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About the Programme
Oil-for-Food
Origins: In August 1990 the Security Council adopted
resolution 661, imposing comprehensive sanctions on Iraq following
that country’s invasion of Kuwait. In the immediate aftermath of
the Gulf War in 1991, the Secretary-General dispatched an
inter-agency mission to assess the humanitarian needs arising in
Iraq and Kuwait. The mission visited Iraq from 10 to 17 March 1991
and reported that "the Iraqi people may soon face a further
imminent catastrophe, which could include epidemic and famine, if
massive life-supporting needs are not rapidly met." (S/22366,
para. 37). Throughout 1991, with growing concern over the
humanitarian situation in the country, the United Nations proposed
measures to enable Iraq to sell limited quantities of oil to meet
its people's needs. The Government of Iraq declined these offers,
contained in particular, in resolutions 706 (1991) and 712 (1991),
adopted, respectively, in August and September 1991.
Resolution 986: On 14 April 1995, acting under Chapter VII
of the United Nations Charter, the Security Council adopted resolution
986, establishing the "oil-for-food" programme,
providing Iraq with another opportunity to sell oil to finance the
purchase of humanitarian goods, and various mandated United Nations
activities concerning Iraq. The programme, as established by the
Security Council, is intended to be a "temporary measure to
provide for the humanitarian needs of the Iraqi people, until the
fulfillment by Iraq of the relevant Security Council resolutions,
including notably resolution
687 (1991) of 3 April 1991".
Agreement: Although established in April 1995, the
implementation of the programme started only in December 1996, after
the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the
United Nations and the Government of Iraq on 20 May 1996 (S/1996/356).
The first Iraqi oil under the Oil-for-Food Programme was exported in
December 1996 and the first shipments of food arrived in March 1997.
Funding: Until 20 March 2003, when war intervened and oil
exports under the programme ended, the Oil-for-Food Programme was funded exclusively from the
proceeds of Iraqi oil exports, authorised by the Security Council.
In the initial stages of the programme, Iraq was permitted to sell
$2 billion worth of oil every six months, with two-thirds of that
amount to be used to meet Iraq’s humanitarian needs. In 1998, the
limit on the level of Iraqi oil exports under the programme was
raised to $5.26 billion every six months, again with two-thirds of
the oil proceeds earmarked to meet the humanitarian needs of the
Iraqi people. In December 1999, the ceiling on Iraqi oil exports
under the programme was removed by the Security Council.
Seventy two per cent of Iraqi oil export proceeds funded the
humanitarian programme, of which 59% was earmarked for the
contracting of supplies and equipment by the Government of Iraq for
the 15 central and southern governorates and 13% for the three
northern governorates, where the United Nations implemented the
programme on behalf of the Government of Iraq. The balance included
25% for a Compensation Fund for war reparation payments; 2.2% for
United Nations administrative and operational costs; and 0.8% for
the weapons inspection programme.
Management: The Office of the Iraq Programme is headed by
the Executive Director who is responsible for the overall management
and coordination of all United Nations humanitarian activities in
Iraq under resolutions 661 (1990) and 986 (1995) and the procedures
established by the Security Council and its Committee set up by
resolution 661 (1990), as well as the Memorandum of Understanding
between the United Nations and the Government of Iraq (May 1996).
Mandate: The Office of the Iraq Programme administers the
programme as an operation separate and distinct from all other
United Nations activities within the context of the sanctions
regime, which fall within the purview of UNMOVIC, IAEA and the
United Nations Compensation Commission.
Coordination: The Office of the Humanitarian Coordinator
in Iraq (UNOHCI) is an integral part of the Office of the Iraq
Programme (OIP). The Humanitarian Coordinator in Iraq reports
directly to the Executive Director of OIP, and is responsible for
the management and implementation of the programme in the field.
Implementation: There are nine United Nations agencies and
organizations involved in the programme. They are: FAO, UNESCO, WHO,
ITU, UNICEF, UNDP, WFP, UNOPS, UN-Habitat.
