UN's
Alleged Biter Rejects Plea Deal, Demands Justice, Doss Dealing
Detailed
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, August 10 -- In Criminal Court in lower Manhattan Monday
morning, former UN Development Program contractor Nicola Baroncini,
who states
that his job was stolen by the UN's top envoy in the Congo
Alan Doss for his daughter Rebecca, rejected an offer of reduced
charges and anger management in the assault case against him. His
next court date is October 28.
Two
months before
the June 22 incident inside UNDP's building in which Mr. Baroncini
was pepper sprayed and then bit UN Security Officer Peter Kolonias,
Alan Doss wrote an email about awarding Baroncini's post as assistant
to the Deputy Director of UNDP's Regional Bureau for Asia and the
Pacific to his daughter.
As
first reported by Inner City Press, Doss asked to be shown "leeway" so
that
he could transfer from a UNDP to a UN Peacekeeping contract before or
on the day she got to job, to evade anti-nepotism rules. Inner City
Press first published the email on July 30, here.
On
August 10 in the courthouse
at 100 Centre Street, Baroncini told the Press that
July 1 was the last day Rebecca Doss could be given a UNDP contract
that would not have to be reviewed by a higher panel. He insists,
however, that for Rebecca Doss to have been considered and offered
the job while her father was still with UNDP violated the rules. For
16 days now, the UN and UNDP have repeated that the matter is under
review.
Alan Doss in the Congo, pepper spray and NY
courthouse not shown
The
question arose
Monday if immunity applies to Baroncini, or to the testimony that
would be required later in the case from UN Security Officer Peter
Kolonias. Some opined that Baroncini's immunity was lifted, by
operation of law or by UNDP
Administrator Helen Clark, who after more than 100 days in the post has
yet to hold a press conference.
Others
named
Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon, himself sensitive to questions about
nepotism following the promotion of his son in law Siddarth
Chatterjee at the UN in Iraq and this year at the UN Office of
Project Services in Copenhagen. Inquiries among the press corp have
begun into the related hirings of Mr. Ban's daughter. It is all
coming to a head. Watch this site.
Footnotes:
the proceedings Monday morning in Room 405 of the courthouse at 100
Centre Street involved, one after the other, a defendant in a Miami
Heat "Wade" jersey, handcuffed behind his back; another
defendant, female, with a baby strapped in front; a defendant named
Mamadou Bah with a seemingly disinterested assigned counsel; the
removal of a camera from the Press, and admonitions to those in the
courtroom not to wear caps, eat, drink or talk.
One wondered how
documented nepotism by the UN's top Congo envoy could devolve into
retaliation against a whistleblower down this level. Don't call me
the biter, Baroncini asked. I don't want my child (now two years old)
to have that impression in twenty years. Okay then. We will continue
reporting this story, with an array of related puns: the
whistleblower's mordant critique of the UN's toothless protections
against retaliation, the gnawing problem in the UN of nepotism,
leading to an open and shut case.
Received
on
Saturday:
From:
[Alan Doss] @un.org
To:
Inner City Press
Sent:
8/8/2009 2:32:11 P.M. Eastern Standard Time
Subj:
Re: Hi, Press(ing) Q re Alan Doss [and Rebecca Doss, UNDP]
Dear
Mr. Lee,
In
reference to your email, I can only say that UNDP is currently
reviewing the
matter. It would be premature therefore for me to make any public
comments
at this stage. I can confirm, however, that I transferred to DPKO on
1 July 2009.
Alan
Doss
* * *
In
UN Biter-Gate, Search On For Doss' Daughter, Bill Clinton Haiti Post
Used, Parents and Children
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, August 9 -- The cause or moving force behind the June 22
biting incident at the UN, Alan Doss the chief of the UN's Mission in
the Congo, has responded to Inner City Press' request for comment on
the eve of the court appearance of Nicola Baroncini, the alleged biter
whose
job he helped take.
Responding to four questions which have remained
unanswered by the UN for more than a week, Doss replied "In
reference to your email, I can only say that UNDP is currently
reviewing the matter. It would be premature therefore for me to make
any public comments at this stage. I can confirm, however, that I
transferred to DPKO on 1 July 2009."
