Monday, December 31, 2007

At the UN, Pull of U.S. Hyper-Power on Ban Ki-moon Sparks Concern from Developing Countries, from Lockheed to Jobs, One View of Ban's First Year

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/ban1yr3w123107.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 31 -- In the flurry of bleary-eyed votes on UN budgets and year's-end recap stories, a central question raised by some developing countries at the UN about the tenure of Ban Ki-moon is his relation with the hyper-power, the United States. From the allocation of top jobs and no-bid contracts to his selection of issues of concern, the specifics of negotiations and votes on the long night of the budgets, December 21, provide a snapshot review of Ban's first year as Secretary-General. In subsequent in-depth interviews with diplomats, Inner City Press has sought explanations of provisions of the budget resolutions, and of Ban's back-room presence at the UN until 6:30 a.m. on December 22.

As responsibility for peacekeeping in Sudan's Darfur region is passed to UN hands at year's-end, an under-reported note of concern was expressed in the December 21 resolution on the budget for the UN mission there, UNAMID, in which the General Assembly

"Notes with concern the decision of the Secretary-General to utilize a single source contract without competitive bidding and requests the Secretary-General to take immediate action to supply good and services in compliance with the established procedures for procurement, based on international competitive bidding and the widest possible geographical base of procurement, so as to avoid a non-competitive extension of the present contract...Requests the Secretary-General to entrust the Office of Internal Oversight Services to undertake a comprehensive review of the use of the extraordinary measures for this mission..."

The "single source contract without competitive bidding" referred to was for $250 million, to U.S.-based military contractor Lockheed Martin through its subsidiary, Pacific Architects & Engineers. After the deal was quietly announced on October 15, Inner City Press twice asked Mr. Ban to explain the lack of competitive bidding. He responded by promising transparency; his spokesperson's office explained that following the Security Council's July 31 resolution on UNAMID, requiring the UN to take responsibility for Darfur by year's end, there had been no choice but Lockheed. But then whistle-blowing UN staffers showed Inner City Press an earlier letter, from April, from the head of the UN's new Department of Field Support, Jane Holl Lute, pushing Lockheed Martin's PAE for a sole source contract.

The incongruity was never explained. Despite numerous requests, Jane Holl Lute never came to a briefing to answer questions (although she did write a December 26 letter to the editor of the Washington Post arguing that reports of corruption in peacekeeping procurement were overblown). On December 21, the General Assembly itself, even in compromise language, criticized the Lockheed Martin contract and called for an investigation of the lack of competition.

In fact, the creation at Ban's request of the Department of Field Support, and Jane Holl Lute's continued holding of the top job, was also a matter of concern to member states, particularly those in the 130-nation block of the Group of 77. "They told us it was an emergency to create DFS," a G-77 insider told Inner City Press, "and we went along because it was Ban's first reform. But then he never filled the top post. And so we refused to approve his next reform, of the Department of Political Affairs."

The calculus, according to this diplomat, was that by placing American Lynn Pascoe in the UN's top political job, the U.S. lost its claim on the DFS post. But Jane Holl Lute continued to hold it, on an interim / acting basis. When finally the Secretariat asked member states to propose candidates, they were given only ten days, for a job description that, the diplomat quipped, was tailored only for a combination of Microsoft's Bill Gates and General Colin Powell. "Most countries didn't even bother asking their capitals" for candidates, the diplomat continued, adding that a similar hurry-up-and-wait approach was taken to filling the top human resources job, vacated by Jan Beagle following persistent Staff Union complaints. "They are politically tone deaf," the diplomat concluded, pointing as another example to the attempt to eliminate the long-standing UN position of Special Advisor on Africa.

A sample "one year of Ban" roundup opined that

"Ban Ki-moon has spent an unwelcome amount of time fending off critics of a closed management style they say comes from his native South Korea. As the year ends, diplomats and analysts give Ban, a former South Korean foreign minister, good marks for persistence, but say many member states find his decision-making secretive."

While the UN Staff Union recently passed a resolution diplomatically noting the "the senior levels of the organization should lead by example and avoid creating the perception of conflict of interest by, for instance, not seeking employment of their own relatives and friends," which Staff Union sources tell Inner City Press is among others directed at Mr. Ban, the focus on South Korea, covered early by Inner City Press, is superseded in the view of most diplomats interviewed for this article by the Ban - U.S. dynamic. There are counter-trends, such as another way mentioned in the Staff Union resolution, that "the Secretary-General has failed to protect the one staff member of UNDP who was designated by the UN Ethics Office as a bona fide whistleblower." The U.S. mission initially championed this case, although later backing off and acquiescing in the UN Development Program's rebuffing of the UN Ethics Office and creation of its own in-house ethics office and review panel, which missed its own end-of-year deadline.

In full disclosure, Inner City Press has spoken with Ban Ki-moon in several settings throughout the year: hurried one-on-one questions and answers in transit from the basement rooms where the budget negotiated to his elevator to the 38th floor, on-camera answers in front of the Security Council and in the briefing room, at the Secretary-General's residence on Sutton Place (about climate change and carbon offsetting) and, at year's end, at 6:30 a.m. on December 22, as Ban left the General Assembly president's office after the budgets finally passed. In person, Ban is likeable. Clearly he is hard-working. On the other hand, the night of the budget many ambassadors, left to twiddle their thumbs while UN officials negotiated with the U.S. about its objection to a budget item for a conference the U.S. views as anti-Israel, offered a different explanation of Ban's presence in the building. They said that while the U.S. had been unable to get others to agree to a budget cap, Ban would take the floor during the General Assembly's vote at dawn and would commit to such a cap. As one of them put it, "there no way to prove what Ban would have said, since he ended up not speaking. But no one would have believed this of Kofi Annan or Boutros-Ghali," Ban's two immediate predecessors. The U.S. voted against the budget anyway, citing to the conference.

News analysis: Any UN Secretary-General must listen to the U.S.. Boutros-Ghali in his memoir "Unvanquished" notes that he allocated the UN's top management job first to George H.W. Bush's choice, Dick Thornburgh, then to Bill Clinton's choice. But if the Secretary-General becomes perceived as overly close with the U.S., a needed counter-balance is lost. In a similar vein, the UN needs reform, and to its credit the United States is the main country pushing for it. But when the U.S. has a conflict, as in the case of the Lockheed Martin contract, the need for a counter-weight to the U.S. becomes apparent. Stay tuned in 2008.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/ban1yr3w123107.html

UN's Darfur Contract with Lockheed Troubles General Assembly, Of Access to Coded Cables, Air, Water and Copters

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/gadarfur123107.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 31 -- Today responsibility for peacekeeping in Sudan's Darfur region passes to the UN-African Union hybrid mission created by a resolution of the Security Council on July 31, UNAMID. Rather than the projected 26,000 troops, it begins with barely nine thousand. None of the called-for helicopters have been provided by member states. And in a little-noticed section of the UNAMID budget resolution, adopted in an all-night session of the General Assembly on December 21, the UN's $250 million no-bid contract with Lockheed Martin for Darfur infrastructure was criticized, and an investigation called for.

