US Hostage rescued

RexBudler

Wonder Dog
Forum Member
Dec 6, 2003
14,927
30
0
54
Irvine, California
Funny how you never heard much about this. I guess he was assumed dead.......

Coalition Forces Rescue U.S. Hostage
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - The U.S. military, acting on a tip, raided a farmhouse Wednesday and rescued an American held hostage for 10 months. In southern Iraq, a roadside bomb killed four American security guards, fueling fears the bloody insurgency was taking deeper root outside Sunni-dominated territory.

Roy Hallums, 57, was ``in good condition and is receiving medical care,'' a military statement said after U.S. forces freed him from an isolated farmhouse 15 miles south of Baghdad. The statement said the military had received a tip from an Iraqi prisoner.

In a telephone interview with CNN, the freed hostage's ex-wife, Susan Hallums, said she had talked to her former husband.

``That's the best phone call I've ever gotten,'' she said in Los Angeles. ``It was just very, very early this morning and he called and said that he was free, and I said that's just - our prayers were answered.''

Hallums, formerly of Newport Beach, Calif., was kidnapped at gunpoint from his office in the Mansour district of Baghdad on Nov. 1, 2004. He was freed along with an Iraqi civilian who was not identified.

``I want to thank all of those who were involved in my rescue - to those who continuously tracked my captors and location, and to those who physically brought me freedom today,'' Hallums said in the military statement.

``To all of you, I will be forever grateful. Both of us are in good health and look forward to returning to our respective families. Thank you to all who kept me and my family in their thoughts and prayers.''

A family Web site was topped with a headline: ``Roy IS FREE!!!!!! 9/7/05.''

Susan Hallums said she and her husband of 30 years divorced a couple of years ago but remain good friends. They have two daughters.

Roy Hallums was working for the Saudi Arabian Trading and Construction Co., supplying food to the Iraqi army, when he was abducted along with two other foreigners after a gunbattle in Baghdad. An Iraqi guard and one attacker were killed. A Filipino, a Nepalese and three Iraqis also were seized but later freed.

Hallums' family sent fliers to Iraq that, in English and Arabic, offered a $40,000 reward for information leading to his safe release.

In a January video issued by his kidnappers, Hallums had a shaggy beard and a gun pointed at his head. In the video, Hallums asked Arab leaders, singling out Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, to save his life. Gadhafi responded by calling on insurgents to release the American.

More than 200 foreigners have been abducted in Iraq since the war began in March 2003; more than 30 have been killed.

Wednesday's roadside bombing in southern Iraq was particularly noteworthy because attacks against Americans in the region of Basra, Iraq's second-largest city, are rare. The U.S. has only a minimal presence in the area. Also, Shiites, who are the dominant population in the south, have found themselves the political winners as new government structures take shape after the U.S.-led invasion.

The powerful bomb flipped the guards' white SUV onto its roof in a ravine alongside a highway near Basra, a major oil center that is under the control of Britain's 8,500-strong contingent in the south.

``All four individuals worked for a private security firm supporting the regional U.S. Embassy office in Basra,'' U.S. Embassy spokesman Peter Mitchell said in a statement.

AP Television News videotape showed the overturned white SUV and six British Army Land Rovers, with Iraqi police cars and two civilian ambulances parked nearby. British soldiers loaded a body from the SUV into a military ambulance.

Despite a peaceful postwar history in the south, violence has spiked in the past two months.

On July 16, a roadside bomb in Amarah killed three British soldiers and wounded two. Two weeks later, two Britons, who worked for the security firm Control Risks Group, were killed when a roadside bomb exploded alongside a British diplomatic convoy in Basra.

Two British soldiers died Monday in a roadside bombing west of Basra, bringing to 95 the number of fatalities British forces have suffered since the war began.

A U.S. soldier was killed Wednesday in a non-combat accident in central Iraq, the military said. It did not identify the soldier.

Also Wednesday, an official of the court that will try Saddam Hussein discounted a claim by Iraq's president that the former leader had admitted wrongdoing in a confession to mass killings and other crimes during his rule.

In an Iraqi television interview aired Tuesday, President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, said Saddam had confessed he ordered the killing of more than 180,000 Kurds in the north of the country in the late 1980s.

``Saddam Hussein is a war criminal and he deserves to be executed 20 times a day for his crimes against humanity,'' said Talabani, who heads the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan party. He claimed Saddam had tried to assassinate him at least 20 times.

