After
DSK Resignation, Questions of Laissez Passer, Pay &
Gift Disclosures Dodged
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
May 20 -- With Dominique Strauss-Kahn out on bail and the
International Monetary Fund yet to answer Press questions about
Strauss-Kahn's and his interim replacement John Lipsky's required
disclosures of gifts, Inner City Press on Friday asked the UN about
Strauss-Kahn's UN travel document.
The
document was
repeatedly referred to due Strauss-Kahn's bail hearing. It's called a
laissez passer,
and as UN spokesman Martin Nesirky confirmed to Inner
City Press on Friday “it
is a travel document that’s issued,
indeed, by the United Nations. The UN also issues laissez-passer to
officials of the specialized agencies, including the IMF.”
But
doesn't the UN
have a duty to retrieve this travel document when its bearer resigns
from the UN system?
Spokesman
Nesirky repeatedly declined to answer,
telling Inner City Press to “ask the IMF.” So Inner City Press
did, along with questions about the gift disclosures of the IMF's top
ten officials.
With
Chinese state
media now saying that the top spot at the IMF should go to China,
Inner City Press' exclusive
stories about how this may impact Ban
Ki-moon's drive for a second term as UN Secretary General have
generated even more interest inside the UN.
“They really
scared,” a well placed UN source told Inner City Press on Friday
afternoon, at a concert by Chinese and US military bands in the UN
General Assembly, whose votes Ban would need for a second term.
Ban, DSK (and World Bank chief), China's play not shown
From
the
UN's
May 20 transcript:
Inner
City
Press: at the bail hearing that was held yesterday here in New
York, there was a lot of discussion of his laissez-passer passport. And
that it was in Washington. What happens when somebody in a
specialized agency resigns? Do they return the Laissez-Passer to the
UN? The court is somehow asking for it, but it is not clear to me if
it is still, if his UN powers are, remain in effect.
Spokesperson
Martin
Nesirky: What UN powers are you referring to, Matthew?
Inner
City
Press: The ability to go through airports with a Laissez-Passer,
to use it as a travel document. Is this now canceled, and is the UN
going to retrieve the document?
Spokesperson
Nesirky:
Well, I think you’d have to ask the IMF what will happen
to the document, which is, as I understand it, at the IMF. I think
you know what the score is with a laissez-passer. It is a travel
document that’s issued, indeed, by the United Nations. The UN also
issues laissez-passer to officials of the specialized agencies,
including the IMF, and also to some other agencies under agreements
concluded with those organizations. And these laissez-passer are
modified to refer to the appropriate agreements relating to the
status of the relevant organization and its officials. I am talking
in general about the nature of laissez-passer. Anything to do with
the case you have mentioned, you need to speak to the IMF.
Inner
City
Press: if somebody ends their tenure before, because I am
assuming these documents have a date on it, so they would just expire
and couldn’t use them any more, but this one would still, it would
appear to be active, not…
Spokesperson
Inner
City Press: Well, as I said, I think I answered that already,
Matthew. As I said, Matthew, ask the IMF.
Inner
City
Press: Okay, I will.
Even
though the
IMF, while providing a partial response about Strauss Kahn's plane
ticket did not answer about the IMF gift policy and disclosures,
Inner City Press submitted this question, so far without response:
In
today's
UN noon press briefing I was told to “ask the IMF” about
Dominique Strauss Kahn's UN Laissez Passer.
If
holding the LP is based on being an IMF official or staffer, given
Mr. Strauss Kahn's resignation, why hasn't the LP been retrieved?
What
policies does the IMF have for the LPs of persons who resign or are
terminated?
Separately, what
policies does the IMF have regarding the pensions and end-of-service
payments to individuals charged with, or convicted of, felonies
including those involving moral turpitude, such as sexual assault?
Has
Mr. Strauss Kahn receive any payment since his resignation, or does
his resignation trigger one?
Other
questions:
On
both
Air France upgrade and Sofitel discount, please explain how
these related to the IMF's online policy on gifts
http://www.imf.org/external/hrd/code.htm#VI
Acceptance
of
gifts, decorations and honors
32.