Paragraphs 27 and 30 of the December 21 UNAMID resolution state that the General Assembly

"27. Notes with concern the decision of the Secretary-General to utilize a single source contract without competitive bidding and requests the Secretary-General to take immediate action to supply good and services in compliance with the established procedures for procurement, based on international competitive bidding and the widest possible geographical base of procurement, so as to avoid a non-competitive extension of the present contract...

"30. Requests the Secretary-General to entrust the Office of Internal Oversight Services to undertake a comprehensive review of the use of the extraordinary measures for this mission..."

To recap, the "single source contract without competitive bidding" referred to was for $250 million, to Lockheed's subsidiary Pacific Architects & Engineers. After the deal was announced on October 15, Inner City Press twice asked Ban Ki-moon to explain the lack of competitive bidding. He responded by promising transparency; his spokesperson's office explained that following the Security Council's July 31 resolution on UNAMID, requiring the UN to take responsibility for Darfur by year's end, there had been no choice but Lockheed. But then whistle-blowing UN staffers showed Inner City Press an earlier letter, from April, from the head of the UN's new Department of Field Support, Jane Holl Lute, pushing Lockheed Martin's PAE for a sole source contract.

The incongruity was subsequently raised in the General Assembly's budget (Fifth) committee, by speakers ranging from the African Group to Russia and even Canada, but was never publicly explained. The budget committee and General Assembly cannot have been convinced by explanations provided behind closed doors, either: on December 21, the full Assembly, even in compromise language, criticized the contract and called for an investigation of the lack of competition.

Despite numerous requests, Jane Holl Lute never came to a briefing to answer questions -- although she did write a December 26 letter to the editor of the Washington Post arguing that reports of corruption in peacekeeping procurement were overblown.

Inner City Press has spoken on background with UN officials involved in the Sudan. Requesting anonymity in order not to be fired, these officials have complained for example that the UN has at least 21 helicopters elsewhere in Sudan that it is not moving to Darfur. Others have complained that the UN mission on south Sudan, UNMIS, stands alone in allowing national staff to view so-called coded cables, a practice they say began under then-envoy Jan Pronk. While 140 Chinese engineers are already in Darfur, because flying their water-drilling equipment in on Antonov cargo planes was deemed too expensive, it is en route literally on a slow boat from China. A diplomat involved in the budget negotiations recounts other procurement irregularities, up to sourcing needed water even by air through the UN base in Brindisi, Italy, rather than closer-by. "It's a comedy of errors," this diplomat told Inner City Press at year's end. Only nobody is laughing.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/gadarfur123107.html

Friday, December 28, 2007

After Bhutto's Killing, UN Security Council Statement Watered Down, Omitting the Need for Speed, Peace, Democracy and the Rule of Law

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/bhuttounprst122807.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 28 -- In the hours after Benazir Bhutto was killed, the 15 members of the UN Security Council negotiated and agreed to a Presidential Statement of condemnation. A sixteenth country was consulted: Pakistan. According to Council diplomats involved in the negotiations, among the changes made before the final Presidential Statement was issued was the omission of any temporal reference in the Council's statement of the "need to bring perpetrators, organizers, financiers and sponsors of this reprehensible act of terrorism to justice." The proposal was to say this should be done as soon as possible, but this was omitted, apparently to make it less likely that the matter could be brought back before the Council if the investigation is too slow or otherwise not credible.

Before these Security Council negotiations, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon had issued a statement, including a

"call for the perpetrators to be brought to justice as soon as possible. I convey my heartfelt condolences to Mrs. Bhutto's family, her colleagues and to the people of Pakistan. While strongly urging for calm and restraint to be maintained at this difficult time, I call on all Pakistanis to work together for peace and national unity."

In the Council, it was suggested that the Presidential Statement should track Ban Ki-moon's already-issued statement. But issue was taken with the phrase "as soon as possible" and "peace" -- "international peace and security" being the legal hook for the Council to send peacekeepers or investigators, as in Lebanon, to a country. Following the assassination in Beirut of Rafiq Hariri, the Security Council set up an International Commission to investigate, and is now setting up a tribunal in The Hague. Diplomats involved in the negotiation Thursday of the Council's Presidential Statement, dismissive of the post-negotiation comments on camera of Pakistan's Deputy Permanent Representative Farukh Amil, opined to Inner City Press that the government of Pervez Musharraf wants to forestall any outside inquiry or oversight, even any language that could help bring his administration to the attention of the Security Council again.

When asked about the phrase "as soon as possible," which is in the Secretary-General's statement but did not make it into the Council's Presidential Statement, Pakistan's Deputy Permanent Representative Farukh Amil said "I don't understand the question," and then "not at all, the statement was prepared and done very smoothly." A journalist also asked about reservations Pakistan might have had with the tribute to former Prime Minister Bhutto. The real question, though, concerns the omission of those fighting for democracy and rule of law.

While the final Presidential Statement offers a "tribute to former Prime Minister Bhutto," it had been proposed to also mention those fighting for democracy and the rule of law. But this too was omitted, apparently under the theory that it might embolden and even empower those questioning the rule of Pervez Musharraf. One is left with a watered down statement, and ever-multiplying questions.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/bhuttounprst122807.html

Thursday, December 27, 2007

To Speak or Not with Taliban, Behind Karzai's Expulsion of UN, Its Policy of Don't Ask, Don't Tell and Don't Explain

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/pngkarzai122707.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 27 -- Afghan president Hamid Karzai has ordered the expulsion of Mervyn Patterson, described as the third-highest UN official in the country, and Michael Semple, said to be with the European Union, for allegedly talking with the Taliban. Wednesday the UN denied that Patterson spoke with the Taliban. But Tom Koenigs the highest UN official in Kabul ten weeks ago told Inner City Press that the UN does not ask who is Taliban and who is not. Video here, from Minute 4:28. Press accounts link this with reports of Britain's MI6 also speaking with the Taliban, contrary to UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown's statements two weeks ago. In Afghanistan, the issue seems to be that President Karzai does not want it perceived that foreigners, including the UN, are working around him and speaking to the Taliban.

Mervyn Patterson is included in the UN's official "List of Staff," a document the UN considers confidential -- but of June 30, 2006 (and 2005 and 2003) Patterson is designated as "on special leave without pay." In 2002 he was quoted by wire services as mediating between warlords in northern Afghanistan, for example between Abdel Rashid Dostum and Atta Mohammad of Jamiat-e-Islami party, and between Abdul Saboor and Ahmed Khan. A UN insider who worked with Patterson in 2002 describes him as a consummate negotiator, and also says that Michael Semple worked with the UN. (Semple is not listed at all in the UN's List of Staff.) As of 5 p.m. Wednesday at UN Headquarters in New York, the spokesperson's office said Mr. Patterson had not yet left Afghanistan, but that more would be known by morning. The following day, the office confirmed that Patterson had left. Inner City Press asked this office a series of questions, and the response was that

"We can confirm that a UN official had been asked to leave the country on the grounds that their presence is detrimental to national security. This followed a visit to Helmand province to discuss stabilization efforts with local authorities and community representatives in the province. We believe that there is no basis for such a decision and that this is a result of a misunderstanding with the Afghan authorities. Discussions are currently ongoing with the Afghan authorities to rectify this situation so that we can continue with the vital efforts to secure peace, stability and progress for the people of Helmand province.... Was he talking to the Taliban? No. We have been talking to the local authorities and community representatives, we are not talking to the Taliban."