The official of the Iraq Special Tribunal, which will put Saddam on trial Oct. 19, said Saddam made a statement last month, but did not confess to criminal activity. The former dictator ``boastfully'' acknowledged the so-called Anfal campaign against the Kurds in 1987-88; the campaign led to the ethnic cleansing of many Kurdish communities in the north.

``He said it was legal and justified,'' according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the case.

Saddam has charged that Iraqi Kurds - part of a disaffected ethnic minority that is spread across northern Iraq, Iran, Turkey and Syria - were aiding the enemy in Iraq's eight-year war against Iran. Millions died in the conflict, which Saddam started.
 

ferdville

Registered User
Forum Member
Dec 24, 1999
3,165
5
0
78
So Cal
Why would we expect to hear a good news story when we can get our fill of so much bad news instead.
 

smurphy

cartographer
Channel Member
Jul 31, 2004
19,910
135
63
16
L.A.
Are you guys serious? Do you just wanna hear about the isolated hostage rescue, and ignore the rest of that article? I say we hear it all - the good, the bad, the ugly. Obviously a spike in roadside bombs in an area that used to be more peaceful, inluding 4 killed in an attack today IS FAR WORSE than the rescuing of 1 person.

And I guess you believe Dick when he says "final throes" too?
 

smurphy

cartographer
Channel Member
Jul 31, 2004
19,910
135
63
16
L.A.
sorry, bro! too many absolute rb's for me already tonight! :mj14:
 

ferdville

Registered User
Forum Member
Dec 24, 1999
3,165
5
0
78
So Cal
Some people choose to focus on the positive every once and a while instead of always focusing on the negative.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

Registered User
Forum Member
Jul 13, 1999
19,485
161
63
Bowling Green Ky
----They got to dwell on something Ferd
--their unemployment/economy kinda hit the wall didn't it--despite 911-highest oil and gas prices of all time and now largest natuaral disaster in history--as I said before other than WW war pres can't see anyone dealt a tougher hand--and appears main concern is to cool down economy--quite remarkable.

In fact what they are barking about now certainly can be seen through and won't help their credibilty.

Dean>
By DENISE KALETTE
Associated Press Writer
MIAMI


Race was a factor in the death toll from Hurricane Katrina, Howard Dean told members of the National Baptist Convention of America on Wednesday at the group's annual meeting.

Dean, chairman of the Democratic party, made the comments to the Baptists' Political and Social Justice Commission. The Baptist Convention, with an estimated 3.5 million members, is one of the largest black religious groups in the country.

"We must ... come to terms with the ugly truth that skin color, age and economics played a deadly role in who survived and who did not," Dean said.

moveon.org>

Group's TV ad uses storm's aftermath to target Roberts
By Mark Memmott, USA TODAY

The televised images of poverty-stricken evacuees from Hurricane Katrina are part of a provocative, last-minute effort by a liberal interest group to divert federal Judge John Roberts' path to confirmation as chief justice.

'We believe John Roberts' record on civil rights ... is clearly not the direction our country needs to head now,' a MoveOn.org spokesperson said.
By Pablo Martinez Monsivais, AP

MoveOn.org Political Action plans to unveil a TV ad on Monday that questions whether Roberts is sensitive enough to civil rights concerns to lead the Supreme Court. The ad suggests that the plight of the mostly African-American evacuees in New Orleans showed that poverty remains a serious problem among minorities, said Ben Brandzel, the group's advocacy director. In a mix of judicial and racial politics, the ad then suggests that minorities could suffer if the Senate confirms Roberts.

EdwardsJohn Edwards said the hurricane's aftermath underscores the "two Americas" theme of his presidential campaign last year.

His House counterpart, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., renewed her call for Brown's dismissal. "There were two disasters last week: first, the natural disaster, and second, the man-made disaster, the disaster made by mistakes made by FEMA," she said. (hmm she makes no mention of La gov and mayor)

---and Hilliary on tangent Fema should be seperate from Homeland Security --yet voted along with others to have it included after 911--which ever way the wind blows--Kerry must be coaching her.
 
Last edited:

DOGS THAT BARK

Registered User
Forum Member
Jul 13, 1999
19,485
161
63
Bowling Green Ky
---and I did search of top stories in media and somehow most failed to mention this item also--I wonder why???

Report Criticizes Annan, U.N. Security Council in Oil-for-Food Scandal

Thursday, September 08, 2005



UNITED NATIONS ? Kofi Annan on Wednesday called the latest report on the U.N. Oil-for-Food (search) program "embarrassing" as it slammed the secretary-general, his deputy and the Security Council for allowing Saddam Hussein to cheat $10.2 billion from the humanitarian operation.

The report was released by the Independent Inquiry Committee to the Security Council Wednesday morning before it was released to the public.