You
should never solicit gifts or favors in connection with your IMF
duties. Gifts that are offered should normally be declined. However,
you may accept a small gift when it would create an embarrassment to
refuse it. Under current rules, if its value is clearly less than
$100, you may keep it and need not report it. If the value of the
gift could exceed $100, you should report it, along with your
estimate of its value.
An
upgrade from business class to first class on a flight from New York
to Paris is presumptively worth more than $100. So too the Sofitel
discount.
1)
did
the Managing Director disclose these gifts?
2)
if
the IMF does not consider them gifts under the above, why not? On
what authority?
3)
please
list all disclosures under the policy quoted above that the
Managing Director, and Deputy Lipsky, have provided in the past 12
months.
This last has been
expanded to the IMF's top ten officials, but has still not been
responded to. Watch this site.
* * *
Strauss-Kahn
Air
France Upgrades & Sofitel Discounts Afoul of IMF Policy
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee, Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
May
18 -- With International
Monetary
Fund managing director
Dominique Strauss-Kahn again requesting release on bail from sex
crimes charges, the IMF on Wednesday told Inner City Press that
“Mr.
Strauss-Kahn's
flight,
which was booked before he left Washington,
was a business class seat. He was apparently upgraded by the airline.
This is not unusual given he is the head of the International
Monetary Fund.”
But
when
Inner
City Press asked IMF spokesman William Murray if the Fund's policy
against its officials receiving such gifts applied in this case, he
did not answer the question. Rather, he again told Inner City Press
to “ask Air France” -- while how they are in charge of enforcing
the IMF's policy on gifts is not clear.
Murray
also
stated
that “Sofitel is not a hotel on the official IMF staff list. As
noted by us previously, this was a private visit to NY, and a
personal expense.”
Still, if
Sofitel lowered the rate on Strauss
Kahn's room it was a gift, generally to be rejected but certainly to
be disclosed if the discount was -- as reported -- more than $100.
Strauss-Kahn with Ben Ali of Tunisia: one fell, now
will the other?
The
IMF's policy,
not provided by Mr. Murray but found online, is that
Acceptance
of
gifts,
decorations and honors
32.
You
should
never solicit gifts or favors in connection with your IMF
duties. Gifts that are offered should normally be declined. However,
you may accept a small gift when it would create an embarrassment to
refuse it. Under current rules, if its value is clearly less than
$100, you may keep it and need not report it. If the value of the
gift could exceed $100, you should report it, along with your
estimate of its value.
An
upgrade from
business class to first class on a flight from New York to Paris is
presumptively worth more than $100. And the IMF spokesman tells the
Press that such upgrades to Strauss Kahn are “not unusual given he
is the head of the International Monetary Fund.” So where are the
answers, and disclosures?
One
of two IMF
belated responses to Inner City Press on May 18:
From:
Murray,
William
[at] imf.org
Date: Wed, May 18, 2011 at 5:59
AM
Subject: Air France
To: Matthew Russell Lee [at]
InnerCityPress.com
The
IMF
has
contracts with various intercontinental air carriers due to
heavy travel requirements from Washington. Air France is among the
carriers.
Mr.
Strauss-Kahn's
flight,
which was booked before he left Washington,
was a business class seat. He was apparently upgraded by the airline.
This is not unusual given he is the head of the International
Monetary Fund.
Watch
this
site.
* * *
As
IMF
Says
Strauss Kahn Paid Hotel, Stonewall on Air France,
Pakistan Echoes
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
May
16 -- With International Monetary Fund chief Dominique
Strauss Kahn being denied bail in New York on the sex crimes
charges
against him, the IMF in Washington has clarified that it wasn't
paying for the $3000 a night hotel room in which the crimes allegedly
took place.
The
IMF put this
clarification online, along with the telephone number of Strauss
Kahn's Washington lawyer, “in response to questions.”
But
the IMF has
still not answered a simple question submitted to its three top
spokespeople more than 24 hours ago. Since it was “reported that
Strauss-Kahn 'has an arrangement with Air France that allows him to
get on any flight and sit in first class' - Please describe that
arrangement, including who pays for it, and how much.”
