On
Sudan Staff
Strikes, Ban's
UN Blames UNDP
For Error,
Refuses to Pay
By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Exclusive
series
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 1 –
Amid
continuing
human rights
abuses in
Darfur, where
the UN's Herve
Ladsous
mis-manages
the UNAMID
mission, and
in Southern
Kordofan and
Blue Nile
states, on
July 29 Inner
City Press
asked Ban
Ki-moon's
deputy spokesman
Farhan Haq
about a strike
among UNAMID's
national
staff. From
the UN
transcript:
Inner
City Press:
Question:
Sure. I
wanted to ask
you about the
strike in
UNAMID [United
Nations-African
Union Hybrid
Operation in
Darfur] of
national
staff.
They have gone
on
strike.
They've said
that this
issue of
payment not in
dollars but in
Sudanese
pounds, which
are highly,
you know,
decreased in
value, has
continued and
some other
issues.
What does OHRM
[Office of
Human
Resources
Management] or
whoever is in
charge here,
DFS
[Department of
Field
Support],
intend to do
about the
strike of the
national staff
of UNAMID?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Yes, the
mission is in
touch with the
staff
association
and is dealing
with them on
this and is
also in touch
with
Headquarters
in an effort
to resolve
this.
Since then,
Inner City
Press has
obtained UN
Headquarters'
memo to UNAMID
national
staff,
essentially
saying that
UNDP made a
mistake and
the UN
Secretariat
will NOT be
following
through on
what UNDP
promised. We've
put the memo
online here. What
kind of
organization
is this?
The UN back on
February 5,
2016 moved to
give more U.S.
dollars to the
Bank of
Khartoum, from
its own staff
members'
salaries.
Inner City
Press previously
exclusively
exposed this
outrage,
and a UN
"reconsideration"
ensured. On
February 6,
Inner City
Press reported
this one, and
on February 9
asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric --
who didn't
answer then,
or since. Video here.
Instead, on
February 19
for seeking to
cover UN
corruption
Inner City
Press was
ousted from
the UN, and
has since been
confined to
minders.
On February
10, Dujarric
told Inner
City Press he
was
"harvesting
information"
on the issue.
On
February 12,
Inner City
Press asked
Dujarric
again:
Inner City
Press: do you
have anything
on the strike?
Spokesman:
No.
Inner City
Press: I
ask because,
on 14
February,
there's the
threat that
7,000 workers…
Spokesman:
No, my
understanding
is that
discussions
are being
had.
Obviously,
this also
involves, from
what I
understand, a
review of the
banking system
in Sudan, and
we do hope
that the issue
gets resolved.
Then
Inner City
Press
exclusively
reported a UN
memo that
salaries may
be paid in
local currency
or dollars. See here.
"All
UN Operations
in Sudan
including
Peacekeeping
Support will
stop on
Sunday
February 14th.
A decision on
sit-in protest
was taken by
UN staff in
Sudan starting
Sunday 14th.
They will
report to
office but No
work will be
undertaken.
This
arrangment
includes 2
days on sit-in
protest
without work
and a normal
day of work
following.
This will
continue until
the Salaries
issue
permenantley
resolved...
we're talking
about the
second biggest
UN operation
in the world
with almost
7,000 staff
members, and
including
support to a
very sensitive
peacekeeping
operation in
Darfur which
more than
20,000
soldiers and
high scale Air
movement
operation."
Inner
City Press:
Question:
I have two
more, but I
guess I’ll do
one first and
then
see. I
wanted to ask
you about…
there’s a
situation in
the UN system
in Sudan where
the
headquarters
here has
decided to pay
the UN staff’s
salary to the
bank of
Khartoum in
dollars, and
they, in turn,
get paid in
local
currency.
So they’ve
raised a lot
of stink
saying that
what they get
is about half
what the UN
pays in
dollars to the
Bank of
Khartoum.
They’ve
alleged
corruption.
They’ve also
threatened to
strike.
I wanted to
know, what… by
what logic is
the UN giving…
if they have
dollars to
pay, why don’t
they pay their
staff in
dollars?