Since
UN Deputy
Spokesperson Marie Okabe finally on August 7 answered Inner City
Press' question of two weeks previous, and acknowledged that Rebecca
Doss began with UNDP on July 1 -- thus had her application process
and was offered the job before that, while her father was still at
UNDP -- the violation of both the letter and spirit of anti-nepotism
rules had been made clear on the eve of Baroncini's court appearance
on August 10.
Meanwhile,
a side
character in Inner City Press' initial exclusive story provides
another insight into nepotism and insider connections within the UN
system. On July 30, Inner City Press reported that Violeta Maximova,
who among with Ms. Doss was placed above Mr. Baroncini in the
supposed competition for what he been his job, had been transferred
from jobs for UNDP's Regional Bureau for Asia and the Pacifici to a
post with the an office of former U.S. President Bill Clinton, so
recently in the news from North Korea (in Asia and the Pacific).
It
has since
emerged that is Clinton's UN office, that through which he will do
work in Haiti. The position it seems is paid by the UN Secretariat,
but administered by UNDP. Meanwhile Ms. Maximova's mother, who has
been a UNDP staff member, still has a UNDP telephone extension in her
name.
Nicolo Baroncini, Rebecca Doss not shown
A UNDP spokesman argues that this is just a holdover, that Ms.
Maximova left the agenda some time ago. But to some, it follows the
structure of the Dosses' July 1 pas
de deux: Alan Doss transferring
to DPKO the same day his daughter started in a purloined job she had
been offered while her father was still with UNDP.
Also in the run-up
to Baroncini's August 10 court date, newspapers in Italy and London
have belatedly picked up on the story. Quotidiano.Net, without any
mention of what came before, focuses on Baroncini's two year old
child. For some reason it does not detail how many Italian diplomats
were made aware of the abuse of their national, Baroncini, and yet
did nothing. Last week Inner City Press asked the spokesman for
Italy's Mission to the UN about Baroncini's case, but still without
any answer.
The
Times of
London, going to press as this updated is uploaded, has tried to
track down Rebecca Doss. There is a picture from Nepal; some say she
is the blond girl in the sari at the right. There are Facebook
pictures, notations in Model UN web pages. But Baroncini says that
Ms. Doss, 29, has had no experience in the UN at all, and got a job
with an NGO in the Congo, presumptively with her daddy's help. She
did not respond to an email sent to what should be her address at
UNDP. Watch this site.
* * *
UN
Nepotism from Congo to NY Criminal Court, UNDP Biter Case Set for
August 10
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, August 7 -- When the UN's top envoy to the Congo Alan Doss
wrote in April to ask for leeway to get his daughter Rebecca hired at
the UN Development Program, it set off a chain of events leading to
the firing and pepper spraying of the person who held the Doss-sought
post, and now starting on August 10 his criminal trial for fighting
back, allegedly with his teeth. Click here for
Inner City Press'
exclusive three stories to date on this matter.
Nicola
Baroncini,
who until June 22 was the assistant to UNDP's Deputy Director for
Asia and the Pacific, told Inner City Press on Friday that he intends
to ask for a trial on the changes against him, and to demand the
presence of various UN witnesses. These should, he said, including
the Special Representative of the Secretary General in the Congo, Alan Doss,
whose April 20, 2009 email, first published by Inner City
Press, asked for "leeway" in awarding his daughter the
position Mr. Baroncini had been filling.
On August 7,
UNDP told Inner City Press that "Ms. Rebecca Doss began working at UNDP
on July 1st 2009. The process through which she was hired is currently
being investigated by UNDP’s Office of Audit and Investigation. Until
that work is completed we will not have any further comments."
But, as
first published by Inner City Press, on April 20, 2009 Alan Doss wrote
"Dear
Ligia,
This is just to inform that I have advised UNDP in writing
that I will transfer to DPKO effective 1 July 2009. I have also
spoken to Martin and advised him that I cannot transfer before that
date because the new DPKO contractual arrangements only come into
effect on the 1 July. He informed me that the ‘deadline’ for the
ALD contracts is 15 May so the period of overlap would only be 6
weeks (assuming Rebecca’s ALD would come into force on the 14th May
at the latest). I have asked for some flexibility, which would allow
a very long serving and faithful UNDP staff member a little lee-way
before he rides off into the sunset.
