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SYDNEY - Australian Prime Minister John Howard has denied any cover-up of the government's role in the payment of huge bribes to Saddam Hussein ahead of the release of a damning report.
![]() Australian Prime Minister John Howard has denied any cover-up of the government's role in the payment of huge bribes to Saddam Hussein ahead of the release of a damning report.[AFP] ![]() |
The report is widely tipped to recommend criminal charges against former AWB executives but government officials, including Howard, are not expected to face legal action.
Howard, heading into an election next year, rejected opposition charges that government complicity in the corruption had been shielded from investigation by limits to the commission of inquiry's terms of reference.
"That allegation is totally false," he said in a radio address.
Howard and two of his senior ministers were called to appear before the inquiry where they denied knowledge of the corruption by the AWB, formerly the Australian Wheat Board before it was privatised in 1999.
The inquiry by former judge Terence Cole was established in January after a UN report said AWB paid 220 million dollars in bribes to secure wheat contracts worth 2.3 billion dollars under the oil-for-food programme.
The UN programme was designed to allow Iraq to use money from oil exports to buy food and medicine to relieve the civilian suffering caused by international sanctions against Saddam before he was toppled in 2003.
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