First, if the UN's Tom Koenigs has said that the UN "keeps contact with everybody without asking him or her if they are Taliban," how would the UN so quickly know? Second and more fundamentally, how can one make "efforts to secure peace" without talking to the insurgency?

One week ago, upon his return to New York from visiting survivors of the bombing of the UN building in Algiers, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said:

"We must do even better in explaining to the public and the media the role of the United Nations, wherever we operate -- why we are there, what we do, what we stand for and what we don't. We must make clear we are not there to represent the interests of any one group of nations over another."

While currently this public explaining is lacking, for example here and in Sri Lanka where the UN has remained silent as the government accuses UNICEF of supporting the Tamil Tigers, back on October 15 the UN's outgoing Special Representative to Afghanistan Tom Koenigs said that the UN "keeps contact with everyone, without asking him or her if they are Taliban or not." He also specified, as is relevant here, that ultimate authority for negotiation must rest with the government of Afghanistan. Video here, from Minute 4:28. (Inner City Press had asked, at the televised stakeout in front of the Security Council chamber, about Iran's chiding of the UK and others reaching out to the Taliban.")

News analysis: If, as Mr. Koenigs said in October, the UN does not ask who is Taliban and who is not, this would be the time to explain what the UN is doing, and why. That the UK would desire secrecy, particularly after Gordon Brown's categorical statement two weeks ago, is understandable. But the UN, as called for by Ban Ki-moon, should do "better in explaining." Watch this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/pngkarzai122707.html

Monday, December 24, 2007

In Uzbekistan, UN Development Program Abandons Local Hire to Reported Torture by Karimov, Now Reelected

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/uzbekundp12207.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 24 -- While in Uzbekistan, Islam Karimov celebrates his claim of receiving 88% of the vote for president, over candidates who each issued endorsements of Karimov, the lack of support by the UN Development Program for one of its employees in Uzbekistan who has been charged with espionage and sentenced to 25 years in prison has been called into question.

On the election, Inner City Press on December 24 asked the Office of the Spokesperson for Secretary General Ban Ki-moon if he would have any comment on the Uzbek election. The answer was that, with a few exceptions, he does not comment on elections, but rather sends a letter when the leader is inaugurated -- in Karimov's case, in less than two months.

Inner City Press has previously asked UNDP about its engagement with the Karimov regime, which it helps to collect taxes and, apparently, to censor the Internet. UNDP's resident representative Fikret Akcura has responded to Inner City Press than human rights are not a part of the UN's Millennium Development Goals.

Apparently not. In late 2004 Uzkek Erkin Musaev, after serving as a Lieutenant Colonel in Karimov's ministry of defense, was hired by UNDP. Insiders opine that UNDP frequently hires ex-government officials to try to curry favor with the former employers. It did not work in this case. Following the anti-Karimov uprising at Andijan in May 2005, Karimov had a wide range of people arrested, including Musaev. In a letter to his sister, Musaev describes being tortured to confess:

"They said if I do not agree with this accusation they will accuse me [of] sister, Mr Musaev told how he has been tortured in an attempt to obtain a confession from him of drugs trafficking and personal involvement in the Islamic movement. They said they can put literature or drugs in my house [...] and accuse me on this [basis]."

In a trial without a lawyer, Musaev was convicted of spying for the U.S. and for the United Nations, and given a sentence of 15 years. Six years were added in a second proceeding, in which Musaev was charged with financial fraud at UNDP. With UNDP providing no assistance, and claiming that Musaev was not a staff member, only a contract employee -- a distinction also proffered regarding the whistleblower about UNDP's close relations with the Kim Jong-il government in North Korea -- Musaev's family reached out to a retired Dutch general Ton Kolsteren who had worked with Musaev in a joint program between former Soviet states and NATO. In March 2007, Gen. Kolsteren reportedly sent a petition to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon as well as to UNDP Administrator Kemal Dervis and Associate Administrator Ad Melkert.

Melkert belatedly responded that Musaev was not a member of UNDP staff, and referred to "the necessity to maintain a working relationship with the Uzbek government on an ongoing basis." Apparently Melkert and UNDP think this requires looking the other way when a local hire is hauled before a kangaroo court, charged with spying for the UN based on a confession obtained by torture, and given a multi-year sentence.

On December 17, Inner City Press attempted to pose questions to Ad Melkert in the UN General Assembly lobby. Many UN officials take and answer questions this way. But Mr. Melkert, who once when asked by Inner City Press about transparency said "you ain't seen nothing yet," now rushes by with no answers. "I have to get to the ice bridge," he said on December 17, a rush belied by his companion stopping to get suggestions about coverage and about art. Well, a week later all that is left of the ice bridge outside the General Assembly is two medicine ball-sized chunks of ice. If answers emerge, they will be reported on this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/uzbekundp12207.html

Saturday, December 22, 2007

UN Budget Approved, 142 versus U.S., Long Night's Saga at Ban Ki-moon's UN

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN

UNITED NATIONS, December 21, 6 p.m. -- As dusk descended on the headquarters of the UN Friday night, budget negotiations continued in the basement, at higher and higher levels. The Permanent Representatives of Egypt and Norway sprawled on couches outside conference room 5, into which U.S. Ambassador Mark D. Wallace rushed at 4:45 p.m.. Ten minute later he left the building, then Controller Warren Sach left the room. "We're happy," he told Inner City Press, cryptic as ever.

In the absence of transparency, amid the overflowing ashtrays of cafe tables outside Conference Room 5 we're left to compare the 65-page draft called "Rev. 2 of 20 December," on which is notated which delegation made which suggestion. Since the "Package of December 18" which Inner City Press previously uploaded, the target vacancy rates have gone up, from 6.3% to 6.5% for professional staff, 3.3% to 3.5% for general service staff. The enhanced cut, in Paragraph 94 of the December 20 Rev 2, was proposed by Japan.

The draft budget resolution ranges from policy to nitty gritty. It includes criticism of the Secretariat's "piecemeal" budget, and calls for the next one to be submitted all at once. On other disputes, it "calls on the Secretary-General to urgently fill the position of Under Secretary General / Special Advisor for Africa," and "welcomes the Secretary General's assurance that the post of Under Secretary General for the Department of Field Support would go to a qualified candidate from a developing country," rather than the post's current occupant, American Jane Holl Lute.

