In
Nepal, Snakes in the Camps Are Not In UN's Mandate, Vote by November OK, Envoy
Says
Byline:
Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at the UN
UNITED NATIONS, May 6
-- "It is not in our mandate to register snakes." So said the UN's envoy to
Nepal, Ian Martin, in response Friday to Inner City Press' question about
reports of
up to 700 snakes in the cantonment sites where Nepali rebels are assembled,
waiting for demobilization or integration into security forces.
Nepal as
a whole is waiting for the promised Constituent Assembly, which has been
scheduled for June, but is now being postpone to November "at earliest," Mr.
Martin said Friday. Video
here,
from Minute 7. He was asked if the UN Security Council, to which he had just
provided a briefing, would be issuing a presidential or even press statement
noting the postponement. "It's not being discussed at this point," Mr. Martin
answered. The electoral advisors, who are already in the country, will simply
have to stay on longer.
Inner
City Press asked Mr. Martin to respond to
criticism against
him for making public the rebels' attempt to link issues such as the snakes, or
conditions in the camps and remuneration more broadly, with them agreeing to the
second stage of verification and thus of disarmament and demobilization. Martin
responded that the linkage had already been public, and that the criticism of
him by rebel leader Prachanda was "blown up" and was "only said in response to
questions at the end of a public appearance." Not unlike Mr. Martin's own
responses, which did not appear off the cuff.
Rebels
in Kowli, Nepal -- child soldiers? We'll have more on this.
Martin is one
of the savvier UN envoys, having dealt most recently with Timor Leste and with
Nepal, before, as a representative of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.
About the
snakes, Martin went on to acknowledge that it is an "issue of concern,"
including because the UN has "arms monitors 24 hours a day at the cantonment
sites." He said that "tents have blown away" and "combatants have had to seek
shelter in villages." There's also the point that the 30,000 rebels only
turned in 3,000 weapons -- but who's counting?
Martin
said that with bad weather coming, there are concerns about not only the roofs
in the camp, but also about the ground. An interim government committee, he
said, is dealing with, and he said that the UN Development Program will "assist
in implementation." So is it in UNDP's mandate to register, or at least oust,
snakes? We'll see.
Feedback: Editorial
[at] innercitypress.com
UN Office: S-453A,
UN, NY 10017 USA Tel: 212-963-1439
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UN
Tour Guide Becomes Albania's PR Minister While Paid by UN, Quits Only After
Questions
Byline:
Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at the UN
UNITED NATIONS, May 4
-- A UN tour guide, while paid by the UN, sought to become and was even sworn in
on April 30 as Albania's minister of public relations, all with the knowledge of
the UN's Department of Public Information, UN-DPI.
While the
guide, Mr. Grid Rroji, had previously been known with in the UN headquarters as
the one who escorted ambush comedian Ali G through the building, his Horatio
Alger leap from guide to Minister of Information is both impressive and
indicative of a lack of safeguards and of candor in the UN system.
On May 3,
Inner City Press asked UN spokesperson Marie Okabe if a Grid Rroji was currently
being paid by the UN. "Yes he is," Ms. Okabe answered by email at 11 a.m. on May
4.
After
Inner City Press an hour later at the UN's noon briefing mentioned Rroji's name
-- excluded from the UN's
transcript
but available here in video -- and the
Albanian government web page showing Rroji
with Prime Minister Sali Berisha on April 30, UN-DPI hastily contacted Mr. Rroji.
Click
here
for the April 30 photo; the caption presents as the director of the department
of information and public relations for the Government of Albania and the
Council of Ministers Mr. Grid Rroji.
By six
p.m. on May 4, after asking Inner City Press to hold off on the story, UN-DPI
obtained a letter of resignation, back-dated to May 1. Inner City Press has
requested a description of what the UN knew and when, but this have not been
received. Sources say that the UN knew for months about Mr. Rroji's job search
with the Albanian government, raising questions about the failure to end the UN
job and UN payments before or at least simultaneous with taking Albanian
government job.
UN-DPI's
first reaction to questions had been to tell Inner City Press it might have "the
wrong Grid Rroji," even while acknowledging they knew that "their" Grid Rroji,
the tour guide who took ambush comedian Ali G through the headquarters building
-- click
here
for
YouTube
of the visit -- had traveled to Albania while paid by the UN to seek a job with
the government.
