Google – AFP, 30 Sep 2013
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Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein delivers a televised speech in 1998 -- the year
a
company owned by the Reserve Bank of Australia attempted to strike a
business
deal with him (IRNA/IRNA/AFP)
|
Sydney —
The Reserve Bank of Australia on Monday admitted staff from a subsidiary
visited Iraq at the height of UN sanctions after it was accused of attempting
to strike an illegal deal with Saddam Hussein.
A joint
investigation by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and Fairfax Media said
secret files showed officials from the central bank's scandal-hit Note Printing
Australia (NPA) went to Iraq to discuss a contract to turn the country's paper
currency into polymer notes.
During the
1998 trip, codenamed Delta Project, they met a middleman -- former dictator
Hussein's brother-in-law and bodyguard Arshad Yassin, the reports said.
"Indications
from Arshad Yassin's office are that Saddam Hussein's office has already
allocated $US65 million for the total project," RBA officials said in one
document, the media groups reported.
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A man walks
past the Reserve Bank of
Australia on May 7, 2013 (AFP/File,
William West)
|
Reserve
officials working for NPA said the funds could potentially be accessed by
funnelling them through a Jordanian bank "with the green light of SH
(Saddam Hussein)," it was alleged.
The
operation was called off six months later after Australian diplomats uncovered
the secret dealings with the brutal regime, according to the ABC.
The RBA
admitted officials made the trip, as calls mounted for a full inquiry.
"The
visit in 1998 was, in the opinion of the bank, ill-advised," it said in a
statement.
"No
banknotes were ultimately supplied to Iraq. On the records available to the
bank, the project went into abeyance after concerns were raised by DFAT
(Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade) with the then-CEO of NPA."
David
Chaikin, a legal expert at the University of Sydney who reviewed the
confidential bank documents, said the negotiations were a violation of
international law and alarm bells should have been sounded "to the highest
levels of the bank".
"What
was happening is not only in violation of law, but could potentially destroy and
undermine the reputation of Note Printing Australia and its owner, the Reserve
Bank," he told the broadcaster.
He added to
Fairfax that the files contained a "very strong prima facie" case
that officials involved in the trip had breached a UN sanction that banned
Australians from promoting the sale or supply of goods to Iraq.
NPA has
been plagued by allegations of corruption in recent years, with claims it and
another RBA subsidiary Securency paid bribes to win plastic bank note contracts
in Asia.
Executives
from both companies have been charged over the alleged racket, which involved
contracts in Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam and Nepal, following an investigation
by Fairfax in 2009.
The RBA has
previously denied it attempted to hide information related to the Asian
contracts, with bank chief Glenn Stevens telling an inquiry last year that he
knew nothing about the scandal before it was exposed.
Whistleblower
Brian Hood, a former NPA executive, told the ABC and Fairfax that Stevens'
testimony "wasn't the truth" and the RBA knew of the allegations in
2007, claims the bank rejected Monday.
"The
governor has always answered questions in parliamentary proceedings fully and
truthfully," it said.
Australian
Greens Party deputy leader Adam Bandt said the latest revelations were
disturbing.
"Most
Australians would be shocked to know their central bank was using their money
to line up dirty deals with Saddam Hussein," he said.
"The
stench surrounding the Reserve Bank gets worse and a full inquiry is needed to
clear the air."


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