The draft gets down to the level of "noting with concern" three vacant posts in the UN's "web-services Arabic Unit." In the smoky basement, Egypt's Ambassador threw his arm around other diplomats; the UK's John Sawers put in an appearance. Up at the Security Council stakeout, Amb. Sawers told Inner City Press that the PTF should receive continued funding, and that the question of the UN's proposed new headquarters in Baghdad would be dealt with in the Spring. French Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert said more grandly that enough money must be provided to carry out the UN's mandate. Video here. The draft budget, at least today's Rev. 2, calls on the Secretary-General "to improve the scope of press releases." And so it goes at the UN.

UN Budget Deal Said Reached, Numbers Crunched for Committee Vote Before Midnight

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN

UNITED NATIONS, December 21, 9:55 p.m. -- "Let the numbers crunching begin," a UN budget insider told Inner City Press at 9:20 p.m. in the UN's smoky basement. Deals have been struck, he said. Now there are 45 minutes for the Secretariat to calculate what the deals mean, in dollar terms, and another 40 minutes to try to translate the deal into the UN's six official language. The source indicated that a deal was reached on the Procurement Task Force -- an issue on which the U.S. had threatened to block other aspects of the budget -- as well, apparently, on the so-called Durbin II conference. U.S. representative Bruce Rashkow paced the basement a in disheveled bowtie. Chef de cabinet Vijay Nambiar chatted with Syria's ambassador, who had forwarded to Lebanese journalists drafts concerning the funding of the Larsen office under Security Council Resolution 1559: reportedly, $900,000 a year from the UN, and $36,000 a month from the International Peace Academy.

Other journalists, mostly from Japan, nosed around into the status of a Myanmar-related item. Whether the budget is, in fact, $4.2 or $4.6 or, as U.S. Ambassador Mark D. Wallace first said, $5.2 billion, remains to be seen. The Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions will have to check and certify the numbers. They put the figure for the contested new UN building in Baghdad at $181 million, and not $180 million. But even ACABQ, as of 9:45, had not yet seen the numbers. Upstairs the crunching could be heard, aiming toward a 10:45 p.m. vote in the Fifth (budget) Committee. Some say even then, it might not pass directly upstairs to the full General Assembly for vote.

Meanwhile, there were reports of diplomats miffed at their Delegates' Lounge being filled with drinking interns. The Vienna cafe, usually closed at 6, stayed open until 9:30 p.m.. In the basement beers were being drunk, sushi eaten. "Go get dinner," the budget insider said, citing Murphy's Law and projecting broken copies, typos and mistranslations. We note, not for nothing, that ACABQ this year claims only three corrections, two of which weren't the Committee's fault. Hats off, and let the number crunching continue. Watch this site for more interim updates.

UN Budget Deal Hits Durban Conference Hurdle, $4.6 Billion Blocked by $6.7 Million

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN

UNITED NATIONS, December 21, 11:45 p.m. -- The vote on the UN budget that had been predicted for 10:45 p.m. has been postponed. The funding of the Durbin II conference has reared its head again as an issue. A U.S. representative told Inner City Press the "preparatory conference" would cost $6.7 million, and that it is a point of principle. A spokesman for the Japanese mission, on the other hand, said there are no budgetary implications of the conference, but that the fight is about how to mention the conference in the budget's text. The Group of 77, which caucused in the half-light of Conference Room 4 -- yes, as snarked by the U.S., rum bottles were in view, Havana Club -- wants the resolution to "endorse" the Durban conference. This language was confirmed to Inner City Press by Angolan Ambassador Ismael Gaspar Martins, who shook his head, "For this they keep us here." Even an American, emerging from Conference Room 5, said "there has to be a better way." Another said it was the G-77 being political: "there's a faulty PBI, that they would usually criticize, why are they trying to push it through?" A Fifth Committee staffer told Inner City Press, perhaps facetiously, "Durban is easy." We'll see.

An hour after the slated vote, G-77 members migrated to Conference Room 2 to caucus. Chef de Cabinet Vijay Nambiar stood schmoozing with Egypt's Ambassador. A senior GA staffer said there'd been a sighting of Nambiar's deputy Kim Won-soo, and that Mr. Ban was slated to arrive, but "later." Only victory has proud parents. Ban's bodyguards loitered by the Vienna cafe, standing at the ready. The vacuum cleaners began in Conference Room 5. There was no turning back.

Down the hall came the American flotilla: Permanent Representative Zalmay Khalilzad, Ambassadors Alejandro Wolff and Mark Wallace, accompanied by Controller Warren Sach and the Secretary of the Fifth Committee. In the corner of Conference Room 3 they pow-wowed, as other delegates tried to get in. They discussed the U.S. political ramifications of various ways of voting on the budget. Leave it to the experts, Khalilzad said. But as written, we cannot vote for the budget, he told Inner City Press, as he Googled past midnight.

UN Budget Approved, 141 versus U.S., in Committee Vote, Durban II Opposed by 40

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN

UNITED NATIONS, December 22, 1:05 a.m. -- The UN budget passed the relevant committee, 141 to 1, after midnight on Saturday morning. The lone negative vote came from the United States. U.S. Ambassador Mark D. Wallace, speaking after the vote, said he thought his colleagues in the Group of 77 shared the U.S.'s concerns about the budget being piecemeal, and an incomplete picture of the UN's finances. On an earlier vote, about the Durban II conference, the U.S. garnered more support: it only passed 94 to 40, with six abstentions. Working the room was senior aide Kim Won-soo. On the podium was Management chief Alicia Barcena. One wag joked, of Durban, that someone should have asked Ted Turner to pay for the conference, thus taking it off the General Assembly's agenda. Inner City Press suggested this, and George Soros, to U.S. Permanent Representative Zalmay Khalilzad. "Soros might not fund it," Khalilzad replied. It is said to be anti-Israel.

Before the Durban vote, the U.S. asked for a suspension. Pakistan opposed it, and its position prevailed. The vote was taken, after which the Canadian delegate said his country opposed the conference, and the structure of the budget proposal as well.

Before the budget vote, a request for a European Union meeting was made, but overridden. After the budget passed, there was a standing ovation. Wallace said he joined it, though he did not appear to stand. In the hallway, the U.S. delegation milled around. At least another hour until the full General Assembly vote, they said. It passed one in the morning.


At UN, Late Night Attempts to Change U.S. Budget Vote, Some Durban II Abstentions Surprise

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN

UNITED NATIONS, December 22, 2:35 a.m. -- Even after the U.S. cast the lone vote against the UN budget in a 1 a.m. committee meeting, it and the UN held out hope of a face-saving change before the final vote in the General Assembly. U.S. Ambassador Khalilzad said such a change was possible; the U.S. delegation repaired from the committee meeting room. Calls were made to South Africa, seeking assurances that might allow a positive U.S. vote. But the calls went to voice mail.

Beyond the main budget vote which left the U.S. isolated, 141 to 1, there was a vote on the U.N. Joint Staff Pension Fund, 140 to 1 (U.S.) with one abstaining: Canada. An underlying dispute involves attempts to address problems for U.N. retirees in Ecuador impacted by "dollarization" in that country. A closer analysis of the committee vote on Durban II finds generally that the European Union countries joined the U.S. is opposing. Abstaining rather than opposing were Norway, Switzerland and Liechtenstein. Also abstaining were New Zealand and Japan. Entirely absent was Israel, explained by it being the Sabbath.

