UNITED
NATIONS,
August 11, more
here –
Following up
on Inner City
Press exclusive
publication of
UN Development
Program audits
of its Law and
Order Trust
Fund
Afghanistan,
including
double
payments and
other
irregularities,
whistleblowers
have
exclusively
provided Inner
City Press
with yet more
damning
documents.
See for now here, here,
here
and here,
exclusively
provided to
Inner City
Press by now-former
UNDP staff.
There are more
documents. But
first this consideration
of UNDP's
(non) answer
to date.
On
August 8,
after four
days of asking
by Inner City
Press, UN
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq said
"recent
allegations
concerning
Afghanistan
have
previously
been reported
to the UNDP
Independent
Office of
Audit and
Investigation.
In order to
avoid
jeopardizing
the
investigation
process, the
details of
investigations
are kept
confidential
and very
limited
information is
made available
to offices
outside the
Office of
Audit and
Investigation,
until the
process of
gathering
relevant
evidence and
fact-finding
has been
completed."
But this UNDP
Independent
Office of Audit
and Investigation
COMPLETED an
audit of this
Closing the
Security Gap
on February
12, 2014,
Report Number
1251, here.
That report noted
"incomplete
recording of
expenditure
incurred in
2012. Salaries
were not
charged to the
Project for
the first
five months of
2012; lack of
appropriate
audit evidence
on fuel
charges
amounting to
$60,715 and
rent expenses
of $13,589;
overstatement
of indirect
program
support costs
by $21,737."
First, it is
unacceptable
for this UN to
say it will
not respond to
troubling
documents
because it is
conducting its
own audit, with
no completion
date named and
no commitment
to make it
public. The
new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
is opposing
and seeking to
reverse this
UN descent
into
obfuscation
and stonewalling.
More
specifically,
was Haq
referring to
this completed
(and troubling)
audit, or some
NEW audit of
the same
program? If
the latter,
how much as
paid to Grant
Thorton
International
Ltd for the
first audit?
We'll have
more on this.
Before
publishing any
of the
documents,
Inner City
Press posed
questions to
five UNDP
spokespeople.
But none even
confirmed
receipt --
including
Abdel-Rahman
Ghandour, the
spokesperson
who belatedly
responded to
Inner City
Press'
previous LOTFA
exclusives.
What
changed, other
than Inner
City Press'
subsequent
reporting on
UNDP
Administrator
Helen Clark's
layoff
campaign, and
these new
troubling
questions?
The
questions were
sent on August
5 to the
following,
without
response for
72 hours: lead
spokesperson
Dheepa Pandian
(out of the
office from
August 1 to
18), Mila
Rosenthal and
Helen Clark's
personal
spokesperson
Christina Lo
Nigro.
After Inner
City Press
asked UN
Deputy
Spokesperson
Farhan Haq to
reply about
the UN
Secretariat's
own role, Haq
on August 8
read a
statement from
UNDP -- there
will be no
answer pending
a UNDP audit.
Video
here.
This is pure
stonewalling.
And can Ban
Ki-moon's UN
Secretariat's
Department of
Safety and
Security and
UNAMA Mission
hide behind a
UNDP audit
that may never
be public?
From
the UN's August
8, 2014
transcript,
here:
UN
Deputy
Spokesperson
Haq: I was
asked
questions
earlier this
week about how
the UN
Development
Programme
(UNDP) is
dealing with
allegations in
Afghanistan.
UNDP informed
me that it can
confirm that
recent
allegations
concerning
Afghanistan
have
previously
been reported
to the UNDP
Independent
Office of
Audit and
Investigation.
In order to
avoid
jeopardizing
the
investigation
process, the
details of
investigations
are kept
confidential
and very
limited
information is
made available
to offices
outside the
Office of
Audit and
Investigation,
until the
process of
gathering
relevant
evidence and
fact-finding
has been
completed.
Should the
matter be
substantiated,
the evidence
gathered by
the Office of
Audit and
Investigation
will form the
basis of
remedial
action.
I was also
asked about
allegations
concerning
visas in
Afghanistan.
Regarding UNDP
staff
participating
in the UN
Games in the
United States,
I can clarify
the
following:
only three of
the four staff
members who
were mentioned
in the
allegations
travelled from
Afghanistan to
the United
States to
participate in
the UN
Games.
This was
private
travel.
The staff
members
applied and
obtained their
US tourist
visas
themselves.
They also paid
for all travel
expenses...
Inner
City
Press:
Sure, I wanted
to, after
three days to
say basically,
that the UNDP
is aware of
the charges
but won’t… one
of the
documents
shows
basically a
threat by
Afghanistan to
UN
staff.
It says, you
know, don’t
make these
allegations of
corruption.
And so it
seems like, it
seems kind of
imperative to…
I wanted to
know whether
in response to
the documents
that have been
published,
UNDP provided
any, either
protection to
the staff
involved?
