UN
Banned Staff
From Women's March, WFP
Reversed, Now
Waffles, Gallach at
Power's Elex Party
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
January 20 – UN system
officials told their staff not
to attend the "Global Women's
March" on Saturday, January
21. Below is an email from the
UN World Food Program.
After
Inner City Press published and
Periscoped about it and asked
four WFP spokespeople about
it, by email and phone, UN
deputy spokesman Farhan Haq at
the January 20 noon briefing
answered Inner City Press that
WFP's Ertharin Cousin, from
Chicago, reversed her agency's
Ethics Officer and said staff
can march. YouTube
video here.
But then just
before 6 pm another email went
out, further muddying the
waters before the Women's
March and showing again that Cristina
Gallach (and some other USGs)
have violated the UN's rules.
The new UN
email:
"To: OAH, DPKO,
UN Funds Programs &
Tribunals, HQ NY Secretariat
From: BROADCAST-UNHQ/NY/UNO
Date: 01/20/2017 05:57PM
Subject: Message from the
Ethics Office: Public
Pronouncements and Political
Activities
Recently, there have been a
number of questions regarding
public pronouncements
including participating in
political activities and
social media
discussions. The
questions include
participation in tomorrow’s
Women’s March on Washington.
Are such activities in line
with our status as
international civil
servants?
In this respect, we would like
to remind staff of their
obligations as international
civil servants.
The private activities of UN
staff members must remain
within the limits of the
Organization’s core values as
reflected in Staff Regulation
1.2 and Staff Rule 1.2.
While the Organization
respects the inviolability of
your personal views and
convictions, including your
political and religious
convictions, as well as your
right to freedom of
expression, we must ensure
that the expression of those
views and convictions do not
adversely reflect on our
status, or on the integrity,
independence and impartiality
that are required by that
status.
As international civil
servants, we are called upon
to uphold and respect the
principles set out in the
Charter, including faith in
fundamental human rights, in
the dignity and worth of the
human person and in the equal
rights of men and women.
Nonetheless, as international
civil servants, our Standards
of Conduct (para 9 and 33)
make clear that we do not have
the freedom of private persons
to take sides or to express
our beliefs publicly on
sensitive political matters,
either individually or as
members of a group nor can we
criticize or try to discredit
a Government.
Public pronouncements, which
could have an impact on our
independence and impartiality
as international civil
servants, come in many forms
including but not limited to:
-marches,
protests, demonstrations;
-online petitions:
-social media activity:
-group walks/activities.
Accordingly, participating in
certain activities, especially
those with political
overtones, may be viewed as
incompatible with our status
as international civil
servants."
Haq would
not answer if UN Under
Secretaries General on
Samantha Power's election night
"party" complied with the
impartiality even Cousins
claimed. We'll have more on
this.
Here's WFP's
email:
From: Catherine
COLMAY [at] wfp.org on behalf
of Bonnie GREEN
Date: Thursday 19 January 2017
at 16:36
Subject: Guidance on Public
Political Activities
Message addressed in bcc to
All HQ Staff
On behalf of Bonnie Green,
Director, Ethics Office
Dear HQ
Colleagues,
I am writing
about the Women’s March in
Rome, scheduled for this
Saturday, the 21st January
2017, and our obligations as
employees of an international
civil organization.
Although the
Women’s March in Rome has many
goals including respect for
civil rights, the March in
Rome is part of the “Global
Women’s March” conceived as a
reaction to the election of
Donald Trump as President of
the United States and is
intended “…to send a bold
message to the new US
administration on their first
day in office.” [As per
Women’s March in Rome Facebook
page and other collateral.]
Whereas our
personal political convictions
remain inviolate, while we
work for WFP, we do not have
the freedom of private persons
to take sides or express
personal political views
publicly, either individually
or as members of a group. As
such, it is not appropriate
for us to participate in the
Women’s March in Rome or any
of the marches as part of the
“Global Women’s March”.
The Standards of
Conduct for the international
Civil Service may be accessed
in English,French, Spanish and
Arabic, and feel free to pass
by the Ethics Office (1Y08)
for hard copies in any of the
languages.
As always, the
Ethics Office is available to
you for additional guidance in
person or at WFP.ETHICS [at]
wfp.org.
Regards,
Bonnie E. Green
Director and Chief Ethics
Officer
Ethics Office
World Food Programme
While there is much to be said
about this, what is clear to
Inner City Press is that this
eleventh hour face- (or
funding-) saving attempt
exposes again the double
standards at work in the UN.
While UN
system line staff are told not
to participate in this Women's
March on a Saturday, UN Under
Secretary General for Public
Information Cristina Gallach
proudly retweeted
of outgoing US Ambassador to
the UN Samantha Power's
UN-heavy "election night party."
Gallach
also, among other things,
highlighted the critique of
Secretary of State nominee Rex
Tillerson reportedly
considering not having a
traveling press corps. But Ban
Ki-moon, who as UN Secretary
General, hired Gallach to communicate
for him, did not have a
traveling press corp, and
rarely held press conferences.
This same
Cristina Gallach had her
Department of Public
Information use public funds
to pay a trainer to tell
non-governmental groups
accredited to the UN that
Detroit, Michigan is a third
rate city" in "flyover
country," here.
This while
Gallach used public money to
travel to her native Barcelona
to receive a personal award,
and refused
to answer or explain about
it.
As to the
UN's comment on any of this,
now Ban's holdover spokesman
at the UN, Stephane Dujarric,
has answered only two and a
half of 22 questions Inner
City Press submitted, and that
on a delay. Whatever is
provided now will be
published.
In full
disclosure Cristina Gallach is
also the UN official who, as
Inner City Press inquired
into her and now-gone UN
Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon's connections to the
corruption scandals
surrounding the UN - the John
Ashe / Ng Lap Seng bribery
case (Gallach did no due diligence,
UN
audit at Para 37-40 and
20b), and now the indictments
against Ban Ki-moon's brother
and nephew,
who worked for the UN's
landlord Colliers
International - evicted
Inner City Press without any
due process, and restricts
it still, with no right to
appeal.
We'll have more
on this.
***
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
UN Office: S-303,
UN, NY 10017 USA
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other,
earlier Inner City Press are listed here, and some are available in
the ProQuest service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright
2006-2015 Inner City Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
for
|