Becky is very excited about the
prospect of going to work for you so I hope that it will work out.
With my warm regards and thanks,
Alan."
It
was improper for UNDP to process Rebecca Doss' "application," declare
her on the short list, and offer her the position while her USG father
was with UNDP. Beyond that, the contact by a UN Under Secretary General
was improper.
Sources now
say
that Doss has obtained his daughter other jobs in the past, and they
note that Secretary General Ban Ki-moon may have something of a
conflict in ruling on Doss' behavior, given the hiring of Ban's son
in law Siddarth Chatterjee first by the SRSG in Iraq, Steffan de
Mistura, then by the head of the UN Office of Project Services in
Copenhagen, Jan Mattsson. Attention is turning to the UN system posts
of Ban's daughter, Chatterjee's wife.
Since
Inner City
Press' third story on the matter one week ago, Ban's spokespeople
have repeated referred questions to UNDP, which has told Inner City
Press that "the hiring is being reviewed." On August 7,
Ban's Deputy Spokesperson Marie Okabe specified that UNDP's Office of
Audit and Investigation is looking at it. But UNDP no longer has
jurisdiction over Alan Doss; Ms. Okabe on August 7 answered Inner
City Press' question from a week ago, that Doss transferred from UNDP
to the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations on July 1.
On
August 7, Inner
City Press asked the head of DPKO, Alain Le Roy, what he thought of
the chief of the Congo peacekeeping mission bending rules to get his
daughter hired by the UN. Mr. Le Roy, too, said that UNDP must
answer, while noting that he has read Inner City Press' story. Others
have as well, and questions are multiplying. Video of August 7 noon
briefing here.
Alan Doss, at right, with Alain Le Roy,
requests for hiring leeway not shown: Rule of Law?
Back
on August
3,
Inner City Press asked Ban's spokesperson Michele Montas:
Inner
City Press: Michele, on Friday I had asked Farhan a question about
Alan Doss and when he became a DPKO [Department of Peacekeeping
Operations] staffer and not a UNDP [United Nations Development
Programme] staffer. He told me UNDP would answer. I still don’t
have an answer. Since it seems to be a Secretariat question, it
involves, it’s an e-mail that Mr Doss sent [inaudible]… that job
--
Spokesperson:
No, I think it’s a UNDP question.
Question:
But isn’t it, I mean, the date on which he became DPKO is actually
relevant to that inquiry and it seems like that is something that the
Secretariat would know, since he --
Spokesperson:
Well, at this point I don’t have anything new for you on this, and
we have been saying that UNDP should handle that.
Question:
But I sent them an e-mail as soon as we finished on Friday, but I
don’t have… I guess I am just pleading with you maybe to put a
squeeze on?
Spokesperson:
Yes, okay, I will ask whether UNDP can answer you.
Question:
And I know that the Secretary-General met with Helen Clark this
morning. Is there any readout? What did they discuss?
Spokesperson:
No, just internal matters.
Question:
Including this most recent issue of [inaudible]… not just the
biting incident, but the job search?
Spokesperson:
I don’t think such minor issues come up in discussions of that
sort.
Question:
[inaudible] the envoy of Ban Ki-moon actually writes in and says
“give my relative a job”; this doesn’t seem to me to be that
minor. The biting might be kind of comical, but I mean, I don’t
know if you’ve followed that issue, but I’ve just wondered…
Spokesperson:
Yes, of course I have read about it, but…
Inner
City Press: You don’t think it arose?
Spokesperson:
I don’t think so. Thank you all so very much.
Helen
Clark has yet
to hold a press conference at the UN, despite holding the post for
more than 100 days. On
August 5 Inner City Press asked:
Inner
City Press: In the Council today they’re talking about peacekeeping
and leadership. I just wanted to know, on the question that arose
about Alan Doss and when he became a DPKO [Department of Peacekeeping
Operations] employee. You’ve said, Farhan said Friday UNDP [United
Nations Development Programme] would answer it. You said Monday that
they’d answer it. But, still they haven’t answered. So, that’s
why I am asking. It seems like it’s a straight factual question
and that the information is in this building. Do you have an answer
to that?