Click on the links below to read sections of the report:

Volume I - The Report of the Committee (pdf)
Volume II - Program Background (pdf)
Volume III - United Nations Administration, Part I (pdf)
Volume IV - United Nations Administration, Part II (pdf)
Impact of Oil-for-Food Program on the Iraqi People (pdf)

"The findings of today's report must be deeply embarrassing to all of us," Annan told the Security Council Wednesday. "None of us ? member states, secretariat ? can be proud of what it has found. Who among us can now claim that U.N. management is not a problem or is not in need of reform?"

The document ? the fourth report released by the IIC, headed by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker (search) ? lays out a pattern of "illicit, unethical and corrupt behavior" that overwhelmed the United Nations. It criticizes Annan and slams his stewardship and management skills, as well as the oversight of the Security Council.

"Much of this report is critical of his management of the secretariat in general terms and in quite specific terms about his own personal responsibilities," Volcker said. "I can't say the responsibility was only his, but he certainly has, he is the head of the organization."

The report said that France and Britain cooperated with the investigation, but Russia and China refused requests for information or access to state-owned companies implicated in the probe. While some branches of the U.S. government were helpful, notably the U.S. mission to the U.N. and the State Department, others were not, the report said.

Former Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali (search), who played a key role in the creation of Oil-for-Food, also comes under heavy scrutiny.

Volcker presented the report at a Security Council meeting attended by Annan. The IIC was commissioned by the secretary general to probe the program.

"In essence, the responsibility for the failures must be broadly shared, starting, we believe, with member states and the Security Council itself," Volcker said.

"The politicization of decision making, the managerial weaknesses, the ethical lapses ? that was our mandate. To seek out and report mismanagement ... and any elements of corruption," Volcker said later during a press conference as he publicly released the report.

While he acknowledged that Oil-for-Food helped avert a more dire humanitarian crisis and food shortage in Iraq and helped keep Saddam from obtaining weapons of mass destruction, "over time, these important achievements came under a dark cloud," Volcker added.

Political differences among Security Council member states "clearly impeded decision-making" and other issues led to the program's downfall.

The report said those managing the program failed the ideals of the United Nations, ignoring clear evidence that corruption and waste flourished after it was created in 1996.

"The inescapable conclusion from the committee's work is that the United Nations organization needs thorough reform ? and it needs it urgently," the report said.

The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton (search), called the report a "catalyst for change" and said it casts the world organization in a "harsh light."

"This report unambiguously rejects the notion that business as usual at the United Nations is acceptable," Bolton said. "We need to reform the U.N. in a manner that will prevent another Oil-for-food scandal. The credibility of the United Nations depends on it."

Saying "there's plenty of blame to go around for the failings of the Oil-for-Food program," Bolton ? along with other representatives from countries such as Great Britain ? stressed that it was the former Iraqi dictator who was the biggest culprit.

"We can all agree that Saddam Hussein (search) exploited the goodwill of the international community," Bolton added.

Annan: None of Us Can Be Proud

In his address to the Security Council Wednesday, Annan said neither his office nor the Security Council as a whole knew enough about the distress Oil-for-Food was in and the corruption going on. He said the roles of various U.N. entities must be further defined "so that the secretary general knows precisely what is expected of him and member states can hold him fully accountable for the results."

"I know that none of you want a secretariat that can always blame its failings on member states or member states always blaming its failings on the secretariat," Annan said.

One of the largest humanitarian programs in history, Oil-for-Food was a lifeline for 90 percent of the country's population of 26 million. But Saddam was allowed to choose the buyers of Iraqi oil and the sellers of humanitarian goods, and used that power to curry favor by awarding oil contracts to former government officials, activists, journalists and U.N. officials who opposed the sanctions.

"The findings in today's report must be deeply embarrassing to us all," Annan said in a briefing to the 15-nation Security Council. "The Inquiry Committee has ripped away the curtain, and shone a harsh light into the most unsightly corners of the organization. None of us ? member states, Secretariat, agencies, funds and programs ? can be proud of what it has found."

Despite the criticism, Annan told reporters afterward "I don't anticipate anyone to resign. We are carrying on with our work."

The report, more than 800 pages long, was highly critical of the almost total lack of oversight of the program by the secretary-general and Deputy Secretary-General Louise Frechette (search), who was the direct boss of Benon Sevan, the program's executive director who is being investigated for allegedly accepting kickbacks.

It said lax oversight of the program allowed Saddam's regime to pocket $1.8 billion in kickbacks in the awarding of the contracts.

