Maybe Kofi Will Buy Me a Car
I posted last week about UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's outburst and refusal to answer a reporter's question.
Said reporter, James Bone, has a guest editorial in the Wall Street Journal today. He covers the outburst -- but more importantly gives the background for what prompted the question.
It was with some amusement that I found myself the target of a decidedly undiplomatic tirade by the U.N. chief at a news conference last week. The usually mild Mr. Annan erupted in an ad hominem attack, calling me "cheeky" and belittling me as an "overgrown schoolboy." Although I have covered the U.N. in minute detail for The Times of London since 1988, and have known Mr. Annan for almost all that time, he suggested I was not a "serious journalist."
[...]
This is where the missing Mercedes comes in. The Mercedes was purchased by Kojo Annan in his father's name four days before the Hotel de Crillon meeting--and about two weeks before Cotecna won the U.N. contract. The use of the U.N. chief's diplomatic status qualified the car for a $6,541 discount on the purchase price and a $14,103 tax exemption when it was imported to his native Ghana.
Mr. Volcker's investigators found a memo on the computer of Mr. Annan's personal assistant asking him to authorize a letter to Mercedes. "Sir, Kojo asked me to send the attached letter re: the car he is trying to purchase under your name. The company is requesting a letter be sent from the U.N. Kojo said it could be signed by anyone from your office. May I ask Lamin to sign it?" the assistant wrote.
Neither Kofi Annan, his aide Lamin Sise, nor his assistant, Wagaye Assebe, can recall what happened, and the original documents have disappeared--but somehow the Mercedes was purchased with the diplomatic discount anyway. Abdoulie Janneh, the U.N. official who arranged the tax exemption in Ghana was recently promoted to U.N. under-secretary-general, in charge of the Economic Commission for Africa.
Amid the clutter of unanswered questions, one query has the virtue of simplicity: Where is the car? I have been asking this for weeks at the U.N.'s daily briefing. It was this question that triggered Kofi Annan's outburst. He clearly wants me to shut up. I'm afraid, Mr. Secretary-General, that would be the wrong thing for me to do. Every schoolboy knows that.
Remember, Democrats and lachrymose Senator George Voinovich thought that John Bolton was somehow too mean to represent our nation's interest in this august body.
And remember that the anti-war crowd has no better plan for what could have happened than that we would "let Sanctions work." A few more years and I might have gotten a car with the UN discount...
United Nations
Posted by jk at December 27, 2005 12:40 PM
Mercedes' "diplomatic discount" is one thing, but what about the $14,103 tax exemption? It's that sort of thing (tax evasion) that got Al Capone busted when none of his other voluminous crimes could be pinned on him. If the U.N. is immune to even tax prosecution then it is clearly an organization with NO limits.
As for Kofi's outburst, it is entirely understandable. In order to circumvent punitive, confiscatory taxation he pulled some strings. It's a natural human trait - selfishness - and proves that even those who condone and levy such taxes against others are loathe to submit to their own rules.
Here we have evidence of two corrupt institutions of society: Subjective tax policy and the United Nations. Both will become extinct when the chicanery that preserves them eventually peters out.
Mercedes' "diplomatic discount" is one thing, but what about the $14,103 tax exemption? It's that sort of thing (tax evasion) that got Al Capone busted when none of his other voluminous crimes could be pinned on him. If the U.N. is immune to even tax prosecution then it is clearly an organization with NO limits.
As for Kofi's outburst, it is entirely understandable. In order to circumvent punitive, confiscatory taxation he pulled some strings. It's a natural human trait - selfishness - and proves that even those who condone and levy such taxes against others are loathe to submit to their own rules.
Here we have evidence of two corrupt institutions of society: Subjective tax policy and the United Nations. Both will become extinct when the chicanery that preserves them eventually peters out.
Posted by: johngalt at December 27, 2005 5:16 PMI think you're being very cheeky to bring this up...
Posted by: jk at December 27, 2005 6:49 PMPolitical chicanery is in danger of petering out?
Posted by: Silence Dogood at December 29, 2005 11:11 AMPerhaps that's a bit of a reach but, as an optimist, I believe that the intelligence and rationality of the masses will tend to increase rather than decrease. As this happens it will be more difficult to pull the wool over voters' eyes.
I'm judging subjective tax policy and worthless bureaucracies, as machinations of socialist ideology, to be ultimately unsustainable against the irrepressible force of individual selfishness. In other words, socialist policy has to be continually propped up by new and not yet discredited explanations, while individual selfishness is self-sustaining (except in individuals who completely abandon it.)
Posted by: johngalt at December 29, 2005 5:06 PM | What do you think? [4]