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U.S. urges Cyprus to help extradite former UN official

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  • U.S. urges Cyprus to help extradite former UN official

    Xinhua News Agency
    February 17, 2007 Saturday 7:00 AM EST

    U.S. urges Cyprus to help extradite former UN official

    NICOSIA

    U.S. congressmen have asked Cyprus to help bring to trial Benon
    Sevan, a former UN official who headed the scandal-ridden
    oil-for-food program for Iraq, the latest edition of Cyprus Weekly
    reported.

    Sevan, a Cypriot of Armenian descent, was indicted in New York last
    month on charges of bribery and corruption in connection with the
    oil-for-food program.

    According to an indictment released by a U.S. federal court in New
    York, the former UN official was accused of receiving 160,000 U.S.
    dollars in kickbacks from Nadler, brother-in-law of former UN
    Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali, on behalf of the Iraqi
    government.

    The Cyprus government has confirmed that Sevan is currently staying
    in the island country, but due to absence of any extradition treaty
    between Cyprus and the U.S., citizens from either country can not be
    extradited without the approval of the Attorney General of that
    country.

    The U.S. Justice Department then requested Sevan's extradition
    through international law enforcement agency Interpol.

    Recently, two U.S. congressmen, Republican Tom Lantos who chairs the
    House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee and another
    Republican Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida, sent a letter to Cypriot
    ambassador in the U.S. for help in extradition of Sevan.

    The two congressmen said Cyprus' membership in the European Union was
    seen as "heralding a new era of international cooperation by your
    country."

    "In this context, we trust that your government will undertake robust
    efforts to investigate, locate and extradite Mr Sevan, so that he may
    be fairly tried for his alleged violations of United States law and
    international confidence," they wrote.

    If convicted, Sevan could be sentenced to 50 years in prison while
    Nadler faces up to 112 years.

    But a statement issued by Sevan's lawyer claimed that the U.S. has
    decided to use Sevan as a "scapegoat and a distraction from the
    United States' own massive failures and mismanagement in Iraq. "

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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