The UN Security Council believes the Iraqi government must take greater responsibility for the management of its own resources, a top United Nations official said Thursday, Xinhua reported.
The 15-nation Security Council was briefed in a closed meeting by UN Controller Jun Yamazaki on the fund administering proceeds from export sales of petroleum from Iraq, known as the Development Fund for Iraq.
The fund was established in 2003, the same year the Security Council phased out the oil-for-food program, under which a sanctions-bound Iraq was allowed to use monitored oil sales revenue for humanitarian purchases.
Also discussed in the Thursday meeting was the International Advisory and Monitoring Board (IAMB), an independent body set up by the Security Council.
"Council members expressed some concern about the need for further steps to improve the internal controls" in the fund, Deputy Permanent Representative Philip John Parham of Britain, which holds the Council's rotating presidency this month, told reporters following the consultations.
In a report to the Council made public here on Wednesday, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said that the IAMB has found that the Committee of Financial Experts, created by Iraq's Council of Ministers in 2006, is ready to assume oversight responsibilities of the fund.
"It will be important to ensure that a proper succession mechanism and process be considered," the secretary-general wrote.
From its establishment in 2003 till the end of 2008, the fund has received nearly 180 billion U.S. dollars from oil exports, the balance of the oil-for-food funds held under escrow by the UN and proceeds from frozen assets, according to the report.