Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un1compacts020408.html
UNITED NATIONS, February 4 -- On Monday Ban Ki-moon signed 28 agreements with his senior managers which will, his Under Secretary General for Management Alicia Barcena told reporters, commit these officials to measurable targets for their work in 2008. Ms. Barcena said the agreements were being placed on the UN's intra-net so that UN staff can see them. Since the UN is an international organization, Inner City Press asked Ms. Barcena why they shouldn't be in the internet, available to Member States and to the public at large. Staff first, Ms. Barcena said, adding that later, "nothing precludes them from being public."
Later on Monday, Inner City Press asked one of the officials, Carolyn McAskie, Assistance Secretary General for Peacebuilding Support, if she would object to her agreement being made public. "I see no reason why not," Ms. McAskie said. Click here to view. ASG McAskie's agreement, called a Compact, is representative of most of the other agreements Inner City Press has seen. (The Compact by Antonio Maria Costa in his capacity as head of the UN Office in Vienna was not, a spokesperson told Inner City Press, complete in time for Monday's launch, despite Ms. Barcena's statement that all 29 were ready.) In fact, most parts of the Compacts are identical boilerplate, committing to no more than 5% vacancies, and 100% compliance with the Performance Appraisal System. Among the mandate-specific commitments in Ms. McAskie's Compact is to have ready a strategy for Guinea-Bissau by mid-2008.
A notable Compact is that of UN Security chief David Veness, which mentions reducing vehicle accidents -- perhaps in light of the serious accident at Headquarters in 2007, which sources tell Inner City Press resulted from a lack of training provided by the Security Department -- but says little about the elephant in the room, the deadly bombing of UN premises in Algiers in December 2007. Sources tell Inner City Press that the UN and UN Development Program facilities in Rabat, Morocco and in Sana'a, Yemen are even less secure that Algiers was, and that in Sana'a, no barricades have been built under the Algiers-like theory that it might anger the local government. But you won't find this in Mr. Veness' Compact for 2008.
Rather, under Drugs and Crimes, you'll find reference to a "Turkmen Border Initiative." Under Children and Armed Conflict, there's the very specific output of a legal brief for the trial of Thomas Lubanga in 2008. Peacekeeping's Jean-Marie Guehenno promises vaguely to comply with Security Council mandates, while using his Compact to complain that the UN's rules for procurement are no good, a post-facto justification for having worked around the rules to issue a $250 million no-bid contract to Lockheed Martin for the Darfur Mission.
Humanitarian chief John Holmes commits himself to passing, or seeing passed, two General Assembly of ECOSOC resolutions concerning climate change. The nearly defunct Office of the Special Advisor on Africa mandate says repeatedly, support OSAA as appropriate. Investigator Inga-Britt Ahlenius commits to very little, saving meeting regularly with the Secretary General.
It is said that the Deputy Secretary General personally reviewed these Compacts; while only Ms. Barcena briefed on the process, the DSG should still be heard from on. Ms. Barcena's Compact commits her, among other things, to coordinating the UN's Funds and Program, something that appears to be a problem, not only in light of UNDP's Kosovo-like unilateral declaration of independence from the whistleblower protection scheme of the UN Ethics Office, but most recently in light of UNICEF's failure to implement the most basic of safeguards in offering up the UN's North Lawn to "celebrate" the opening of a Gucci store on Fifth Avenue. This was criticized Monday by Ban's chief of staff Vijay Nambair, who was visible during the signing ceremony, which was broadcast on UN Television. These Compact are presented as a big deal for the UN. Then why not make them public?