Spokesperson:
All I can tell you is that UNDP is reviewing the issue, that’s all
I have really. I don’t have a definite answer for you. I know that
UNDP is reviewing the issue, that’s all I can say at this point.
Question:
But doesn’t DPKO know? I mean, the e-mail that was released said
that he asked, he said that 1 July he was going to transfer to DPKO
from UNDP, but he wanted them to hire his daughter prior to that and
sort of play with the rules. So, it’s just factual, while they
review that, that’s fine. But it seems like DPKO or your office
should be able to know when someone…
Spokesperson:
Well, we’re trying to ascertain the facts, that’s what I am
saying, Matthew. I am not evading your question, I just don’t have
the facts yet. And if I have them, I will give them to you as soon
as I have them. In this specific case, as I said, I was told by UNDP
that they are reviewing the case. That’s all I was told today. I
asked the question.
Question:
I mean, the guy who sort of raised this complaint that the job was
improperly given has like a criminal trial date on 10 August, you
know, that’s going to be released. He says that there is some
connection between these two.
Spokesperson:
Well, you know, I have to say about that incident, you know the one
that you have mentioned several times here. There was a serious
nature to the security incident that took place on 22 June in the
DC-2 building. And the incident resulted -- and I found that out
yesterday -- resulted in the injury of one of our UN officers, whom I
might add was transported to the hospital because of the severity of
his wound. So, I was not aware of that fact when I spoke to you
yesterday. Now I know that the man was hospitalized. He has since
had to do several tests for specific diseases as a result of the
wound, which was extremely stressful for everyone involved. He was
out on sick leave after the incident, based on the hospital’s
request. So this is what I have. It was much more serious than was
originally reported to us. And so I just wanted to underline that
fact.
Inner
City Press: [inaudible] I had asked Farhan, maybe now that you know
this you can tell. The dispute seems to be whether security used
pepper spray on the individual prior to what appears to be a biting
or vice versa. Do you have any information on that?
Spokesperson:
No, I don’t have the details on whether pepper spray was used or
not. It was a violent incident and the individual was violent, as I
can testify. The person was bitten.
The
court return
date is Monday, August 10. Watch this site.
* * *
At
UN, Biting Incident Reveals Nepotism of UNDP and Congo Envoy,
Whistleblower Maced
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, July 30 -- The biting incident at the UN, on which Inner
City Press exclusively
reported one week ago, has its roots in a
glaring case of nepotism in which the UN's top envoy to the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mr. Alan Doss,
lobbied to get his
daughter the UN Development Program job effectively held and applied
for by alleged biter, Mr. Nicola Baroncini.
When Mr. Baroncini was
suspected of knowing of the nepotism, documented by an e-mail to UNDP
from Mr. Doss, he was fired, forcibly removed, with pepper spray,
from the UN compound and arrested by NYPD on the basis of false
accusations. Doss' daughter Rebecca is now ensconced in the disputed
UNDP job, while Mr. Baroncini is due in Criminal Court on August 10
on charges of third degree assault.
The
case is an
early test of UNDP Administrator Helen Clark, in the job for 100 days
now, and new UN Security chief Gregory Starr, with whom Mr. Baroncini
is asking to meet in order to withdraw the criminal charges against
him. Also in question is how Secretary General Ban Ki-moon will react
to documented allegations of improper requests and nepotism by his
personal envoy to one of the UN's largest and most controversial
peacekeeping missions.
Documents
filed
with the US Department of State, obtained by Inner City Press, show
the lead-up to the June 22 pepper spray.
On March 16, 2009, after several other UNDP posts ranging from
Cambodia to New York, Mr. Baroncini began functioning as assistant to
Ms. Ligia Elizondo, Deputy Director of UNDP Regional Bureau
for Asia and the Pacific (RBAP).
According to
the complaint Mr.
Baroncini was "managing her personal agenda; screening inbound
and outbound communications; organizing meetings; reviewing documents
and other material; distributing tasks within the bureau. I had
unlimited access to her UNDP email account. My tasks also included
email filing (in my hard drive)."
A
month later in
April according to the complaint, Mr. Baroncini "witnessed that
Ms. Elizondo received several phone calls from Rebecca Doss. Her CV
was permanently in Ms. Elizondo’s in-tray. Also while filing Ms.