Back in the committee, it turned into a love-fest, with the Indian delegate praising the outgoing Pakistani head of the Group of 77, and the UK delegate thanking the coordinator of the European Union. The widest-spread praise, however, was reserved for Rajat Saha of the Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions, who will leave the post on December 31. Pakistan feted him, India welcomed him home. The U.S. representative said he expects to here great thing of Mr. Saha's future work. The U.S.'s delegate Ms. McClurg is taking over for Mr. Saha. Whether the ACABQ will henceforth be viewed as independent remains to be seen.

Still on the podium as the clock passed two a.m. were Controller Warren Sach and Alicia Barcena. It ain't over, as they say, until the fat lady sings.

U.S. Opposes UN Budget, Which Passes Assembly 142-1, Mr. Ban into the Dawn

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN

UNITED NATIONS, December 22, 6:45 a.m. -- The UN's budget was adopted, 142 to 1, past 6 a.m. the Saturday before Christmas. After hours spent trying to convince the United States to reverse its vote against the budget, explained as a protest of the funding of a conference called anti-Israel, ultimately the U.S. still voted no. Afterwards Inner City Press asked General Assembly president Srgjan Kerim for his view of the vote. "With a little more flexibility," he said, consensus might have been possible. Moments later, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon emerged from Mr. Kerim's office, in a tan overcoat. "I was supposed to say something," Mr. Ban told Inner City Press, but it got too late. "I will issue a statement tomorrow. Happy holiday," he said.

The vote had hung in the balance between the 2 a.m. vote in committee and the final approval at 6 a.m. in the full General Assembly. The issue was to convince the U.S. task were a slew of UN top officials, from Controller Warren Sach to Mr. Ban's chief aide Kim Won-soo, all huddled in the second floor office of GA president Kerim. Outside U.S. Permanent Representative Zalmay Khalilzad paced. Inner City Press asked him, what about reported calls to South Africa, site of the initial Durban conference in 2001 which Israel denounced as anti-Semitic. "The vote is not final yet," he said. When Inner City Press said, "Maybe you'll vote yes," Khalilzad laughed. Could the strategy have been to get others to vote with the U.S. and oppose the budget? Later he was heard to say, "I can't wake Condi Rice for this." And the vote moved toward the dawn.

Despite U.S. Ambassador Mark D. Wallace's broad-ranging explanation of negative vote -- that the budget was piecemeal and incomplete, and added too much money -- Amb. Khalilzad focused his comments exclusively on the Durban conference. In fact, he was heard in the hall musing about which position would be understood by journalists. It was, one wag said, a late night cause by U.S. editorial boards.

Other countries' delegates were surprisingly understanding. While they had loudly groaned down in Committee when Wallace proposed a suspension before the vote, while waiting for GA action they relaxed. In the Delegate's Lounge, bottles of champagne were opened for outgoing chairman of the Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions, Rajat Saha. After the vote, Japan's representative emphasized that the U.S. had been happy with the reduction of the budget, he said, to $4.17 billion. It was "unfortunate," he said, that the U.S. had voted against the budget based solely on the funding of Durban II. But was that the only reason? What of the critique of the process, and of the size of the budget?

On the Procurement Task Force, Singapore's representative said the resolution requires an audit of, and accountability for, the PTF. The PTF has told reporters that it is not only targeting developing world officials and companies, but also, a journalist of record reports, Pacific Architects & Engineers, the Lockheed Martin unit given a no-bid $250 million contract by the UN for infrastructure in Darfur. We'll see if that's true. Happy holidays.


Friday, December 21, 2007

At UN, Budget May Cut Iraq and Conference Funding, Corruption Issues Raised, a Snapshot

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/ga1budget122107.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 21, 11:30 a.m. -- On the last day to adopt the UN budget, negotiations continued in the smoky basement of the world body's headquarters, with proposals to cut the Procurement Task Force and a new UN building in Iraq opposed by proposals to reduce staffing levels, de-fund a particular conference and call for a vote on a one-time fix for UN pensioners in Ecuador. As of late Friday morning, negotiations continued. A snapshot of the elements in-play is provided in a negotiation document obtained by Inner City Press and placed online here.

The "Provisional Package" document, reflecting proposed cost-cuts as of the night of December 18, shows the Fifth (budget) Committee cutting $180 million from the Secretary-General's Special Political Missions. That is the amount Ban Ki-moon has proposed spending to build a new headquarters in Baghdad, to expand UN presence in Iraq. The Fifth Committee also proposed increasing the "vacancy rate" of UN professional staff to 6.3%, and of general service staff to 3.3%, for a savings of $35 million. All told, compared to a the Secretary-General's proposed budget of $4.5 billion, the proposed cuts of the UN's Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions ($33 million) and of the Fifth Committee ($319 million) would reduce the budget to $4.15 billion.

But are these reductions enough for the United States? Friday's New York Times reports, apparently sourced nearly entirely to the U.S. and Procurement Task Force, that Singapore is winning in its battle to shut the PTF after six months. The Times opines that the conflict around the PTF "represents the continuing suspicion developing countries have about international intervention in their affairs," which connotes, throughout 2007, the controversy around the U.S.'s allegations of wrongdoing in the UN Development Program's operations in North Korea. The Times ascribes the current PTF conflict to the Task Force's case against Singaporean procurement official Andrew Toh.

Ironically, while the Times' coverage appears to side with the U.S. and PTF against Mr. Toh and Singapore, the Times fairly clearly sided with UNDP, including running the name of an until-then anonymous whistleblower. This may show even-handedness: the Times' reporting is pro-U.S. on the PTF, while siding with UNDP over the U.S.'s allegations about North Korea. (That's more even-handed than the PTF, which is apparently uninterested in the recent $250 million no-bid contract to U.S.-based Lockheed Martin.)

But the allegations of lack of controls in UNDP's programs in North Korea were upheld by the UN's Board of Auditors, and continue to be investigated by a UNDP-named panel. Meanwhile, unmentioned by the Times, Mr. Toh has recently prevailed in his case before the UN's Joint Appeals Board, which has reputedly recommended that the UN pay him damages. (Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon can accept or reject the recommendation.)

