UN's Budget
Committee Complains of Late Reports, Diagnosis of OIOS Problems
Byline: Matthew
Russell Lee of Inner City Press at the UN: News Analysis
UNITED NATIONS,
May
5 -- As the UN budget committee began a month-long set of meetings on
Monday,
it criticized the Ban Ki-moon administration for providing its
proposals late,
and not answering its questions. An
insider to the UN Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary
Questions,
in an extended interview with Inner City Press, explained why the UN
system is
not working. The Secretariat works all twelve months of the year coming
up with
proposals for funding, he said. Then these are funneled through a
seven-month
session of the ACABQ, which does not have sufficient time or staff to
appropriately
report. Then the General Assembly's budget committee, in sessions from
September to December, then March and finally May, is expected to
seriously
review the proposals and reports. This proves impossible, and much
review is
confined to the final 72 hours of each session. (Click here for
Inner City
Press' coverage for the dusk to dawn budget session in late
December.)
ACABQ must be given better information and resources, he
said, and the
budget committee must meet more frequently. The UN's budgets have
skyrocketed,
while the oversight as not. See today's story on the problems at
the
UN's Office of Internal Oversight Services. The insider opined that
OIOS'
proposal to shift investigators from peacekeeping missions to regional
centers
is not yet well thought out, and may not pass in its current form.
At UN, G-77 and flags, Secretariat
reports and reforms not shown
These perspectives found their way
into some of the speeches given on Monday in the Fifth Committee. For
the Group
of 77 and China, Conrod Hunt began, "It is regrettable that we once
again
have to register our concern with the late submission of reports by the
Secretariat." He continued that "while the size of the peacekeeping
budgets of the UN have increased significantly over the past few years,
Member
States, however, are put in a position where they have less and less
time each
year to complete our consideration... The ACABQ has not been able to
prepare
reports except on five peacekeeping operations so far."
Inner City Press last week asked
OIOS chief Inga-Britt Ahlenius for an update on OIOS' action on the
General
Assembly's call, in December 2007, for her to examine the Secretariat's
invocation of "special measures" allowing no-bid contracting, including
the $250
million contract with Lockheed Martin's PA&E unit, and waiving
hiring rules in the Darfur mission. She replied, "OIOS does not make
any
comments on our ongoing work other than to say that the audit is still
in
progress and will be submitted to the GA in accordance with the slot
date." Here's hoping the Budget Committee
follows-up. We'll see.
* * *
These reports are
usually 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
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