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WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- A group of
international auditors said that the United States should repay some 208 million
US dollars to Iraq for a poorly-done reconstruction work, The New York Times
reported Saturday.
The work, which was contracted to KBR, a subsidiary
of the US defense contractor Halliburton, and was paid with Iraqi oil proceeds,
was either carried out at inflated price or accomplished poorly, the auditors
were quoted as saying.
The auditors belong to the International Advisory and
Monitoring Board of the Development Fund for Iraq, an auditing group sponsored
by the United Nations to check reconstruction projects in Iraq.
The board's authority extends only to making
recommendations onany reimbursement of the reconstruction projects and it is up
to the US government to decide whether to make the repayment.
US analysts said the finding will incur further
suspicions among Iraqis, who always fear that the United States invaded their
country to control the oil resources.
Meanwhile, the report also came at a tough time for
the Bush Administration, since US Vice President Dick Cheney's former role as
chief executive Halliburton has already led charges that the company received
preferential treatment in obtaining reconstruction contracts in Iraq.
US Congressman Henry Waxman, a Californian Democrat,
accused the Bush administration of repeatedly giving Halliburton special
treatment and "allowed the company to gouge both US taxpayers and the Iraqi
people."
Some of the Iraq reconstruction projects are financed
by the United States while the rest is paid with Iraqi oil proceeds.
It is the first time that an international auditing
group suggested that some US contractors have overcharged Iraq in reconstruction
work, though a number of private auditors had criticized the overpricing
behavior of KBR and other US contractors. Enditem |