Sunday, June 10, 2007
Search Site:
Home | About Us | Subscribe | Contact Us | Archives | Feedback | DH Avenues
News
National
State
District
City
Business
Foreign
Sports
Comments
Edit Page
Panorama
Net Mail
Your Take
Infoline
In City Today
HelpLine
Daily Almanac
Festivals of India
Weather
Leisure
Crossword
Horoscope
Year 2007
Weekly
Daily Astrospeak
Calendar 2007
Pearls of Wisdom
"Take your life in your own hands, and what happens? A terrible thing: no one to blame."
- Erica Jong
Supplements
Economy & Business
Metro Life - Mon
DH Avenues
Cyber Space
Metro Life - Thurs
DH Education
Studying Abroad
Studying In India
Metro Life - Fri
Open Sesame
Metro Life - Sat
Living
DH Realty
Fine Art / Culture
Articulations
Entertainment
Science & Technology
Spectrum
Sportscene
She
Sunday Herald
Reviews
Book Reviews
Movie Reviews
Art Reviews
Columns
Kuldip Nayar
Khushwant Singh
N J Nanporia
Tavleen Singh
Swami Sukhabodhananda
Bittu Sehgal
Suresh Menon
Shreekumar Varma
Movie Guide
Ad Links
Deccan
International School
Real Estate Properties in Bangalore
Deccan Herald
Now Available
Globally
in Print Format
Others
About Us
Subscription

Send your Suggestions / Queries about the Website to the
Webmaster


To send letters to Editor :
Letters to Editor

You are welcome to post your letters/responses to NETMAIL here.

For enquiries on advertisements :
Contact Us

Deccan Herald » Foreign » Detailed Story
Ex-UN official convicted of bribery
New York, pti:
Former United Nations procurement official Sanjaya Bahel was on Friday convicted of charges that he helped his friend win lucrative UN contracts worth USD 100 million in exchange for cash and discounted luxury Manhattan apartments and could end up serving 30 years in jail.

Former United Nations procurement official Sanjaya Bahel was on Friday convicted of charges that he helped his friend win lucrative UN contracts worth USD 100 million in exchange for cash and discounted luxury Manhattan apartments and could end up serving 30 years in jail.
He was convicted of bribery, wire fraud and mail fraud charges. Bahel, 57, will be kept in jail until his sentencing in September. “I don’t know whether there could be some scheme to have him depart from the country,” US District Judge Thomas P Griesa said.
Bahel, who was chief of UN Commodity Procurement Department from 1999 to 2003, has maintained his innocence all along.
The investigation against Bahel, who is from India, was part of the inquiry set off by the Volcker Committee report in the Iraqi oil-for-food programme which had cast doubts on contacts given by the peacekeeping department of the United Nations.
Bahel, who was in the field procurement unit of the procurement department of the United Nations, was investigated for bending the rules to steer millions of dollars worth of contracts to Indian firms.
In a statement issued within hours of the conviction, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed satisfaction that “justice has been done” and asserted that the conviction had resulted in a large part from the extensive work done by the United Nations task force.
The world body’s investigators had given an 86-page dossier on Bahel to the prosecutors.
The indictment has charged him with inviting re-bids to ensure that his friend Nishan Kohli’s companies get the contracts. Bahel has also been charged with providing him with access to information not available to other bidders.
Even though companies he represented benefited, Kohli cooperated with the prosecutors and testified against Bahel which helped in his conviction. For his testimony against Bahel, he will get a lenient sentence for giving bribes, the charge to which he has pleaded  guilty.
But Bahel’s lawyer Richard Herman attacked the United Nations, saying that the “witch hunt” against him had resulted from the efforts by the world body to repair its image in the wake of several scandals, including investigation into charges of corruption in the Iraqi oil-for-food programme.
Chairman of the Procurement Task Force at the UN internal oversight office Robert Appleton denied there was a witch hunt and pointed out the argument was not bought by the jury.
During his testimony, Kohli said he had made cash payments to Bahel and rented two luxury apartments to him on a discounted rent and then sold them at much lower than the prevailing price. He also said he had arranged strip club visits and prostitutes for two UN officials for 6000 dollars a night.
 Prosecutors had charged Bahel with helping two firms represented by Kohli to get contracts. The companies were identified as the Telecommunications Consultants India Ltd, owned by the Indian government, and Thunderbird Industries.
Kohli said Bahel gave him so much inside information to his family that he was considered a business partner and prosecutors alleged that Bahel got 10 per cent of profits that Kohli earned through UN contracts.
He also testified that the inside information that Bahel gave helped the companies he represented to get contracts. His family sought Bahel’s advice in connection some two dozen contracts.

comment on this article
Other Headlines
SC blocks Tamils evicition
G8s $60 bn AIDS pledge criticised
Quartet seeks to bridge Israeli-Palestinian gulf
Gonu wanes, leaves Oman, Iran
Ex-UN official convicted of bribery
Remote power for mobiles, laptops
AT A GLANCE
HERALD DIARY
Ad Links
Flowers to India , Gifts to India
Your Life Partner? Get personalized proposals daily. Thousands of New members with Photo Profiles. Profession,Religion, Community searches & more. Register FREE!
Gifts to India, Flowers to India, Gifts to India, Bangalore, Gifts to India, Mumbai, Delhi, Rakhi
Gifts to India , Flowers to Bangalore India
No minimum balance NRI account
India Flowers - Dehradun Hyderabad Kolkata Gurgaon Punjab
Flowers to India Flowers Gifts Delhi Bangalore Mumbai Chennai
Flowers to Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Delhi, Mumbai, Pune Kolkata.
Send Flowers, Cakes, Chocolate, Fruits to Pune.
Flowers to India , France , Japan, Germany, Hong Kong, Singapore, Mexico, USA
Flowers to India , Mumbai , Pune, Delhi, Chennai,
click here
Copyright 2007, The Printers (Mysore) Private Ltd., 75, M.G. Road, Post Box No 5331, Bangalore - 560001
Tel: +91 (80) 25880000 Fax No. +91 (80) 25880523
200x200
Gender:MaleFemale

Email:

click here
click here
click here