"This very large and very complex program accomplished many vital goals in Iraq ... At the same time, things went wrong, damaging the reputation and credibility of the United Nations," the IIC said in a statement. "The committee's central conclusion is that the United Nations requires stronger executive leadership, thoroughgoing administrative reform and more reliable controls and auditing."

But the IIC said the United Nations is essentially the only organization of its kind in the world that is capable of taking on such daunting tasks.

The committee also accused top U.N. officials and the powerful U.N. Security Council of turning a blind eye to the smuggling of Iraqi oil outside the program in violation of U.N. sanctions. That poured much more money ? $8.4 billion ? into Saddam's coffers from 1997-2003.

Saddam pocketed an additional $2.6 billion before the program started from illegal oil sales in violation of sanctions, the report said.

Volcker's team repeated previously known charges that the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council ? Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States ? repeatedly looked the other way as the smuggling took place ? and sometimes even actively supported the practice ? as a way to compensate Iraq's neighbors, who suffered too from the tough trade sanctions against Baghdad.

No Smoking Gun on Annan

The report's preface called for four central reforms, including the creation of a chief operating officer at the United Nations. The U.N. General Assembly (search) should demand that the changes go into force no later than a year from now, the preface said.

While Annan's failure to properly manage the $64 billion program will be a central focus, there is no new "smoking gun" linking him to an Oil-for-Food contract awarded to a Swiss company that employed his son Kojo.

The report said IIC investigators couldn't find evidence that Annan directly influenced the awarding of the contract but it will find more troubling links between Kojo Annan and Cotecna (search), and will cite management problems.

Yet, as the Volcker panel has said previously, Annan did not sufficiently investigate conflicts of interest involving his son.

As for Kojo himself, the committee said he used his father's "name and position" in 1998 to buy and deliver a car at reduced price. It said he had asked beforehand whether he could buy the car in his father's name, but no evidence showed the secretary-general ever agreed.

It reveals that Kojo Annan saved $20,000 by improperly claiming that a new Mercedes he bought was his father's, getting a diplomatic discount and saving customs fees.

cont
 

DOGS THAT BARK

Registered User
Forum Member
Jul 13, 1999
19,485
161
63
Bowling Green Ky
The Italian business newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore and the London-based Financial Times were to report in their Wednesday editions that Kojo Annan (search) received more than $750,000 from oil trading companies being scrutinized by Oil-for-Food investigators.

The newspapers said the payments appeared to be linked to oil deals in West Africa. Kojo Annan's lawyer, Clarissa Amato, denied the payments were connected to Oil-for-Food, but said Annan was a director of a Nigerian company called Petroleum Projects International (search).

Questions of U.N. corruption have now spread far beyond Oil-for-Food. Click here to read about the FOX News investigation.

Federal prosecutors last week indicted the head of the world body's budget oversight committee, Vladimir Kuznetsov (search), for allegedly laundering hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes. He has pleaded not guilty.

This came less than one month after U.N. procurement officer, Alexander Yakovlev (search), pleaded guilty to stashing $1.2 million in illegal payments in an offshore bank. The investigation of Yakovlev has now expanded to include questions about a Giant Food service company, Eurest Support Services (ESS), that provides meals for U.N. peacekeepers around the globe.

Volcker's latest report included documents annotated by Yakovlev that were heavily edited to conceal the company involved. An ESS spokesman would not comment, citing client confidentiality.

The preface of the report makes four broad recommendations:

?Create the position of a chief executive officer, to ensure hiring decisions are based on talent rather than "political convenience."

?Establish an Independent Auditing Board to fully review U.N. programs and hiring.

?Seek more effective coordination between U.N. agencies.

?Make sure the U.N. Security Council is clearer about the purpose and criteria for U.N. operations that it authorizes.

While the report recommends the changes be enacted by next year, the chances of that happening are not clear. U.N. member states are already grappling over similar reform proposals ahead of a summit of world leaders next week, but have confronted deep divisions.

Volcker's team plans to release a last follow-up report in October that will focus on the companies that did work under Oil-for-Food.
 

djv

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 4, 2000
13,817
17
0
I guess folks for got he was a American since he worked for the crooked Saudis. I think if he was a soldier we would have had more info sooner. Media desides as DTB said. We had seen 90 day's on Fox about a girl gone missing in Aruba. Nothing about this man. And then came the hurican and Aruba was not so important.
 

ferdville

Registered User
Forum Member
Dec 24, 1999
3,165
5
0
78
So Cal
You might think that the public should be at least as angry about Annan as they are about those greedy corporate thieves. Evidntly not.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top