Dutch Government Also Paid
Military Officials at UN, Like Herfkens and N. Korea, Litigation Needed
Byline: Matthew
Russell Lee of Inner City Press in Amsterdam: Analysis
AMSTERDAM,
June 1 -- While in New
York the United Nations has been trying to bury the controversy
of Eveline
Herfkens, the Coordinator of its Millennium Campaign who
simultaneously took
$280,000 from the Dutch government, here in the Netherlands l'affaire
Herfkens continues to gather
steam and to expand. Raised in the Dutch press, contrary to UN denials
on May
30, is that Dutch military officials ostensibly working for the UN may
be
having their salaries "topped off" to equate what they would make in
NATO or in Holland. Meanwhile Ms. Herfkens herself has refused to
return any of
the money, saying that would be an admission of guilt. She has said, in
essence, "sue me." If someone does, it is not known if the UN's
immunity, or in this case impunity, could be a prevailing defense.
On May 30 at the UN's noon briefing in New York, Inner
City Press asked
Ban Ki-moon's Deputy Spokesperson Marie Okabe
"This
is in light of this issue of either housing subsidies or wage
supplements. There is an article in
NRC/Handelsblad in the
Netherlands saying that, if these payments are prohibited, the
Netherlands is
going to have a hard time detaching senior military officials to work
for the
UN or, I guess, in peacekeeping missions... Do force commanders or
senior
military figures from Governments that work for the UN on peacekeeping
missions, are they entirely paid by the UN, or are they allowed,
despite or
around the Charter, to receive wage supplements from their Governments?"
Deputy
Spokesperson Okabe: No, they are not.
Inner
City Press: They only are paid by the
United Nations?
Deputy
Spokesperson: Of course.
But
following this exchange,
the Dutch newspaper BN DeStem reported that the country's Ministry of Defense
"Also Paid UN-ers," specifically colonels working to the UN. Click
here
for English translation.
Dutch Prince and furtive figure, return of
subsidies not shown
As with the still-unanswered question of which other
countries' UN
official may have "pulled
Herfkens," which other countries secretly pay extra
to their
military personnel supposedly answering only to the UN? Now that even
the
narrow Dutch issues have moved beyond the UN Development Program, which
has
specialized in blocking, delaying and controlling investigations into
its
activities, will the wider UN, or anyone else, conduct a credible
investigation?
Footnote:
well-placed sources say
that UNDP long-prepared whitewash of its retaliation against the
exposure of
irregularities in its North Korea programs is to be unfurled Monday.
Not
surprisingly, the whistleblower is not protected. But even the Kemal
Dervis-selected
panelists admitted systemic breakdown of safeguards within UNDP. The UN
Ethics
Office, which backed down or was called off this case once already, now
has
another chance, on this, the Koumoin /
Cote d'Ivoire case, and the Somalia /
KPMG cases, along others. Watch this site.
Footnote: back on
May 22,
Inner City Press asked UNDP these two questions, which have yet to be
answered:
Q: What
ever happened to the promised
investigation by OAPR of UNDP's award of no-bid contracts to a
firm called
PRO-FIT? At the time, UNDP promised its own investigation.
did it ever
happen? will UNDP make it public? So
far not answered.
Undp claimed a couple months ago that internal
investigations and a
Kimberly Process investigation had cleared undp from any wrongdoing in
Zimbabwe, concerning undp's support of
diamond mining operations. but
undp refuses to make public the investigations. what is the basis for
undp not
sharing copies of these investigation reports: Will UNDP release
the
reports? So far not answered.
Q: Beyond
UNDP, what about the question of UN requiring letter from a media's
country's
mission for accreditation?
Answered
thusly: " I have
been advised that for regular accreditation missions do not get
involved.
However, they do get involved when a visiting senior official travels
with a
press corps. In those instances, the mission would sent the UN Media
Accreditation
and Liaison Unit a list of journalists who need to get a one or two day
pass."
We
less sure of this
last answer, as several journalists have been asked to get letters from
their
country's mission to the UN. Developing.
* * *
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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Other,
earlier Inner City Press are listed here, and some are available
in the ProQuest service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
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