BAK
JF-Expert Member
- Feb 11, 2007
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UK should come clean on the radar suspects
Two weeks ago, we broke the news that, Sailesh Vithlani - the man who has been hiding out in Switzerland for years, to escape prosecution for brokering the BAE radar scam - has finally been arrested by UK's Serious Fraud Office (SFO).
Vithlani fled Tanzania almost three years ago while out on bail for charges involving the trumped up $40million radar deal, and since then the Prevention and Combating of Corruption Bureau (PCCB) has sought help from the UK's Serious Fraud Office (SFO) in getting Vithlani extradited back to the country to face the charges.
But, what is worrying us, is the dilly-dallying by the UK in extraditing the Radar deal's prime suspect even after the country was requested officially by the PCCB that Vithlani is wanted back home to face criminal charges.
Perhaps the most appalling move is the SFO's decision to grant a bail to Vithlani under controversial circumstances last week, while knowing that the radar deal mastermind is wanted in Tanzania where he jumped the bail four years ago.
It is unfair for UK-a country purporting to be at the frontline in fighting corruption to dilly-dally the extradition of the man they know very well that is the prime suspect in the controversial radar deal.
The same UK has been putting pressure to Tanzania under the donor umbrella to hurry the investigations of grand corruption cases in order for the country to prove before the international community that ‘it was fully determined to fight corruption.'
UK should therefore stand for its words by assisting Tanzania to extradite Vithlani as well as two Britons found to have received kickback pays during the radar deal. It should stop double standards in the radar case and commit its resources in helping PCCB to extradite the three prime suspects in this case.
Apart from Vithlani, two UK citizens, including a former close aide to Tony Blair, have been implicated in the controversial radar deal. Vithlani organised the $40 million deal between the UK arms suppliers British Aerospace Engineering (BAE Systems) and the Tanzanian government, and allegedly received kickbacks amounting to $12 million that he shared with at least seven high-ranking officials from the previous Tanzanian administration.
We don't expect the UK authorities to follow the same path they took few years ago in blocking the investigation of dubious arms deal between BAE System and the Saudi regime.
On June 12, 2007, Blair defended the government's 2006 decision to halt the SFO's investigation into the alleged bribery surrounding BAE Systems' contracts with Saudi Arabia. The former prime minister told the House of Commons that continuing the investigation would have damaged the UK's relationship with the oil-rich country.
Since 1985, BAE Systems has signed a $80billion worth of arms contracts with Saudi Arabia. But it was alleged these were agreed in return for payments totalling £1 billion to Prince Bander.
With memory of what happened in the BAE-Saudi multibillion deal still fresh in our minds, we would like to ask the UK---our long-term partner, to come clean on the radar case, by extraditing the prime suspects as requested by the PCCB. It will be a shame for the UK which has been number one preacher to Tanzania on how to fight corruption to shield individuals who are implicated in corruption scandals.
SOURCE: GUARDIAN ON SUNDAY