The Times says funding for the PTF is "not a budget matter so much as a political one." But it interacts with the budget negotiations. The U.S. is calling for a vote, rather than the usual consensus, on a proposal to modify the pensions of UN retirees in Ecuador, given changes in exchange rates. The U.S. has sought to, diplomats say, line-item veto funding of a follow-up anti-racism conference which it calls anti-Israel. Meanwhile, the Fifth Committee has proposed cutting $15 million from the Office of Central Support Services, the unit previously headed by Mr. Toh. A show-down is looming, watch this space.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/ga1budget122107.html

Thursday, December 20, 2007

In Darfur, UN Will Have Barely 9000 Troops at Hand-Over, Drilling Equipment on Slow Boat From China, Helicopter Mystery

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/tccdarfur121907.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 19 -- There will be only nine thousand peacekeepers in Darfur at the beginning of 2008, along with 140 Chinese engineers whose drills to search for water will still be en route, by ship, from China. As the handoff of Darfur peacekeeping to the United Nations hybrid force with the African Union approaches, a memo from the UN's Department of Peacekeeping Operations to the Security Council, obtained by Inner City Press, shows that at year's end the peacekeeping force will consider of four battalions each from Nigeria and Rwanda, one from South Africa and one from Senegal. Some time in the first two months of 2008, battalions from Egypt and Ethiopia are slated to deploy. Click here to view the UN memo, which was addressed to Italian Ambassador Marcello Spatafora, December's president of the Security Council. Gambia will be reducing its force from 200 to 90. Also listed in the memo are police unit from Bangladesh and Nepal, and engineers from Pakistan.

About the listed 140 Chinese engineers, Inner City Press on Wednesday asked China's Deputy Permanent Representative Liu Zhenmin to confirm a source's account that the needed drills to search for water in Darfur will not be sent by air, but rather by boat. Ambassador Liu said that is true, the equipment is headed to Port Sudan and discussions are underway how to get it to Darfur. It is said that the cost of large Antonov cargo planes was deemed too expensive.

Another air transportation controversy concerns the UN's lack of helicopters for Darfur. The UN has loudly complained that no country has offered helicopters. Well-placed sources have told Inner City Press that the UN in fact has 21 helicopters in Sudan, but cannot move them to Darfur, allegedly because this would violate some of Sudan's rules. Inner City Press asked about this at Wednesday's noon briefing, and spokesperson Michele Montas said "it's not just a question of finding helicopters, it's finding helicopters suitable for the Darfur area, in terms of dust and in terms of sandstorms and things of that sort. But I'll direct your questions to the Department of Peacekeeping Operations," DPKO.

In fact, Edmond Mulet the deputy chief of DPKO had taken questions at the Security Council stakeout on December 13. When Inner City Press asked for a comment on questions raised in the Fifth (budget) Committee about the UN's $250 million no-bid contract for Darfur infrastructure with military contractor Lockheed Martin, Mr. Mulet said, "I can't discuss that, you have to asked the Department of Field Support." Video here.

On Wednesday the UN produced a person, who insisted on being called "a senior UN official," to generally address charges of procurement irregularities. This person repeatedly said that he could not defend or explain the UN's contracts with Lockheed Martin's Pacific Architects & Engineers (PAE) unit, but that he would ask his boss, Jane Holl Lute of the Department of Field Support, to come and give a briefing. "We are completely transparent," said the official. Inner City Press asked if DFS would make available at least part of its response to questions raised in the Fifth Committee about the PAE contract. "It's not in our province to give it out," the official said. "They own the information now."

But a check with delegates to the Fifth Committee on Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. found that they still did not have relevant information about the sole source contracts. "That's the main sticking point," one delegate told Inner City Press, before heading back down to the meetings in the UN's basement about the budget. By 11 p.m., the delegate said that the Darfur budget had been agreed to, after three main countries sat and changed nine paragraphs, compromising on how strenuously to criticize the no-bid Lockheed contract. Many delegates were cut out of the process. Only at the UN. Click here for more on the budget process, and watch this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/tccdarfur121907.html

As UN Budget Deadline Looms, GA President Foreshadows Its Passage, US Plays Coy

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/kerimbudget121907.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 19 -- As the deadline previously set for passing the UN budget approached on Wednesday, General Assembly president Srgjan Kerim predicted that it would be finalized by Friday, with a message to the Secretariat for more savings and more transparency in how the money is used. Inner City Press had asked specifically about questions raised in the GA's Fifth (budget) committee about the $250 million no-bid contract given to Lockheed Martin for Darfur infrastructure, and the lack of public answers to these questions.

"There can be answers afterwards," Kerim said. "I would not be prepared to reach out to the public, it could be understood as a sort of pressure." He said that many countries are working "constructively" on the budget, and named Japan as coordinating them. He said he gets calls at night -- "because I allow them to do it, to bother me" -- and attended an early morning meeting at which "the EU was there, the U.S. is there, the UK, Egypt, India, many more."

Why is there so little transparency, Inner City Press asked. "You said yourself, while there is a debate, it needs to be behind closed doors," Kerim said. "You would not go to a board of a company, where people are saying the worst things imaginable to each other... they make the decisions public after." He said he would brief the press about the budget after it is passed, on Friday. "We do not want to postpone it," he said, adding that the GA can use the budget process "to exercise pressure for management reform." But if it is all secret, what kind of reform is it?

Inner City Press caught up with U.S. Ambassador for reform Mark D. Wallace in the hall outside the Security Council late Wednesday afternoon. "Finally attention is being paid" to the budget, he said, praising the experts in the Fifth Committee, "particularly the G-77," for identifying budget offsets. "What's coming next year is the real budget," Amb. Wallace said, adding "we want reasonable growth, not unreasonable growth." Asked for the odds of the budget being passed on Friday, Wallace said, "I don't make predictions."

At 11 p.m. Wednesday, UN Controller Warren Sach joined Under Secretary General Barcena in the basement. They chatted with Fifth Committee staff, who answered a delegate's question about the likelihood of passage of the budget with a shrug, "It's your budget." Information was tightly controlled, but word on the street, as it were, has the U.S. and Japan making a deal with the Group of 77, and using as their "offset" the proposed strengthening of the Department of Political Affairs. Maybe next year, one DPA staffer said. Watch this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/kerimbudget121907.html

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

At the UN, Official Sent to Rebut Scandal Declines Lockheed Martin Contract Questions, Confirms Andrew Toh Job Offer

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/paemasri121907.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 19 -- The UN turned off its briefing room cameras before making available on Wednesday a person who insisted on being called "a senior UN official" to address charges of corruption and procurement irregularities in connection with UN peacekeeping operations. This person then repeatedly said that he could not defend or explain the UN's $250 million no-bid contract with Lockheed Martin's Pacific Architects & Engineers, but that he would ask his boss, Jane Holl Lute of the Department of Field Support, to come and give a briefing. "We are completely transparent," said the official who insisted on anonymity and said he was unable to answer. Inner City Press asked if DFS would make available at least part of its response to questions raised in the UN's Fifth (budget) Committee about the PAE contract. "It's not in our province to give it out," the official said. "They own the information now."

But a check with delegates to the Fifth Committee on Wednesday night found that they still did not have relevant information about the sole source contracts. "That's the main sticking point," one delegate told Inner City Press, before heading back down to the meeting in the UN's basement.

