Friday, December 14, 2007

At the UN, Darfur No-Bid Contract to Lockheed Martin and Budget Confined to Secret Meetings

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee at the UN
www.innercitypress.com/unsecrets121307.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 13 -- After briefing the Security Council about the prospective UN - African Union hybrid force in Darfur, the deputy chief of the UN's Department of Peacekeeping Operations, Edmond Mulet, appeared to take questions from journalists. He made much of Sudan releasing communications equipment it had impounded for two months. But when asked by Inner City Press to explain DPKO's responses to questions raised in the UN's budget committee about the UN's no-bid $250 million contract with Lockheed Martin's Pacific Architects & Engineers (PAE) to build and maintain camps for peacekeepers in Darfur, he pointedly refused to answer. That is a question for the Department of Field Support, he said, one that I am not prepared to answer. With that he left the microphone. On his way to the elevator, Inner City Press asked when a briefing or availability by DFS could be arranged. You have to ask them, Mulet said. So the split of peacekeeping into DPKO and DFS allows public questions about the UN's largest peacekeeping contract, given out without bidding, to go unanswered for two months. Ah, UN reform...

In any event, the head of DPKO, Jean-Marie Guehenno, wrote a letter as far back as December 2006 pitching Lockheed's PAE for the sole-source Darfur contract, click here to view.

Meanwhile the UN's budget committee, the Fifth, continues its late night meetings in the basement of the UN. Thursday night the signs outside Conference Room 5 mere said, "Closed." While at the U.S. Mission predictions were made that at least some parts of the UN budget will be deferred to the Fifth's "resumed" session beginning March 2008, Committee insiders scoffed, saying that deals always get done before the deadline. Staff Union source worry that the reductions from the Secretariat's budget proposal will come out of the hide of relatively lower level staff. From a journalist's perspective, the story is the near total lack of coverage. But as one well-meaning observer tried to argue, at the UN transparency does not mean to the public, but to the member states. The late night meetings in the UN's basement continue as outside snow and sleet fall, on police cars checking packages more suspicious now than ever. So it goes at the UN.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/unsecrets121307.html