Elizondo’s UNDP email inbox I came across several emails from
Rebecca Doss to Ms. Elizondo. In one, Rebecca made reference to the
position of 'Special Assistant to RBAP Deputy Director' and said that
she would contact Ms. Elizondo at home."
Subsequently,
Mr.
Baroncini applied for and was one of four short-listed candidates for
this post, whose functions he was already performing. Other
candidates included Violeta Maximova and Rebecca Doss, whose father
Alan Doss, in charge of the UN's billion dollar peacekeeping mission
in the Congo, wrote on April 20 to Ms. Elizondo
"Dear
Ligia,
This is just to inform that I have advised UNDP in writing
that I will transfer to DPKO effective 1 July 2009. I have also
spoken to Martin and advised him that I cannot transfer before that
date because the new DPKO contractual arrangements only come into
effect on the 1 July. He informed me that the ‘deadline’ for the
ALD contracts is 15 May so the period of overlap would only be 6
weeks (assuming Rebecca’s ALD would come into force on the 14th May
at the latest). I have asked for some flexibility, which would allow
a very long serving and faithful UNDP staff member a little lee-way
before he rides off into the sunset.
Becky is very excited about the
prospect of going to work for you so I hope that it will work out.
With my warm regards and thanks,
Alan.
Alan
Doss
Special Representative of the Secretary-General United Nations Mission
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo"
E-mail
in docx text
format - download
When Inner
City Press asked the UN spokesperson's office on July 27 about the and
biting incident and the underlying recruitment, Associate Spokesman
Farhan Haq said "it
had to do with a frustrated jobseeker. The only thing I
can say is the information I got from UNDP on this is that the hiring
process regarding
that particular vacancy at UNDP was filled in accordance with their
rules." Transcript here,
video here.
But as Doss'
email in
the complaint shows, since it is illegal for the child of a UNDP
staff member, as Doss then was, to be hired by UNDP, Doss asked for
"a little lee-way" -- to ignore what he called a six week overlap. The
propriety of a UN Under Secretary General making personal contact and
applying pressure to waive rules and award a job to his daughter has
not yet been addressed.
UN's Doss, at right, with Kouchner and Clooney: Doss is connected
Next,
Ms. Maximova
and Ms. Doss were declared the top two candidates. Ms. Maximova
suddenly was offered and accepted a job at the Clinton
Foundation /
Initiative, and Ms. Doss was given the job.
Mr.
Baroncini spoke
with the Director of RBAP, Mr. Ajay Chhibber, on July 19. Initially,
Mr. Chhibber
took an interest in hearing out Mr. Baroncini, offering him advice.
But once Ms. Elizondo realized that Mr. Baroncini might, in the
course of his duties, have become aware of the improper influence in
the hiring decision, Mr. Baroncini had his email access terminated
and was told to no longer come in to UNDP.
Subsequently,
according to the complaint filed by Mr. Baroncini:
I
voiced my complete disapproval and said that I will challenge this
decision with the appropriate personnel.
I
handed to Mr. Chhibber a print-out of Alan Doss’ email to Ms.
Elizondo of April 20, 2009 and told him, “In case you do not know,
this is the way human resources selection works in UNDP.” I
repeated that I will challenge this course of events.
Within
a couple of minutes a man arrived. He asked for my UN badge and
requested that I leave the building. I began collecting my personal
belonging. The whole process took several minutes.
Three
UN Department of Safety and Security Guards approached me.
Immediately, Peter Kolonias, one of the guards, ordered me to enter
office 2312 of DC-1. I complied immediately.
I
entered the office and sat down escorted by two UN DSS Security
Guards. The door was shut. Shortly, my wife joined me (she works
elsewhere in UNDP).
After
waiting for some time, I asked the guards about the procedures in
place and why we had been waiting for so long. In several instances I
was told that Ms. Elizondo was giving a written statement and that
once she had completed it would be my turn.
I
began asking for access to a lawyer and my consulate. I repeated this
request frequently (I would say every 15 minutes) both to the guard
inside office 2312 and to other officials that entered the office.
I
asked my wife to leave office 2312 and look for Mr. Chhibber and ask
him to speak with me. I wanted to understand if he had any control
concerning what was happening, and I wanted to share my concerns
about this absurd escalation of events.