I also wanted
to know, I
know that
Helen Clark
herself
received a
letter from
the Office of
the Special
Investigator…
of the Special
Inspector
General for
Afghanistan
Reconstruction
in May, asking
for a lot of
information.
I wanted to
know, whether,
I guess, UNDP
will only
answer through
you, so I’ll
ask you,
because I
e-mailed them
these
questions.
I’ll ask you,
did Helen
Clark answer
this… detailed
request from a
major donor or
did she give
the same
answer, that
UNDP is
investigating
itself?
When will that
investigation
be
finished?
And will it be
made public?
Deputy
Spokesperson:
Well, first of
all, as I
think I just
pointed out to
you, this is
subject to an
audit.
We’ll need to
wait for that
to proceed and
the details of
the
investigation
will be kept
confidential
while that
investigation
is
proceeding.
As I also
said, should
the matter be
substantiated,
the evidence
gathered by
the Office of
Audit and
Investigation
will form the
basis of
remedial
action.
So that’s
where we stand
on that.
If there are
further
details once
this has
proceeded from
UNDP, either
they will get
in touch with
you, or I
will.
Inner
City
Press:
Did they
answer
CGIAR?
Did they
answer
this?
I’m starring
at this pretty
lengthy
letter,
detailed
letter sent to
Ms. Helen
Clark.
Did she answer
questions from
donor nations?
Deputy
Spokesperson:
As you’re
aware, because
I just said it
several times,
this is all
subject to an
audit and,
therefore,
there won’t be
any further
details to
provide at
this stage
while the
audit is under
way.
Yes?
After Haq
refused
another Inner
City Press
question,
after the UNTV
cameras turned
off, Haq told
Inner City
Press that
UNDP refused
to answer the
August 5
questions,
below, due to
"your people
skills." Inner
City Press
deals
perfectly well
with numerous
diplomats at
the UN and
many others --
but UNDP and
some UN
officials
don't like
hard questions
and think they
can simply
stonewall, in
the UN's Zone
of Impunity.
Seventy two
hours in,
while the UN
Secretariat of
Ban Ki-moon
said it won't
answer about
the role of
its own
Department of
Safety and
Security and
UNAMA mission
while UNDP
answers, August
6 and 7 video
here --
UNDP had
provided no
answer at all.
This despite
UNDP
Administrator
Helen Clark
having been
subject to
formal
governmental
requests about
related UNDP
irregularities
in Afghanistan
in May. Is
this any way
to run for UN
Secretary
General?
Today's fourth
document,
exclusively
published here,
makes even
more clear why
Bann Ki-moon's
Secretariat
must respond.
The document
describes
double
payments then
introduces one
"Colonel
Bashary," who
threatens not
to talk about
corruption, "I
will not
tolerate these
accusations."
Click
here to view.
In Afghanistan
as Inner City
Press exclusively
dug into, UN
Security
official Louis
Maxwell was
killed,
presumptively
by Afghan
Forces --
and the UN has
obtained zero
accountability
for this
killed staff
member. Inner
City Press has
put questions
about Louis
Maxwell to Deputy
Secretary
General Jan
Eliasson, who
to his credit
responded,
and to current
Syria envoy Staffan de
Mistura, here.
Now:
why would the
UN be telling
a
whistle-blower
to "just let
it be," then
refusing to
answer?
Yesterday's third document,
exclusively
published here,
concerns
"'Ghost
Staffing' at
the UN
Protective
Force," about
which the UN
Department of
Safety and
Security said,
"Just let it
be for now." Click here to
view.
On
August 5,
Inner City
Press
exclusively
published this one,
linking it to
the LOTFA
scandal: an
official "was
again advised
that it may be
illegal for
salaried
police
officials to
take cash
payments to
augment their
salaries" but
the adviser
was told it
was "no longer
my priority
under LOTFA
and that I was
no longer to
address these
issues with
DPII or DSS."
This and the
other
documents
indicate that
little was
fixed, that
UNDP goes
after
whistleblowers,
and does not
follow up even
when for
example it is
involved in
visa fraud.
Inner City
Press on
morning of
August 5 asked
no fewer than
four
spokespeople
at UNDP,
including the
personal
spokesperson
for UNDP
Administrator
(and UNSG
candidate)
Helen Clark
for their
response to
the below.
More
than 72 hours
later -- no
answers. Inner
City Press exclusively
published the second
document, here:
about payments
by UNAMA /
UNDSS to fully
salaried
Afghan forces.
Click
here.
Both UNAMA and
UNDSS are run
by Ban
Ki-moon's
Secretariat,
so Ban's
spokespeople
must answer.
UNDP's Helen
Clark herself
has refused
official
inquiry about
these
irregularities.
So on August 6
Inner City
Press asked
UN deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq: