Ban's
Musical
Chairs,
UNwanted EOSG
Staff Can Take
Any Job,
Anywhere
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, July
15 -- Entering
the last six
months of Ban
Ki-moon's
second term as
UN Secretary
General, not
only Ban has
his eye on
future jobs
(South Korea
presidency)
and paydays.
Beyond the
Andrew Gilmour
move on June
24, in the
July 15 UN
Journal Ban
quietly gave
himself "the
authority to
laterally
transfer staff
members of the
Executive
Office of the
Secretary-General
to any of the
activities or
offices of the
United
Nations,
including to
any vacant
position in
any
organizational
unit or duty
station with
or without
advertisement
of the job
opening or
further review
by a central
review body."
This is
lawless,
anologized by
one wag to a
refugee
resettlement
program for
Ban's staff
who would
otherwise
become
homeless once
a new SG
clears house
and handpicks
new staff. But
Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric
might, it
seems, call
reporting on
it "stalking."
Video
here. Where
might Dujarric
show up,
without
competition?
On June 24
when Ban's
office
announced a
promotion for
Andrew Gilmour
of the United
Kingdom to
Assistant
Secretary-General
for Human
Rights and
Head of the
Office of the
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights (OHCHR)
in New York,
there were
near-immediate
grumbling from
the developing
countries int
the Group of
77.
Several
who contacted
Inner City
Press asked,
Why was there
no open
recruitment
process? Why
did Ban,
having
“already
picked an
Australian in
Geneva [Kate
Gilmore] now
choose a Brit
in New York?”
Others said
there is an
attempt to
move people to
new jobs so
that when the
next Secretary
General comes
in, the
argument can
be made that
they haven't
enough time,
leave them in
place. On June
27, Inner City
Press asked
Ban's deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq, UN Transcript:
Inner City
Press: And
you'd
mentioned
this, that Mr.
[Ivan]
Šimonovic will
be replaced by
Andrew
Gilmour.
Since then,
I've heard
from a number…
I guess I want
to just to ask
factually,
what was the
recruitment
pol… pr … was
a call put out
for an ASG
(Assistant
Secretary-General)
post?
Because people
in G-77 (Group
of 77) are
saying there
was no call,
and there's…
there's some…
some pushback
to it.
And also some
people that
work in the
human rights
at D2 and
other levels
are saying
they couldn't
apply.
Isn't it the
norm for an
ASG post to
write a letter
to Member
States and
saying send in
names or do
interviews?
Was that done
or not done?
Deputy
Spokesman:
As far as I'm
aware, the
standard
process for
filling that
post was
followed as
with all
senior posts.
Inner City
Press:
Can… I mean, I
guess… can you
check on
that?
Because maybe
these people
are
ill-informed,
but they seem
to think that
didn't take
place.
Deputy
Spokesman:
As… like I
said, I mean,
as far as I'm
apprised of
the process,
it was filled
in the
standard way
of previous
posts, with a
short list of
candidates and
interviews and
so forth.
Inner City
Press:
But is it the
norm to inform
Member States
that an ASG
post is
becoming empty
and for them
to write in if
they have a
candidate?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Ultimately,
things depend
on the level,
but I believe
that all the
appropriate
policies for
that post were
filled.
Countries,
too, have
their
strategy.
Several
sources tell
Inner City
Press that
Herve Ladsous
might have to
leave before
the end of
Ban's term --
good -- but
not as
accountability
for
peacekeeper
rapes and
justifying
them, nor more
recently for
the failures
at Malakal in
South Sudan.
No, the
idea is that
if France
wants to hold
on to the
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations, it
will be better
with a
recently
appointed USG
in place than
Ladsous and
his stench.
There was talk
of the Obama
administration
wanting
Peacekeeping,
now the talk
has turned to
the Department
of Management.
We'll have
more on this.
As to Ban
himself, when
he wrapped up
his five day
campaign trip
in South Korea
with a
three-question
"press
conference" at
the UN's
DPI-NGO
conference, he
criticized
"coverage of
what was
supposed to be
off-the-record
meeting with
the Kwanhoon
Club" of
political
correspondents.
Even during
Ban's long
visit to South
Korea, Inner
City Press in
New York where
it has been
evicted from
its long time
shared UN
office and
confined to
minders, told
not to
question
diplomats
asked the UN
why no
transcript was
provided of
Ban's session
with the
Kwanhoon Club.
It asked again
on June 10,
the day after
Ban himself
called such
questions
"undue."
On June 16, as
Inner City
Press
continued to
ask Ban's
spokesman
Dujarric about
Ban's role in
retaliation -
and Dujarric
refused to
answer - it
was told by
other sources
that the South
Korean mission
has come out
defending its
role in
promoting
meetings for
Ban with South
Korea
political
figures,
defending its
travel with
Ban and
specifically
denying the
Mission wrote
speeches for
Ban.
* * *
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