Grid
Rrodji, left, on April 30 with PM Berisha
Inner City Press was also chided for publicizing the name of a relatively lower
level UN employee -- even if he had leaped to become the Minister of Information
of Albania (while paid by the UN).
Inner City Press has reported on moonlighting at both high and lower levels of
the UN. Click here
for yesterday's story, in which the UN declines to provide a list of officials
paid only "When Actually Working," who may also be working for, and be paid by,
private entities. Click
here for Inner City Press' story earlier this year on an employee of UN
University conducting $99 trainings across town in Times Square.
Moonlighting aside, Inner City Press often reports on the travails of the UN's
"working stiffs," for example the UN Television employees who even after thirty
years of service are required to pass through metal detectors easily avoided by
freshly hired interns, some of them recommended by power brokers of important
member states. Only on Friday, a question from Inner City Press about how the
slated headquarters rehabilitation will impact the employees of the contractor,
One Source, was met with the response that "they are only cleaning people." In
fact, the UN tour guides were only recently given health insurance, and are
still deemed not to be staff members, despite being in many cases the UN's
public face.
The
question, however, is what policies the UN has to govern its employees' search
for jobs with national governments, and what procedures it has, or doesn't, to
ensure that a person cannot continue to be paid by the UN even after being named
to an outside job, in this case a public relations ministry of the country. The
case of Grid Rroji would seem to make clear that there are no safeguards in
place.
UN
insiders consulted by Inner City Press during the reporting for this story point
to the Office of Human Resources Management, OHRM, as the unit whose lack of
safeguards allow this and other double-dippings. The UN Staff Union has asked
Ban Ki-moon to remove Ms. Jan Beagle from heading OHRM. The statement provided
after-hours Friday, along with word that the back-dated resignation fax had just
been received, was that "International Civil Servants have the right to seek
alternative employment, provided they do nothing to compromise their obligations
to the UN in the process." The resignation letter faxed on May 4 after questions
were raised, back-dated to May 1, should be seen in light of the mutual
obligation to give 30 days notice.
For those
who marvel at the leap from tour guide to Minister of Information, Inner City
Press is told that "Grid Rroji always reads a lot." Albanian Prime Minister Sali
Berisha, in introducing him on April 30 in Tirana, bragged that Rroji "comes
from a high position in the United Nations' Department of Public Information."
This seems inconsistent with UN-DPI's subsequent statement to Inner City Press
that Rroji was "just a tour guide." So too does Rroji's appearance in the Ali
G's Show's UN visit. In the seven-minute
YouTube
clip, Mr. Rroji shows up at Minute 3:30, explaining that the "Jordan" seat in
the Security Council is not for the NBA's Michael Jordan.
In fact, Rroji's last -- for now -- UN job was not as tour guide, but telephone
receptionist for that unit. Apparently he got a call from Tirana, and an offer
he couldn't refuse. We wish him well. He is a prolific
blogger, and
reportedly a good friend of Berisha's daughter, who bragged that she made in
just four years $800,000 from the UN Mission in Kosovo. Click
here
for Inner City Press' most recent Kosovo story; again, click
here for
yesterday's story, in which the UN declines to provide a list of officials paid
only "When Actually Working," who may also be working for, and be paid by,
private entities. And click
here for Inner City
Press' story earlier this year on an employee of UN University conducting $99
trainings across town in Times Square. There appear to be neither safeguards nor
candor. Developing.
From the
UN's
transcript of the May 4 noon briefing:
Inner City Press: I
asked you yesterday about this (inaudible), a UN employee, a person who is still
employed and paid by the UN and you said yes. I think you emailed and said, yes
he is. There’s a report that he's functioning as the Minister of Information of
the Government Agency of Albania. That's sort of why I asked you whether
somebody can at the same time work for the UN and work for a Government or have
some other job.
Spokesperson: I have no information on this, so we'll have to look into it
definitely.
Inner City Press: But you checked into it, and he's paid by and employed by the
UN. Is that the case? (inaudible)
Spokesperson: You asked about a staff member, if he's still employed, and the
answer was yes.
Until six
o'clock, that is...
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