And why do
they let the
Bank of
Khartoum take
half of the
money that’s
meant for
staff…?
Spokesman:
I’m not aware
of the
situation.
I can…
Inner City
Press:
Are you going
to check that
out?
Because…
A
source
exclusively
told (and
showed) Inner
City Press,
"UN
published the
long
awaited
salary scale
in as a result
of the local
staff salary
survey. The
very big
surprise that
the Salary
scale was
issued in US
Dollar with a
note
written
at the end of
the sheet that
'Salaries are
payable in
local currency
converted at
the prevailing
United Nations
rate of
exchange
during the
month of
payment.'
"This
means that
Bank of
Khartoum will
get the staff
Salaries in US
dollars at
'Current rate'
which is
usually 50% of
the actual
market rate.
Currently UN
rate is
6.446.while
market rate is
SDG 12.00...
Now,
Staff
Federation is
meeting and
the UN may
face the
biggest staff
strike in its
history."
So the UN
under Ban
Ki-moon (and
Peacekeeping
under Herve
Ladsous) stand
ready to
subsidize the
Bank of
Khartoum.
Ban Ki-moon,
as Inner City
Press has
reported in
detail,
essentially
broke the
Staff Union or
federation at
UN
Headquarters
in New York.
This
is today's UN.
The Next SG
process, and
the
transparency
being sought
by the Free UN
Coalition for
Access and
others, is all
the more
important so
that the UN
doesn't
further
decline.
On December
30, the day it
was belatedly
received,
Inner City
Press
published a
response from
the UN and the
UN Development
Program,
below.
Since then,
Inner City
Press has
obtained a
series of
e-mails from
UN
whistleblowers
to UNDP about
the transfer
to the Bank of
Khartoum, as
well as UNDP's
responses.
On November
28, Sudan
whistleblowers
wrote to
UNDP's hotline
that under an
arrangement
with Bank of
Khartoum (BoK)
would become
the recipient
of all UN
local staff
salaries in US
dollars while
it would be
paying their
salaries in
local currency
using the UN
exchange rate
around 5.99
SDG.
The
bank of
Khartoum will
be benefiting
from the
difference
between the UN
exchange rate
and The
Central Bank
of Sudan rate
for commercial
importers of
8.47 SDG (BoK
USD selling
rate for
businessmen).
The net profit
per each US
dollar
channeled to
Bank of
Khartoum is
approximately
2.47 SDG.
There were
additional
charges in the
whistleblowers'
communications
to UNDP,
including
about how Bank
of Khartoum
was chosen
(this is not
addressed in
the UN's and
UNDP's
response to
Inner City
Press, below.)
UNDP's
response to
the
whistleblowers
was to ask for
identifying
information
about the
whistleblowers,
and then to
blandly state
that it is not
uncommon in
areas such as
Sudan, to make
similar
arrangements
with Banks to
pay the salary
of local
staff."
But what about
the obvious
exchange rate
loss? It is
reminiscent of
another UN
scam Inner
City Press exclusively
uncovered,
the
overpayment of
Myanmar by
inflated
foreign
exchange rate
in the wake of
Cyclone
Nargis.
And what about
the losses to
UN system
staff set
forth in their
complaint to
Al Za'tari,
which Inner
City Press
exclusively
published here?
On
December 30,
Inner City
Press wrote to
UN
spokespeople
again:
"This
is a request
that Deputy SG
Eliasson or
someone else
from the
Secretariat
hold a press
availability
on Sudan's
decision to
expel Yvonne
Helle (which I
asked about at
the December
24 noon
briefing) and
Ali
Al-Za'tari.. A
media
availability
by the
Secretariat,
ideally the
DSG but
another if
necessary,
later this
afternoon is
being
requested,
including on
behalf of the
Free UN
Coalition for
Access. Either
way, am
awaiting
Secretariat
response on
why UN
national staff
members' US
dollar
accounts in
UNFCU were
transferred to
the Bank of
Khartoum, and
why the UN
Secretariat
said nothing
publicly when
the Country
Director of
UNFPA was
expelled from
Sudan in
April."