The purpose of the noontime background briefing, it appears, was to minimize recent reports of corruption. $610 million has not been wasted, the official emphasized. Rather, contracts worth $610 million have been impacted by irregularities. It is impossible to say how much money was lost. As to Abdul Karim Masri's reported extortion in connection with a Congo airfields renovation -- PAE has the UN's Congo airfields contract -- the official said that Masri's supervisor, Barbara Klopp, has reported irregularities by her staff to the Office of Internal Oversight Services in 2005 and 2006. "Barbara... is now with another mission," he said (sources say it's in Sudan).

On the situation of Andrew Toh, Inner City Press asked the second senior UN official, reputed to soon be retiring, about reports that Toh has been asked to work for DFS. That's true, the first official said. He had been asked to go work in the field, but "he has health problems, and so we are working up terms of reference for him to work at headquarters." We'll see.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/paemasri121907.html

UN Split on Kosovo As Precedent, Russia Speaks of Shockwaves and China of Disaster; Schook Scandal Update

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at the UN: News Analysis
www.innercitypress.com/unserbia121907.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 19 -- At Wednesday's Kosovo meeting at the UN in New York, after all the weeks of build-up, it was just a routine theater in a room closed to the public. Outside, the proponents of independence for Kosovo spoke first. Fatmir Sejdiu emphasized "Kosovo's sui generis nature" as "not a case of ethnic secession." Inner City Press asked Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin if Kosovo presented a precedent. "Especially you who work in this building," Amb. Churkin said, "you can feel palpably the concern the possibility of the precedent of Kosovo is spreading throughout this building and throughout the UN... If things go in directly of unilateral [declaration of independence] it will send shockwaves through the international system." Video here, from Minute 6:35.

In order to gauge the level of concern about the precedent, Inner City Press asked Serbia's foreign minister Vuk Jeremic which of the 15 countries on the Security Council, beyond Russia, are supporting Serbia's position. Jeremic named China, Indonesia and "the Africans," without specifying if this meant Congo-Brazzaville and Ghana as well as South Africa. Afterward, a diplomat emerging from the Council told Inner City Press this list was wishful thinking on Serbia's part. Inner City Press asked China's Deputy Permanent Representative Liu Zhenmin about China's position. "They should continue to talk," he said, "to find a solution and... avoid disastrous effects." Amb. Liu added that "There are different view in the Council." And if a referendum were held in the General Assembly?

At the UN's noon briefing on Wednesday, Inner City Press asked about reports that UNMIK's Number Two, Steven Schook, has left the mission, and is in New York. Schook has previously acknowledged being under investigation by the UN's Office of Internal Oversight Services, in connection with irregularities in privatizations and, he said, for loving (certain) Kosovar woman too much. As reiterated on Pristina-based Koha Television, singer Nora Istrefi's name has come up. Spokesperson Michele Montas confirmed that Schook is out, his contracts ends on December 31 and will not be renewed. Inner City Press asked if Mr. Schook is in New York, and if so, whether a media availability could be arranged. Ms. Montas said she would look into it. For now we can report that Ms. Istrefi is singing in New York on December 24. Happy holidays...

And see, www.innercitypress.com/unserbia121907.html

UN Budget "Can't Be Christmas Tree," Says US, Deal in Principle Predicted for December 21

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/sachbudget121807.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 18 -- "We can't load up the budget like a Christmas tree and pass everything," a U.S. diplomatic told Inner City Press on Tuesday outside the Security Council chamber. It was a week before Christmas, and already a day into the week when the budget was to be adopted. Inner City Press asked, can the budget be approved on that timetable? "I don't think we can move that quickly," was the answers. "There are a lot of questions that we have."

While for the U.S. these questions include whether the Group of 77 and China will support the Procurement Task Force, for others the questions revolve around the UN's $250 million no-bid contract with U.S.-based Lockheed Martin, and the UN's proposed $185 million expenditure to build a new headquarters in Iraq. At Tuesday's noon briefing, Inner City Press asked if the latter, only introduced in the Fifth (budget) Committee on Monday, was slated to be adopted before the end of the week. That's the plan, the spokesman said.

UN Controller Warren Sach on Tuesday briefed the Security Council's meeting on Iraq, in his International Advisory and Monitoring Board role. Afterwards, Inner City Press asked him about the budget process, whether it can be done by Friday. "It depends what you mean by when a budget is done," Sach answered. "Is it when there is an agreement in principle at the level of Permanent Representative? Is it consultation meetings in the basement of the Fifth Committee?" He rattled off what he called the "elements... the Secretary-General's request, the add-ons, the PBI's (program budget implications) and the revised estimates." He said it would be hard to "aggregate" these by Friday, much less translate them into six languages. Inner City Press didn't ask, why then wait until three days before the vote to even introduce the Iraq funding proposal?

Tuesday in the basement, Procurement staffers milled around outside the Fifth Committee's meeting. Inner City Press has interviewed a number of these sources. Later, Fifth Committee staffers told of the comments of Controller Sach and the U.S. diplomat jokes about the Christmas tree, and noted that budget resolutions are rarely translated into six languages. If you say so... Watch this space.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/sachbudget121807.html

Behind Tuesday's UN Corruption Story, Kid-Gloves on Americans, Lockheed's No-Bid Contract

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/ptfmasri121807.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 18 -- UN corruption was ostensibly the topic of a story in the Washington Post on Tuesday, focused on charges by the UN Procurement Task Force including against efforts by midlevel staffer Abdul Karim "Masri to solicit a kickback from a construction executive on a $5.5 million contract to refurbish an airfield in eastern Congo." The timing of the story is not unrelated, it seems, to the questioning of continued funding for the PTF by Singapore and other developing countries, who have demanded to see the PTF's results. Tuesday morning, the U.S. mission let it be known that they'd like to answer questions about the report.

This desire to speak was particularly welcome given the US Mission's lack of public comment on questions raised, here and in the Fifth (budget) Committee, about the UN's $250 million no-bid contract with U.S.-based military contractor Lockheed Martin, through its Pacific Architects & Engineer (PAE) unit, for peacekeeping infrastructure in Darfur. In fact, PAE has been identified as overcharging the UN, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, for airfield services and repair -- the type of work for which Mr. Masri allegedly sought a bribe.

A well-placed source with whom Inner City Press spoke about Tuesday's article indicates that Masri's supervisor was an American, Barbara Jean Klopp, and that in an earlier account, Masri was quoted as saying, "I need money for my boss." But neither the PTF nor the Washington Post mention Ms. Klopp, much less Lockheed's PAE and its irregularities in the Congo. Notably, Ms. Klopp is now said to be among those handling procurement in Darfur, where Lockheed got its no-bid contract.

Inner City Press on Tuesday asked U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, as transcribed by the U.S. Mission:

Inner City Press: "on The Washington Post article. One of the irregularities alleged is in the Congo and one of their - actually, a company with irregularities in the Congo is this U.S.-based Pacific Architectural Engineer, airfield services which now has the Darfur contract. I guess what I'm wondering is, do you feel in - as these issues are pursued, could there be more transparency in how this company got the Darfur contract? And are you willing to follow these - you know, these leads, whatever the companies - whatever country the companies are based in?"