My
wife left the office, but the guards outside invited her to join Ms.
Elizondo and Ms. Jovita Domingo, a UNDP human resources advisor,
inside Ms. Elizondo’s office. There, they questioned my wife about
our private life until a UN official wearing a white uniform came in
and my wife was invited to leave by Ms. Elizondo.
Once
my wife left Ms. Elizondo’s office, they shut the door and had a
meeting. My wife returned to office 2312.
The
UN official wearing a white uniform along with the third UN DSS
guard, Peter Kolonias, joined the two other UN DSS guards inside
office 2312. They asked my wife to leave and shut the door.
The
UN official wearing a white uniform swiftly informed me that I had
two options: leave the building with them or be handcuffed.
I
felt that something very wrong was happening and again I requested
access to a lawyer, the Italian consulate and to give a statement.
The
second or third time I repeated my requested I was assaulted.
First,
Peter Kolonias put me to the floor. The two other guards followed
immediately. They tried to immobilize me using every sort of
technique. I was kicked repeatedly on the leg, stomach and neck. I
was punched repeatedly on the neck, head and face. Twice, at close
range, I was sprayed a pepper spray on the face. Immediately, and
for about two hours thereafter, I was blinded and suffered tremendous
pain on the face and eyes. Other than limited access to water, I was
denied proper medical treatment despite my repeated requests.
Eventually
I was handcuffed. UN DSS guards brought me outside office 2312 and I
waited there for about 1½ hours, handcuffed, sitting in a chair
in
RBAP Directorate area.
At
2:35 pm, NYPD officers arrived and I was officially arrested
Eventually
I was escorted outside DC1 building where an ambulance was waiting
I
waited handcuffed until approximately 7:40 pm in a waiting room of
Bellevue Hospital. After meeting with a Dr. Falck, I was immediately
discharged.
I
was brought to a police facility where NYPD took my fingerprints, and
I awaited transportation to 100 Centre Street.
After
routine procedures, I was jailed until 9:30 am of the following day.
The jail was no more than 17-18 square meters. The number of
detainees kept changing between 18 and 20 men. No restroom. Primitive
sanitation. No hygiene facilities.
My
case was reviewed, and I was immediately released without any bail
payment. I am set to appear in Court on August 10, 2009."
These
techniques
-- the pepper spraying of those who ask questions, pressing of
criminal charges as retaliation -- are the type of tactics that the
UN and officials like Alan Doss criticize in places like the Congo.
But the UN engages in them right on First Avenue in New York. What will
Ban Ki-moon, Gregory Starr and Helen Clark each do? In the case Ms.
Clark, she was officially informed of all of the above on July 27, and
her closest advisor Heather Simpson a full week before that. Now what?
Watch this site.
UNDP
has told Inner City Press first that
"There
was an unfortunate and isolated incident involving an employee of
UNDP on 23rd June 2009. UN Security and the New York Police
Department responded, and it is now being handled by the authorities
of the host government."
Then
after a follow up request by Inner City Press to UNDP spokesperson
Stephane Dujarric that UNDP "provide the requested description
of the recruitment process, the name of the post and the person
awarded, and whether they have any family or personal relationship
with the supervisor or selector," UNDP Administrator Helen
Clark's spokesperson Christina LoNigro responded that "we
cannot comment further on this case at this time as the legal process
is ongoing."
* * *
At
UN, Complaint to EU After Man Bites Man, Biter Seeks Meeting and
Consular Protection
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, July 29 -- In the wake of the UN macing and calling the NY
Police Department to arrest a UN Development Program staffer who
complained and bit a UN Security Officer, the UNDP staffer has
complained to the European Commission. Click here for
Inner City
Press' first exclusive report.
Mr.
Nicola Baroncini has written to the
Legal Counsellor to EC Delegation to the UN, asking for assistance in
obtaining a meeting with the head of the UN Department of Safety and
Security, Gregory Staff.
The EC's Roland
Tricot, calling it
a "consular protection" matter, has urged Baroncini to
write to his Italian mission. Mr.
Baroncini, citing another report by Inner City
Press, which beyond reporting exclusively on the biting incident last
week continued reporting this week, says he see no reason to
meet with Starr's subordinate Bruno Henn, to whom UNDP referred him.
