With Clark at UNDP, Melkert Is "Expected" to
Leave, Dervis' Stealth Service
Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at
the UN: News Analysis
UNITED NATIONS,
March 31 -- A game of musical
chairs has begun in the UN system, starting with today's confirmation
of New
Zealand's former prime minister Helen Clark as the replacement for
Turkey's
Kemal Dervis at the top of the UN Development Program. Hours before the
General
Assembly meeting to cap Clark's selection, it emerged that Dervis had
quietly
been named a Special Adviser to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon for the
upcoming
G-20 meeting in London.
The UN had
never announced Dervis' appointment, but
when Inner City Press asked about a quote from Dervis in the Turkish
Press
about the appointment, Ban's spokeswoman Michele Montas confirmed it.
Video here,
from Minute 20:26. Like the
ill-fated appointment of Canadian diplomat Robert Fowler as Ban's envoy
to
Niger, where he and a colleague have been kidnapped, it was never
announced.
Inner City Press asked, are there other stealth envoys? While the
answer seemed
to be "no," in today's UN one never knows.
An African
diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity
to Inner City Press Tuesday afternoon moments before the GA vote on
Clark, said
it was unfortunate that no expert from a developing country had been
found,
even to be a serious candidate for consideration by Ban Ki-moon. He
added, "hopefully for the deputy post at UNDP." When Inner City Press
asked if that
meant current Dutch deputy Ad Melkert would be leaving, the diplomat
said that
is to be expected. Especially after Ban Ki-moon's still-protested
ouster of Tanzanian Anna Tibaijuka from the top spot at the UN in
Nairobi in favor of Achim Steiner, from now on "if the top
spot goes to the developed world, the deputy
should be from the developing world," he said.
Helen Clark and George W. Bush, circa 2002,
Dervis and UNDP not shown
While a newspaper
in New Zealand put Clark's
prospective pay at $500,000, by Inner City Press' calculation it is
$287,000 --
the $189,000 that all Under Secretaries General make, plus a 68% "New
York post
adjustment" of over $98,000. There's talk of housing subsidy and “other
perks,”
with a reference to the former director of the UN Millennium Campaign
Evelyn
Herfkens, who said she couldn't live or entertain appropriately in New
York on
an Assistant Secretary General's salary, and so illegally took housing
subsidy
from the Dutch government. Exposed for violating UN rules, she left her
post,
only to re-surface as a consult or special envoy, still getting Daily
Sustenance Allowance and other perks.
Meanwhile,
UNDP still declines to state how
much it pays each member of Somalia's parliament, in a purported
response to precisely
this question, referred to it by the UN's envoy to Somalia. Other long
standing questions remain unanswered. One UNDP insider wondered if
Helen Clark, whose husband has said
he will not be moving to New York, will be part of the calculation of
Ms.
Clark's benefits. Watch this site.
Footnotes: In
an "only at the
UN" moment, at a reception at the Libyan mission on the eve of Clark's
confirmation, excited word circulated that Clark had
while prime minister criticized
Israel for its (mis) use of New Zealand passports, several
missions' level of
support for Clark went up....
UNDP, which run democracy and voting
programs, for example in Kenya, put out a press release on Tuesday
saying the UN "General Assembly this morning unanimously approved Helen
Clark of New Zealand as the new Administrator." Apparently UNDP
jumped the gun, since the vote was held in the afternoon...
While Dervis never
explained why he left UNDP -- and
now resurfaces still working for the UN -- Turkish sources maintain it
was
“family reasons,” that his wife did not like him traveling so much. Now
he has
three jobs, one in Turkey, one at Brookings in Washington and, quietly,
with
the UN. Few ever truly leave the UN: as they say of a certain type of
five cent
coin, the UN musical chairs never stop.
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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