
US acquiesced in iraq transactions outside UN program { February 3 2005 }
US ignored oil smuggling warning { January 14 2005 }
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Volcker report sharply critical of oil for food operation { February 3 2005 }

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