As Ban Heads to Asia, UN Labor
Strife Heats Up, Safety in Shambles, UNDP Runs Wild
Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of
Inner City Press at the UN: News Analysis
UNITED
NATIONS, June 26, updated June 27
-- As Ban
Ki-moon gave a speech to the Korean and Japan Societies on 47th Street,
on the
eve of setting off on a trip to both countries, his human resources
staff worked
overtime on the 25th floor of UN Headquarters, trying desperately to
finalize a
deal with a grouping of unions that represents neither UN staff in New
York nor
Geneva. While Ban came in promising to
focus on improving the UN's own operations, things have grown more
discordant
under his distracted watch, close observers say.
While Ban read out his speech, back in
the General
Assembly lobby the
talks was of security. Who will replace resigning chief David Veness?
Most
mused that he'd never really wanted the job, declining to come to be
interviewed, then not moving his family to New York. He'd thought he be
head of
Scotland Yard, but then got was named "Sir" as a consolation. His
role in not solving the theft of millions from the UN in Somalia is a
story for
another day. But his resignation now is not accountability but
convenience,
these sources say.
Bertini to Veness, Algiers bombing and Somalia not shown
In Algiers
at the time of December's deadly bombing, for safety the UN's
Designated
Officer was Marc de Bernis from the UN Development Program. One would have expected, then, for safety
improvements to be a major topic at this month's annual meeting of
UNDP's
Executive Board, held in Geneva. One might
be wrong however.
Likewise,
when on June 3 the Nemeth Panel's report on UNDP in North Korea was
released,
the press was told that the report would be presented to UNDP's
executive board
later in the month. Other after that, it was said, could the Nemeth
panel
answer questions. But the report was hardly presented to the Executive
Board, despite
requests from a number of countries.
It appeared
as a lunchtime
item on June 24, leaving some member states on the Board grumbling.
Thereafter, some additional time was added. We anticipate receiving an
audio recording of the discussion, and will have more at that time.
There is a
method to UNDP's seeming madness, and that method is to try to make
problems go
away. In Myanmar, for example, in the wake of Nargis UNDP undertook
getting
cash into the hands of the needy. Inner City Press' sources say UNDP
paid
dollars to Myanmar's government, and got local currency back at an
artificially
low official exchange rate.
Inner City Press asked UNDP
spokesman "could you confirm or deny that a meeting was called at UNDP
HQ today about Myanmar, and separately if it had anything to do with
currency, exchange rates." For now he has replied, "On Myanmar, I am
following up... there are meetings about specific countries every day.
On Myanmar, there have "crisis board" meetings held on regular basis
since the cyclone two months ago. There is nothing peculiar about this.
In fact, it's part of the regular mechanism to deal with on-going
emergencies."
The new resident
representative in Myanmar, these
sources say, is now
trying to
disappear this problem as well.
Among the
disappeared, we're told, is Marc de Bernis himself. He's said to be on
paid
home leave, with Daily Sustenance Allowance, just don't talk to the
press. But
if the Brahimi and DSS reports are truly, he should face
accountability. We'll
see -- we'll have more on this.
On another
labor front, the contract with UN TV personnel which expires on June 30
has
still not been extended. The UN's contractor National Mobile Television
has financial
problems; its subsidiary Venue Services is not itself registered as a
vendor.
The UN staffer ostensible riding herd over the process left the
building on
June 23 until September, to cover the Beijing Olympics for NBC. While
not technically
permissible, one Andrew Nye gave the green light. But might the lights
go off,
on UN TV productions? Only time -- and July -- will tell. Watch this
site.
* * *
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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