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  1. #1
    JP226's Avatar Dux Limitis
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    Default Galloway is deeper hotter water now

    Apparently about 85,000 pounds were discovred in his wife's bank account fromt he oil scandal:

    UK'S GEORGE GALLOWAY REFUTES NEW OIL SCANDAL CLAIMS
    Mon Oct 24 2005 19:52:44 ET

    George Galloway has strongly refuted new allegations that he pocketed money from Saddam Hussein's scandal ridden oil-for-food programme and lied about it under oath.

    The US Senate committee investigating the Respect MP's alleged involvement in the saga claims to have discovered £85,000 (150,000 dollars) in Iraqi oil money in his wife's bank account.

    Mr Galloway may face criminal charges if found to have given false testimony to the committee when he defended himself against similar claims in a passionate showdown earlier this year.

    The Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations has accused him of giving "false and misleading testimony" at the May 17 hearing.

    Mr Galloway, who used the headline-grabbing appearance as the basis for a new book, denied being an oil trader, soliciting oil allocations or instructing anyone to do so on his behalf.

    But Republican Senator Norm Coleman, who chairs the committee, claims to have obtained new evidence proving that Saddam's regime granted oil allocations to the Bethnal Green and Bow MP and his Mariam Appeal fund.

    The committee's new report accuses Mr Galloway of personally soliciting and being granted eight oil allocations totalling 23 million barrels from the Hussein government between 1999 and 2003.

    It claims that his estranged wife, Dr Amineh Abu-Zayyad, received approximately £85,000 (150,000 dollars) in connection with one allocation of oil.

    Developing...

    http://www.drudgereport.com/flash4.htm




    thoughts? Will they catch him?

  2. #2
    GORE's Avatar Decanus
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    will they giv him a fair trial...he was told he was guilty without being approached, informed or questioned. a few months ago he was the only man accused that faced the senate commity or wateva it was, and pointed out the 'cavalier view of justice' to the prosecutioner. im slowely getting the feeling he is being made a scapegoat and this trial isnt being conducted properly.

    if he did, then he did, but it cant be proved, one small fact is that all these illegal transactions occured under 'americas watch'. so why has it been left until now?

    i never used to like george galloway becos of his relationship with saddam, but now he is earning my respect by taking a stand against this injustice.
    Always Outnumbered...Never Outmaneuvered

  3. #3

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    Catch him? What happened to the original allegations. They were concrete were they not? If they were charge him, if they were not lets have the full public apology.

    Once thats covered you can move onto the 'next' drum roll.

    It seems that all mannner of allegations can be thrown by one side without redress. Galloway should charge libel in the UK at the Yanks to even the scales of justice a bit.
    ...but I think Germany with home advantage will raise their game as always for the big ones and win the title. Post #260

  4. #4

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    Galloway impressed me by taking on the senate, I think he is innocent and is going to do exactly the same to these allegations as the fisrst ones, make the US senate look funny.
    Well, if I, Belisarius, the Black Prince, and you all agree on something, I really don't think there can be any further discussion.
    - Simetrical 2009 in reply to Ferrets54

  5. #5
    Tom Paine's Avatar Mr Common Sense
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    Galloway is being hit hard and repeatedly by the Senate, in the hope something sticks. He has been accused of lying to the committee; how did he hear of this charge? From someone on the committee? No. From someone before the press? No. He heard it when he was questioned on it. And of course, this makes me think "scapegoat".

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    imb39's Avatar Comes Rei Militaris
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    I have no love of Galloway - I don't agree with the war on Iraq but he has been so hypocritical it almost makes me vomit. However I did enjoy his performance in Washington earlier this year. He'll give any prosecutor hell over these allegations - I'll give him this, he knows how to spar with the best of them. In this sense he is an outstanding Parliamentarian. I think he is innocent - they tried something similar in Britain (well the papers tried) and it didn't stick.

  7. #7
    Bovril's Avatar Primicerius
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    If the allegations are true I hope he shafted. However, I wouldn't be at all surprised if they were fabrications. Either way, the senate isn't doing itself any favours in terms of credibility by conducting this whole affair in such an obviously partisan way.

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    Tom Paine's Avatar Mr Common Sense
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bovril
    If the allegations are true I hope he shafted. However, I wouldn't be at all surprised if they were fabrications. Either way, the senate isn't doing itself any favours in terms of credibility by conducting this whole affair in such an obviously partisan way.
    What, you mean telling the press before Galloway? He's now actoually invited them to charge him... a new event in their experience, I reckon.

  9. #9
    ajimenez3's Avatar Ducenarius
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    Here is some more background on the story with a link.

    I think Galloway is nothing more than a con artist and has fooled all his backers and supporters, who only support him because he is attacking the American Administration.

    Slate
    Slate is hardly a right wing publication.

    Calling Galloway's Bluff
    The Senate uncovers a smoking gun.
    By Christopher Hitchens
    Posted Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2005, at 12:59 PM PT

    Just before my last exchange with George Galloway, which occurred on the set of Bill Maher's show in Los Angeles in mid-September, I was approached by a representative of the program and asked if I planned to repeat my challenge to Galloway on air. That challenge—would he sign an affidavit saying that he had never discussed Oil-for-Food monies with Tariq Aziz?—I had already made on a public stage in New York. Maher's producers had been asked, obviously by a nervous Galloway, to find out whether I had brought such an affidavit along with me. I replied that this was not necessary, since his public denial to me was on the record and had been broadcast, and since it further confirmed the apparent perjury that he had committed in front of the U.S. Senate on May 17, 2005. I added that I wanted no further contact with Galloway until I could have the opportunity of reviewing his prison diaries.