Baroncini writes that "Mr. Henn is under investigation and is
about to leave is position with UN DSS."
Below
is the pertinent portion of a message Mr. Baroncini has sent today to
numerous officials in the EC and Italian government, as well as to
Inner City Press.
UN's Ban and DSS' Starr, biting incident and
consular protection not shown
Subj:
Re: Asking for EU assistance
From:
Nicola Baroncini
To:
Roland.TRICOT [at] ec.europa.eu
cc's
Sent:
7/29/2009 9:26:16 A.M. Eastern Standard Time
Dear
Mr. Tricot,
Thank
you very much for your concise and very clear message. Also thank you
for confirming my position. European institutions are run and shape
their culture upon Treaty not common sense even when the two do not
get along. I also acknowledge that none of European Institutions is
willing to use their "moral suasion" for my case, i.e.
asking for a meeting with UN DSS USG or somebody senior and get down
to what really happened. UNDP told my lawyer to contact Mr. Bruno
Henn. I do not know who he is. I know however from the media that Mr.
Henn is under investigation and is about to leave is position with UN
DSS therefore I do not think he will ever reply and if he will I
doubt it has any leverage.
Still
looking forward to receive a copy of your organization policy and
procedure about how staff has to handle relation with the public.
On July
27, after publishing the first exclusive story about the biting
incident, Inner City Press asked UN Associate Spokesman Farhan Haq:
Inner
City Press: I wanted to ask you if you can either provide
information on or comment on an incident that took place last week in
which a UN security officer was apparently bitten by a staff member
who had a contract terminated in DC-1. What was the cause of that?
Associate
Spokesperson: That wasn’t last week. That was actually several
weeks ago, unless there’s a more recent biting incident. But I
assume what you’re referring to took place about a month ago,
roughly. The basic point is, yes, I can confirm that that did
happen. It had to do with a frustrated jobseeker. The only thing I
can say is the information I got from UNDP [United Nations
Development Programme] on this is that the hiring process regarding
that particular vacancy at UNDP was filled in accordance with their
rules. And beyond that, I’d refer you to UNDP.
Inner
City Press: Just to make sure we’re talking about the same biting,
was the biter maced and taken to the Seventeenth Precinct?
Associate
Spokesperson: I know that UN security, and then outside security,
handled the situation. I am not aware of any sort of use of mace. I
can’t imagine that we’re talking about more than one biting
incident. This doesn’t happen all the time!
Inner
City Press: When you say outside security, you mean like the New
York City Police Department? What do you mean?
Associate
Spokesperson: I think outside security was brought in eventually
after the initial response by UN security.
Inner City Press then asked UNDP in
writing:
Please
provide all available UNDP information on the biting incident I asked
about at noon: Farhan says UNDP tells him the biter was a job SEEKER,
and that the recruitment was transparent. Please name the underlying
job, the job seeker, and what happened.
Six
hours later, UNDP's Christina LoNigro replied:
There
was an unfortunate and isolated incident involving an employee of
UNDP on 23rd June 2009. UN Security and the New York Police
Department responded, and it is now being handled by the authorities
of the host government.
Inner City
Press, now naming the bitee, asked for confirmation and explaination:
"On the
biting
incident, while UNDP did not provide the name as requested, now I'll
ask you to confirm or deny that the the biter (and macee) was Nicola
Baroncini, and to provide the requested description of the
recruitment process, the name of the post and th person awarded, and
whether they have any family or personal relationship with the
supervisor or selector."
UNDP
responded, "unfortunately
we cannot comment further on this
case at this time as the legal process is ongoing." UNDP suggested to
Mr. Baroncini that he speak with Bruno Henn, of whom Mr. Baroncini
writes, he
"is under investigation and is
about to leave is position with UN DSS."
Henn,
after the UN's rejection of his request to become security chief
for the Capital Master Plan renovations of the UN, is said to be
seeking outside employment, on information and belief with an energy
company in New Jersey. The UN has repeatedly be requested to produce
Mr. Henn for a press conference or other Q & A, but has not. Watch
this site.