The
IMF should
answer this type of question. Inner City Press has been contacted by
Deena Shehata, the spouse of the IMF's chief in Pakistan Paul Simon
Ross, who has asserted under oath that despite repeatedly contacting
the IMF to request action on abuse by her spouse (and the IMF's
employee), nothing was done.
Click
here,
here
and here
to view her affidavit.
Ms
Shehata says, the IMF
thinks they can do these things to women, whether by failing to
protect wives of overseas officials, or in hotel rooms in New York. It
seems to be a pattern. Watch this site.
* * *
IMF
Promotes
Bank
Mergers,
Says
Bigger
is Better, Politics &
Portugal Dodged
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
WASHINGTON
DC,
April
15
--
The
International
Monetary
Fund is unabashedly
promoting the takeover of small banks by large ones, claiming that
its own work in “Emerging Europe” since the financial meltdown
shows that communities are better served by large banks, even if
based far away or in other countries.
IMF
European
Department Director Antonio Borges told reporters on Friday that
Belgium was smart to have pushed Fortis to being acquired by BNP
Paribas. He urged more such mergers.
Inner
City
Press
asked
Borges
if
the IMF proposed any safeguards at all, given that
concerns exist that when a local bank is acquired by one based far
away, there will be less reinvestment and accountability.
Borges,
while
calling
this
an
“interesting
question,” bragged that the IMF
organized a coordinated effort to get large banks to treat
communities, particularly in Emerging Europe, fairly, and that this
had worked. See IMF
transcript, below.
Borges, invisible hand and safeguards on mergers not shown
Inner
City
Press
began
to
ask
about attempts to encourage or require reinvestment, for
example in the UK -- but moderator Simonetta Nardin said there was no
time for follow up questions.
Meanwhile,
Borges
took
but
refused
to
answer two questions about Portugal, citing an
IMF policy against officials working on their own countries, and also
claiming that the IMF does not get involved in politics. What --
encouraging bank mergers is not political? Watch this site.
From the IMF's
transcript:
Inner
City
Press:
you
seem
to be saying that bank mergers—small banks
being bought by big ones sort of unqualifiedly may be a good thing.
In some countries people think that local banks are more accountable,
that if you move the assets to a faraway headquarters that there's
less responsive. What do you say to that critique and is that
something that the IMF takes any account of?
MR.
BORGES:
you
ask
a
very interesting question, because this is a
problem we were faced with over the last few years. In many of the
countries of emerging Europe, you find banks that actually are owned
by other banks elsewhere and there were concerns that, as there might
be problems in the domestic countries of those banks that assets
would be pulled out from emerging Europe and they might suffer. And
the Fund, the IMF, invested quite a bit of effort to organize a
coordinated effort on the part of all these banks to behave in the
best possible interests of those economies, and I must say this was
quite successful, because as a result, these countries are now
recovering very well and their banks are operating well. So, if
anything, the experience of emerging Europe demonstrates that having
large, solid banks operate in your country may be an important source
of stability if things are properly managed.
Click
for Mar 1, '11
BloggingHeads.tv re Libya, Sri Lanka, UN Corruption
Click
here
for an Inner City Press YouTube channel video, mostly UN Headquarters
footage, about civilian
deaths
in Sri Lanka.
Click here for Inner City
Press' March 27 UN debate
Click here for Inner City
Press March 12 UN (and AIG
bailout) debate
Click here for Inner City
Press' Feb 26 UN debate
Click
here
for Feb.
12
debate
on
Sri
Lanka http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/17772?in=11:33&out=32:56
Click here for Inner City Press' Jan.
16, 2009 debate about Gaza
Click here for Inner City Press'
review-of-2008 UN Top Ten debate
Click here for Inner
City Press' December 24 debate on UN budget, Niger
Click here from Inner City Press'
December 12 debate on UN double standards
Click here for Inner
City Press' November 25 debate on Somalia, politics
and this October 17 debate, on
Security Council and Obama and the UN.
* * *
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reports are
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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
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