Delivery: As of 28 May 2003, some $28 billion worth of
humanitarian supplies and equipment had been delivered to Iraq under
the Oil-for-Food Programme, including $1.6 billion worth of oil
industry spare parts and equipment. An additional $10 billion worth
of supplies were in the production and delivery pipeline.
Performance: The latest report of the Secretary-General on
the Oil-for-Food Programme was issued on 12 November 2002 (S/2002/1239)
. It focuses on improvements, shortcomings and difficulties in the
humanitarian situation in Iraq; a revenue shortfall in the programme;
and an assessment of the implementation of the new set of procedures
for the processing and review of contracts for humanitarian
supplies. The new
procedures were introduced under Security Council resolution
1409 (2002), based on the Goods Review List (GRL). It is the first
such assessment
since the adoption of that resolution.
Oil-for-Food Plus: The Programme, as outlined in the latest
report of the Secretary-General, was expanded by the Security
Council beyond its initial emphasis on food and medicines to include
infrastructure rehabilitation and 24 sectors: food, food-handling,
health, nutrition, electricity, agriculture and irrigation,
education, transport and telecommunications, water and sanitation,
housing, settlement rehabilitation (internally displaced persons -
IDPs), mine action, special allocation for especially vulnerable
groups, and oil industry spare parts and equipment. The Government
of Iraq introduced the following 10 new sectors in June 2002:
construction, industry, labour and social affairs, Board of Youth
and Sports, information, culture, religious affairs, justice,
finance, and Central Bank of Iraq.
Pre-War and Post-War
Developments (2003): On 17 March 2003, the United Nations Secretary-General announced
that in view of warnings received from the Governments of the United
Kingdom and the United States, regarding the prospect of war and the
continued safety and security of UN personnel present in the
territory of Iraq, he was no longer in a position to guarantee their
safety and security. All remaining UN international staff in Iraq
were evacuated on 18 March 2003 and the President of the Security
Council asked the Secretary General to submit proposals to adjust
the mandate of the Oil-for-Food Programme so that it would have
flexibility to meet new humanitarian challenges presented by the
prospect of war in Iraq.
On
19 March 2003, the war in Iraq began with the bombing of Baghdad
and on 20 March 2003, the Secretary General pledged to do his
utmost to ensure that the UN rose to the challenge of shielding the
civilian population "from the grim consequences of war."
A resolution
(1472) was adopted unanimously by the Security Council on 28
March 2003 adjusting the Oil-for-Food Programme and giving the
Secretary-General authority to facilitate the delivery and receipt
of goods contracted by the Government of Iraq for the humanitarian
needs of its people. On 24 April
2003 those provisions were
extended to 3 June. The extension under resolution
1476,(2003) gave the Office of the
Iraq Programme and UN agencies, valuable time to identify and ship
additional goods and supplies.
The Security Council
lifted civilian sanctions on Iraq on 22 May with the adoption
of resolution 1483 (2003). The resolution also gave the
Secretary-General authority to appoint a Special Representative to
work with the occupying forces in rebuilding Iraq; opened the way
for the resumption of oil exports, with revenues deposited in a
Development Fund for Iraq held by the Central Bank; and provided for
the termination of the Oil-for-Food Programme within six months,
transferring responsibility for the administration of any remaining
Programme activities to ‘the Authority’ representing the
occupying powers. The Council has called on the United Nations to
assist the Iraqi people, in coordination with ‘the Authority’,
in a wide range of areas, including humanitarian relief,
reconstruction, infrastructure rehabilitation, legal and judicial
reforms, human rights and the return of refugees, and also to assist
with civilian police.
In its “phasedown” prior to closure on 21 November 2003,
the Office of the Iraq Programme, in coordination with UN agencies
and programmes, the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) and Iraqi
authorities,
has continued to identify and ship approved and funded priority items in
a pipeline of humanitarian goods and supplies valued at some $10
billion. As of 4 November 2003, consultations between the
Coalition Provisional Authority, Iraqi experts and the United
Nations, had resulted in the prioritization of 3,168 contracts
valued at more than $8.5 billion. (Updated 4 November 2003)
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