UN's
Ban Asks for Investigative Power While Defending Lockheed Contract, Somalia to
the End
Byline:
Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at the UN: News Analysis
UNITED NATIONS,
January 7 -- "The UN needs strengthened investigative capacity,"
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Monday, following Inner City Press' question
about the UN's $250 million no-bid contract with Lockheed Martin. While
expressing again, seemingly with some exasperation, his commitment to
transparency, Mr. Ban said he hopes that the UN's member states will consider
how to provide more investigative firepower. But the
General Assembly on December 21 formally
expressed concern about Lockheed "single-source" contract,
and called for an investigation.
Asked
directly to respond to the Assembly's expression of concern, Ban said "I have
answered that question two or three times." Each of these time were before the
General Assembly's formal rebuke, however. Since then, the outgoing head of the
UN's Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary questions has
directly disagreed with Ban's assertion
that the suspending competition was necessary.
And at no point since the no-bid contract was announced on October 15 and Inner
City Press began asking question has the contract been disclosed. Nor has the
official who in a
leaked April 2007 letter urged Lockheed's
PAE unit for the contract, Jane Holl Lute,
deigned to answer questions from the press. While some insiders opine that Ban
is being mis-advised, the question remains, even after Ban's 55-minute press
conference, where is the promised transparency? Video
here,
from Minute 50:17.
On Sudan
more generally, Mr. Ban said he spoke with President Bashir "last Saturday." It
is unclear if the discussion included the need to arrest the two Sudanese
indicted for war crimes by the International Criminal Court, or the reported
failure to comply with agreements and renewed fighting in South Sudan, regarding
which Ban's spokesperson's office on January 6 told Inner City Press, "regarding
your question on the redeployment of troops from southern Sudan, I checked with
UNMIS, who are waiting to see whether there is any significant redeployment by
January 9, which is the deadline for a significant level of redeployment to have
happened. We'll see what happens by that date and react accordingly afterward."
We'll see.
There
were questions about the tribunal investigating the killing of Rafiq Hariri in
Lebanon, in response to which Ban said that not all of the funding required for
the tribunal has been received. One theory is that countries such as France are
holding the funding to obtain leverage over Syria, one target of the
investigation. Also on investigations, Ban was asked if he think the UN should
be become involved in reviewing the assassination of Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan.
Ban replied that Scotland Yard is already involved, and that no request to the
UN has been received from the Pakistani government -- that is, from Pervez
Musharraf, whose administration by most accounts would have to be one target of
investigation.
Other
questions arose about whether the Secretariat had received warnings from its
head of security in Algeria prior to the recent
bombing.
Video
here, from Minute 43:50. "I am not going to tell you anything on these
internal procedures," Ban answered. What was that about transparency, again?
Ban and UN records: transparency
promised but, on Lockheed, not yet shown
A
question about
Kosovo
and the
Ahtisaari status proposal
was met with hesitation, perhaps because Ahtisaari also conducted a review after
the bombing of the UN in Baghdad in 203. The Kosovo response also included a
call from the Security Council members to help to implement the resolutions they
pass -- to some, this appeared more related to Sudan and Darfur than to Kosovo.
Inner
City Press also asked about Somalia, a topic not mentioned by Mr. Ban until it
was raised as the last question in the press conference. Video
here,
from Minute 49:49. Ban's report in late 2007 said it was too dangerous to even
send a UN assessment team. The Security Council disagreed, and has asked that
the team be sent. Monday Ban answered that he is now "considering dispatching a
technical assessment team early this year," and he insisted "there is no
difference between me and the Security Council." But the Council didn't ask that
the assessment be considered, but that it be performed. Other UN officials have
called Somalia the world's worst humanitarian situation, worse that Darfur. So,
some wondered of Monday's press conference, why until the end was Somalia not
even mentioned? Watch this site.
* * *
These reports are also available through
Google News and on Lexis-Nexis.
Click
here for a
Reuters
AlertNet piece by this correspondent about Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army.
Click
here
for an earlier
Reuters AlertNet
piece about the Somali National Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's
$200,000 contribution from an undefined trust fund.
Video
Analysis here
Because a number of Inner City Press'
UN sources go out of their way to express commitment to serving the poor, and
while it should be unnecessary, Inner City Press is compelled to conclude this
installment in a necessarily-ongoing series by saluting the stated goals of the
UN agencies and many of their staff. Keep those cards, letters and emails
coming, and phone calls too, we apologize for any phone tag, but please continue
trying, and keep the information flowing.
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Other, earlier Inner
City Press are listed here, and
some are available in the ProQuest service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
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UN Office: S-453A,
UN, NY 10017 USA Tel: 212-963-1439
Reporter's mobile
(and weekends): 718-716-3540