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UN: A UN panel ruled that Secretary-General Kofi Annan erred in firing the sole UN official to be dismissed for alleged misconduct in the scandal-tainted oil-for-food plan for Iraq, officials said.
The Joint Disciplinary Committee, a panel made up of staff and management representatives, on Thursday said that there was insufficient evidence of violations of the UN staff rules to dismiss UN aide Joseph Stephanides.
The panel's judgments are not binding on Annan but only recommendations.
Other UN employees have run into trouble with law enforcement authorities for actions linked to the $64 billion oil-for-food program.
Stephanides was the only one to be fired outright.
Stephanides was let go after a UN-appointed inquiry accused him of steering a lucrative contract under the oil-for-food program to a British firm. He has contended that his actions were approved by his superiors.
Investigators, in a February 3 report, accused Stephanides, a Cypriot who helped set up the oil-for-food program in 1996, of revealing details to Britain's then-UN ambassador, John Weston, of a rival bid for a contract, a violation of UN procurement rules.
The inquiry, led by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, reaffirmed its initial findings just last month.
As a result of Stephanides' actions, the British firm Lloyd's Register Inspection Ltd. ended up winning a 4.5 million dollars contract even though French firm Bureau Veritas was the low bidder, the report said.
It did not accuse Stephanides of enriching himself and Stephanides argued that he was carrying out the will of his superiors, who wanted the contract awarded to Lloyd's.
Asked about Annan's decision to dismiss Stephanides on Thursday, UN spokeswoman Marie Okabe said the UN had relied on its own determination that staff rules had been violated and not on the judgment of the Volcker inquiry, which was a fact-finding body rather than a judicial body.
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