UN accuses Indian of routing contracts
UN accuses Indian of routing contracts
UN concluded that an Indian official steered money in contracts to a company owned by the Govt of India.

New York: An internal UN investigation concluded that a UN official steered millions of dollars in contracts to a company owned by the government of his native India, in exchange for favours that included low-rent apartments.

The investigation claimed that Sanjaya Bahel, himself formally an official in the Indian government when he was working for the UN under contract, used his relationship with a wealthy Indian businessman and his son to steer the deals to the company they represented, Telecommunications Consultants India Limited (TCIL).

According to the report disclosed on Thursday, Bahel also ignored evidence that TCIL wrongly withheld money from employees sent to UN peacekeeping missions in places such as Liberia, Congo and Kosovo to do communication work.

While the workers claimed they were only getting a pittance - sometimes

as little as $5 for daily expenses - the money enriched another company associated with the Indian businessman and his son.

The confidential report detailing the investigation's findings was shown. Bahel vehemently denied the claims and said the UN only notified him of them earlier on Thursday.

"All I can say to you is to me the allegations are not correct," Bahel said. "I have good reasoning and valid reasoning to counter those."

Bahel was chief of commodity procurement for the UN from 1998-2003. From 1999 to 2004 TCIL received more than $100 mn in UN contracts, the report said.

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