*
* *
At
UN, Man Bites Man as Contracts Cut, Snafus of Relocation, Flushing Out
the Press
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, July 24, updated July 27
-- A UN security officer was bitten earlier this month, not
by a dog but by a just-terminated staff member. Special Operations
officer Peter Kolonias, responding to a disturbance in the UN's
building on the west side of First Avenue and 44th Street, was
confronted by an individual distraught by his contract's termination.*
The
UN sources who
told Inner City Press about the biting, which has not been reported
by the UN at its noon briefing nor in any other media, said that
further adverse reactions by staff are to be expected, with the UN
having eliminated the so-called permanent contract as of July 1, and
now moving remaining staff members out of its headquarters to
locations as far west as Madison Avenue and as far east as Long
Island City.
In
the course of
Inner City Press' reporting on July 24 to confirm the man bites man
story, a range of staff members complained about their moves, in
connection with the UN's Capital Master Plan renovation. Members of
the Office of Human Resources Management, after being told there
would be no more changes to the relocation plan, were recent told
they will move across the East River into Queens.
Longtime Conference
Management staffers have been told they will relocate to "above
the liquor store" on Second Avenue. "Whiskey for
breakfast," one staffer said, questioning moving his unit four
blocks away from the meeting rooms they service.
UN Security with dogs, human bites not shown
The
UN's Under
Secretary General for Management Angela Kane told the Press earlier
this week that the temporary General Assembly building rising on the
UN's North Lawn will not have a bar, as the current building does in
its second floor Delegates' Lounge. Ms. Kane spoke rosily of the
contract changes that resulted in the elimination of permanent
contracts -- and, the Staff Union says, in the death of the
independent international civil service -- and of progress with the
Capital Master Plan.
CMP
chief Michael
Adlerstein, who along with Ms. Kane changed previous plans for
enclosed media work space to an "open office" system in
which whistleblowers could not approach the Press, is said to be
angered concerned about a Dear
Colleague letter circulated in the
U.S. House of Representatives about this aspect of the CMP, and a
Kane-led meeting to target the Press. But this reporting on
events at
the UN will continue -- particularly when man bites man. Watch this
site.
Update of July 27 -- Three days
after Inner City Press published the above, UN Associate Spokesperson
Farhan Haq confirmed the a biting incident took place in the DC-1
building, and stated that the biter was, according to the UN
Development Program, a job seeker, and argued that the underlying
recruitment process was transparent. Haq referred all other questions -
including whether the individual was maced and taken to the local
police precinct - to UNDP. Inner City Press has asked UNDP, which has
declined in the past to answer basic questions, and any update will
appear on this site.
Update
of July 27, 6:35 p.m. -- Inner City Press asked UNDP in writing:
Please
provide all available UNDP information on the biting incident I asked
about at noon: Farhan says UNDP tells him the biter was a job SEEKER,
and that the recruitment was transparent. Please name the underlying
job, the job seeker, and what happened.
Six
hours later, UNDP's Christina LoNigro replied:
There
was an unfortunate and isolated incident involving an employee of
UNDP on 23rd June 2009. UN Security and the New York Police
Department responded, and it is now being handled by the authorities
of the host government.
But
what of the biter's name, the specifics of the post and recruitment,
and what happened at and after the 17th police precinct? Watch this
site.
* * *
Click
here
for an Inner City Press YouTube channel video, mostly UN Headquarters
footage, about civilian
deaths
in Sri Lanka.
Click here for Inner City
Press' March 27 UN debate
Click here for Inner City
Press March 12 UN (and AIG
bailout) debate
Click here for Inner City
Press' Feb 26 UN debate
Click
here
for Feb.
12 debate on Sri Lanka http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/17772?in=11:33&out=32:56
Click here for Inner City Press' Jan.
16, 2009 debate about Gaza
Click here for Inner City Press'
review-of-2008 UN Top Ten debate
Click here for Inner
City Press' December 24 debate on UN budget, Niger
Click here from Inner City Press'
December 12 debate on UN double standards
Click here for Inner
City Press' November 25 debate on Somalia, politics
and this October 17 debate, on
Security Council and Obama and the UN.
* * *
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
Feedback: Editorial
[at] innercitypress.com
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earlier Inner City Press are listed here, and some are available
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2006-08 Inner City Press, Inc. To request
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