Indian PM rejects charges in UN oil-for-food report
NEW DELHI, Wednesday (AFP) India's prime minister described as
unsubstantiated charges that his Congress party and a cabinet minister
had benefited from shady deals linked to the UN oil-for-food programme
for Iraq.
"Our image has not been sullied," Manmohan Singh was quoted as saying
by the Press Trust of India news agency. "Only (an) unsubstantiated
reference has been made ... There is no evidence."
The premier said the ruling Congress party and minister Natwar Singh
had been named in the report, written by former US Federal Reserve
chairman Paul Volcker, but added that "anybody can write this anywhere".
"This does not prove how much truth is there in this," he said,
speaking in Patna, the capital of the eastern state of Bihar.
"We will go to the depth of this and find out the truth."
Singh's remarks came a day after he stripped Natwar Singh of his
foreign affairs portfolio, pending an inquiry into claims that he
benefited from the oil-for-food programme. On Monday, the premier's
office announced that former chief judge R.S. Pathak would look into the
claims made in the UN report.
On Sunday the government also appointed Virender Dayal, India's
former undersecretary to the United Nations, to obtain information about
the charges against the ruling party and its members.
The government says the inquiries by Pathak and Dayal are independent
of each other, and Singh said the aim of both commissions was "to get to
the truth of the matter". |