This last
question,
about the UN's
silence on the
UNFPA ouster
in April, has
yet to be
answered. But
on UNFCU, the
UN Office of
the
Spokesperson
sent this,
which we
publish in
full:
"There
has been a
restriction on
the cashing of
foreign checks
by Sudanese
national
staff.
At the same
time, the Bank
of Khartoum
has put on
hold all
foreign check
cashing by all
staff in
Sudan.
Since this
decision was
taken in
November 2014,
UNDP has
been working
with UNFCU to
find an
acceptable
solution.
"UNDP would
like to
further
clarify that
the issue is
unrelated
to the
requested
departure by
the Sudan
government of
the
United
Nations
Resident
Coordinator
and
Humanitarian
Coordinator,
and Resident
Representative
of the United
Nations
Development
Progamme
(UNDP) and
the
UNDP
Country
Director. UNDP
is
coordinating
with the UN
and with the
Government of
Sudan to
address the
situation.
UNDP remains
strongly
committed to
the human
development,
peace
and
security of
all the
citizens of
Sudan."
In the first
document Inner
City Press
exclusively
published, here,
UNFCU's
President and
CEO William
Predmore told
national staff
in Sudan that
"We
understand the
concerns of
our members
after
necessary
account
restrictions
were implosed,
and we regret
there was not
an opportunity
to deliver
communications
more swiftly
to the
individuals
impacted... As
you may be
aware, UNFCU
is subject to
U.S.
Regulations
(including
those
promulgated by
the Office of
Foreign Assets
Controls
(OFAC)). In
order to
ensure
compliance
with those
regulations,
checking
account
services and
debit card
services were
terminated for
local staff.”
(Many were
stranded with
AMT cards that
didn't work,
while their
dollars were
transferred to
the Bank of
Khartoum.)
But
contrary to
what UNFCU's
Predmore told
staff in
writing, the
US OFAC in the
second
document Inner
City Press is
exclusively
publishing
today, here,
told UN staff
that sanctions
law and
regulation
does NOT
require what
the UN has
done, citing
31 CFR
538.531. Click
here to view
in PDF.
Last week
Inner City
Press exclusively
reported
on the UN
Federal Credit
Union abruptly
telling UN
national staff
in Sudan that
their accounts
were being
frozen and the
dollars in
them
transferred to
the Bank of
Khartoum.
Inner City
Press has asked the UN, including UNDP,
OCHA and UNFPA,
to explain
this.
On December 27
Inner City
Press
exclusively
published a
complaint
filed with Ali
Al-Za'tari
about the
change, here.
Inner City
Press notes
that the
decision to
give the UN
national
staff's
dollars to the
Bank of
Khartoum flies
in the face,
in fact, of
the
sanctions.
The complaint
to Al-Za'tari
states that
“UNFCU
closed
checking and
savings
accounts of
national staff
without prior
notification
and
consultation
and
unilaterally
transferred
all funds of
staff members'
accounts to
local saving
accounts to be
paid in SDG by
Bank of
Khartoum...
Based on the
long years of
established
provision of
the UNFCU
service,
majority of
national staff
have made long
term financial
arrangements
taking into
account UNFCU
deposits
facilities
which provided
solutions to
many of their
problems such
as medical
treatments and
education to
them and their
families.”
Tellingly,
Predmore's
letter to
staff also
says that the
switch was
made pursuant
to UNDP's
rules. What
rules?
Now the UN
Security
Council is set
to meet
on December 30
about Sudan's
order to Ali
Al-Za'tari and
Yvonne Helle
to leave; the
Council will
say they are
in support of
UN staff. What
will they do
about UN staff
members'
dollars having
been given to
the Sudanese
authorities?
In essence,
UNDP and its
Resident
Coordinator
Ali Al-Za'tari
gave Khartoum
the U.S.
dollars of UN
national
staff, without
notice. Even
that wasn't
enough to keep
him in the
country. But
it is
reminiscent of
another UN
scam Inner
City Press exclusively
uncovered,
the
overpayment of
Myanmar by
inflated
foreign
exchange rate
in the wake of
Cyclone
Nargis.