    That day has now been brought measurably closer by the publication of the report of the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. This report, which comes with a vast archive of supporting material, was embargoed until 10 p.m. Monday and contains the "smoking gun" evidence that Galloway, along with his wife and his chief business associate, were consistent profiteers from Saddam Hussein's regime and its criminal exploitation of the "Oil for Food" program. In particular:

    1) Between 1999 and 2003, Galloway personally solicited and received eight oil "allocations" totaling 23 million barrels, which went either to him or to a politicized "charity" of his named the Mariam Appeal.

    2) In connection with just one of these allocations, Galloway's wife, Amineh Abu-Zayyad, received about $150,000 directly.

    3) A minimum of $446,000 was directed to the Mariam Appeal, which campaigned against the very sanctions from which it was secretly benefiting.

    4) Through the connections established by the Galloway and "Mariam" allocations, the Saddam Hussein regime was enabled to reap $1,642,000 in kickbacks or "surcharge" payments.

    (For a highly readable explanation of how the Oil-for-Food racket actually worked, see the Adobe Acrobat file on the site http://www.hitchensweb.com prepared by my brilliant comrade Michael Weiss and distributed as a leaflet outside the debate in New York.)

    These and other findings by the subcommittee, which appear to demonstrate beyond doubt that Galloway lied under oath, are supported by one witness in particular whose name will cause pain in the Galloway camp. This is Tariq Aziz, longtime henchman of Saddam Hussein and at different times the foreign minister and deputy prime minister of the Baathist dictatorship. Galloway has often referred in moist terms to his friend Aziz, and now this is his reward. I do not think—in case anyone tries such an innuendo—that there is the smallest possibility that Aziz's testimony was coerced. For one thing, he was confronted by Senate investigators who already knew a great deal of the story and who possessed authenticated documents from Iraqi ministries. For another, he continues, through his lawyers, to deny what is also certainly true, namely that he personally offered a $2 million bribe to Rolf Ekeus, then the head of the U.N. weapons inspectors.

    The critical person in Galloway's fetid relationship with Saddam's regime was a Jordanian "businessman" named Fawaz Zureikat, who was involved in a vast range of middleman activities in Baghdad and is the chairman of Middle East Advanced Semiconductor Inc. It was never believable, as Galloway used to claim, that he could have been so uninformed about Zureikat's activities in breaching the U.N. oil embargo. This most probably means that what we now know is a fraction of what there is to be known. But what has been established is breathtaking enough. A member of the British Parliament was in receipt of serious money originating from a homicidal dictatorship. That money was supposed to have been used to ameliorate the suffering of Iraqis living under sanctions. It was instead diverted to the purposes of enriching Saddam's toadies and of helping them propagandize in favor of the regime whose crimes and aggressions had necessitated the sanctions and created the suffering in the first place. This is something more than mere "corruption." It is the cynical theft of food and medicine from the desperate to pay for the palaces of a psychopath.

    Taken together with the scandal surrounding Benon Sevan, the U.N. official responsible for "running" the program, and with the recent arrest of Ambassador Jean-Bernard Mérimée (France's former U.N. envoy) in Paris, and with other evidence about pointing to big bribes paid to French and Russian politicians like Charles Pasqua and Vladimir Zhirinovsky, what we are looking at is a well-organized Baathist attempt to buy or influence the member states of the U.N. Security Council. One wonders how high this investigation will reach and how much it will eventually explain.

    For George Galloway, however, the war would seem to be over. The evidence presented suggests that he lied in court when he sued the Daily Telegraph in London over similar allegations (and collected money for that, too). It suggests that he lied to the Senate under oath. And it suggests that he made a deceptive statement in the register of interests held by members of the British House of Commons. All in all, a bad week for him, especially coming as it does on the heels of the U.N. report on the murder of Rafik Hariri, which appears to pin the convict's badge on senior members of the Assad despotism in Damascus, Galloway's default patron after he lost his main ally in Baghdad.

    Yet this is the man who received wall-to-wall good press for insulting the Senate subcommittee in May, and who was later the subject of a fawning puff piece in the New York Times, and who was lionized by the anti-war movement when he came on a mendacious and demagogic tour of the country last month. I wonder if any of those who furnished him a platform will now have the grace to admit that they were hosting a man who is not just a pimp for fascism but one of its prostitutes as well.
    Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair. His most recent book is Thomas Jefferson: Author of America. His most recent collection of essays is titled Love, Poverty, and War.
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  10. #10
    Sidus Preclarum's Avatar Honnête Homme.
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    DUnno about Galloway, but I cannot wait to see Pasqua fall over this (he should fall for so many things; anyway...)

  11. #11
    adamus's Avatar Miles
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    Galloway's denial amounted to "I had no control over my wife when we were married and I certainly have no control over her now". Pure BS

  12. #12
    Sidus Preclarum's Avatar Honnête Homme.
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    Quote Originally Posted by adamus
    Galloway's denial amounted to "I had no control over my wife when we were married and I certainly have no control over her now". Pure BS
    how so ?

  13. #13
    Tom Paine's Avatar Mr Common Sense
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    Ummmm, Slate may be left-wing, but Hitchens and Galloway aren't what you'd call friends.

    And why is saying that he had no control over his wife before they were married so much BS? Its probably true!
    Last edited by Ozymandias; October 26, 2005 at 08:45 AM.

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