Ambassador Khalilzad: "Well, I think that the investigation should get to the bottom of the charges that have been made, and appropriate action has to be taken. I don't want to get into any specific companies, but as a general principle, we support very much, as I said, a transparent, open, effective and efficient process. And when there are allegations of misconduct or wrongdoing, they need to be investigated to the full extent of the law."

While Amb. Khalilzad's response to Inner City Press' question was alchemized into a story by Reuters, it appears he dodged the question, and the U.S. Mission misspelled Pacific Architects and Engineers as " Pacific Architectural Engineer." Maybe that's why they've gotten away with it so far... Watch this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/ptfmasri121807.html

As UN's Iraq Resolution Passes Bombs Drop, UK Leaves and Oil's Still Unmetered

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/iraqmnf121807.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 18 -- We are a sovereign state, was the message of Iraq's UN ambassador, Hamid al-Bayati, in the run up to Tuesday's passage of "the last" UN resolution authorizing the multi-national force in Iraq. The resolution was passed with a letter annexed from prime minister Nuri al-Maliki, asking that Iraq's "independence, sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity" be respected. But out in the real world, Turkey has bombed northern Iraq, and has sent troops in, hunting down members of the Kurdish Workers Party, PKK. This real-world problem was not allowed to intrude on Tuesday's Security Council love fest. UK Ambassador John Sawers recited that "on 16 December, last Sunday, security responsibility for Basra province passed from Multinational Force to Iraqi control. Basra was the last of the four southern provinces of Iraq previously under the security control of the UK-led Multinational Division (South-East)." There is, of course, more to this. A poll in Basra, conducted by BBC no less, found that 85% of Basrawiris found the UK's role negative. The UK leaves Basra to a fight of Shia militias, while British Petroleum fights with Total, Chevron and ExxonMobil for contracts in the oil-rich region.

During Tuesday's Council proceeding, UN Controller Warren Sach provided a terse briefing in his role as the UN's representative on the International Advisory and Monitoring Board. He noted that oil is still not metered; afterwards he told Inner City Press that Shell has a contract to look into the problem. He critiqued irregularities in Iraqi procurement procedures, ironic in light of the currently controversy around the UN waiving any competition before awarding a $250 million no-bid contract to Lockheed Martin for Darfur peacekeeping infrastructure. In the hallway outside the Council chamber, Sach told Inner City Press and other media outlet that the oil bartering he'd referred to takes places mostly with Syria, not Iran. And so it goes...

And see, www.innercitypress.com/iraqmnf121807.html

Behind Death Penalty Moratorium Vote at UN, Lunches with Dictators, Cities for Life

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/dpmoratorium121807.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 18 -- Tuesday the General Assembly adopted a resolution calling for a moratorium on the death penalty. Afterwards, in a swank 57th Street law office, Mario Marazziti of the Community of Sant'Egidio, a major proponent of the resolution, briefed a handful of reporters on why some of the countries voted yes. Cote d'Ivoire, he said, had been won over by Sant'Egidio's role in the peace process. Marazziti initially said that France had helped; after Inner City Press asked for clarification, given President Gbagbo's antipathy for France, Marazziti agreed, it had all been Burkina Faso (which also voted for the moratorium).

Over what he billed as a Tuscan spread, of wine and mozzarella the pepper corns on which may his eyes water, Marazziti sketched the history of the death penalty campaign. This round involved schmoozing with dictators and recruiting sub-regions to become Cities for Life. Tuscany, it turns out, was the first to oppose death, back on November 30, 1786. It was never reinstated.

At the UN, General Assembly President Srgjan Kerim was presented with the text on November 2. On November 15, Marazziti said, Egypt tried some amendments, to tie the death penalty to the wider right-to-life, meaning abortion. According to Marazziti, even the Vatican opposed this "instrumental" use of the principle of life. The Philippines -- a "Catholic country," Marazziti pointed out -- opposed Egypt's gambit. And on December 18, the resolution passed, 104 in favor, 54 against, and 29 abstentions.

Despite the recent news from New Jersey, the U.S. voted against the resolution, along for example with Sudan. Antigua Barbuda, incoming to the presidency of the Group of 77 and China, also voted no. By contrast Algeria voted yes, and Morocco abstained. Who'd have thunk it?

And see, www.innercitypress.com/dpmoratorium121807.html

UN Envoy Declines to Criticize Myanmar, Says Corporations Should Check With Global Compact

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/gambari121807.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 18 -- Weeks after his trip about Myanmar to Far East capitals, the UN's Ibrahim Gambari finally briefed someone on Tuesday. He started with a closed-door session with the General Assembly, then took and fought off some questions from the press. A reporter asked about arrests by the Burmese government since Gambari was there. "Do you have the numbers?" Gambari asked. Another reporter opined that Gambari sounded very optimistic. Don't characterize me as optimistic or pessimistic, Gambari replied. Later, off-camera, he told the first reporter, "I don't trust you to not spin what I have to say."

Inner City Press asked Gambari about Western corporations still doing business in Burma, using France's Total Oil as example. Gambari referred to the UN Global Compact, with its human rights standards. But to a follow-up question of whether Global Compact members should do business with the Burmese government, Gambari declined to answer. Video here. He told Inner City Press that moves are afoot to name another UN country representative to replace Charles Petrie, who the regime expelled for mentioning its problems.

Days ago, a source who had run into Gambari on the street and had been told that Gambari was headed to South Africa, allegedly to hear ideas about Myanmar. Inner City Press asked the spokesperson's office, which responded that Gambari was on annual leave (vacation), and that to say where would be improper. Tuesday Inner City Press asked Gambari if he had, in fact, been in South Africa. The answer was yes, and the reason was given: to attend the International Peace Academy's session on the right to protect and prevention of genocide. "I spoke about the genocide in Rwanda," Gambari said, "in which I played a role... while on the Council." Another reporter snarked that yes, Council members had played their role in Rwanda's genocide. Gambari was a Nigerian diplomat, but on Tuesday the diplomacy ran a bit thin. There's always another day...

And see, www.innercitypress.com/gambari121807.html

Post-Bali, UN Blames China for Breakdown of de Boer, Mr. Ban's Game Face Described

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/bali121807.html

UNITED NATIONS, December 18 -- Anyone who says that the climate change meetings in Bali weren't a success, the UN's Bob Orr told the press on Tuesday, "wasn't at the same meetings I was at." But Al Gore was quoted that "the maximum now considered possible here in this conference is still far short of the minimum that will really solve this process." Inner City Press asked if Al Gore, then, was at the same meeting. Ban Ki-moon's spokesperson responded deadpan that Mr. Ban and Gore had been together. There is a photo to prove it.

But what of the UN's Yvo de Boer breaking down in tears? Television stations which used the clip said that it showed how tense the talks were. But Tuesday after his formal briefing, Orr told Inner City Press that the Chinese delegation had accused de Boer of a lack of transparency, for some of the side meetings going on. That had pushed de Boer to the breaking point. He wept and said he'd been unaware of the side meetings. Orr also said that China was very constructive. Of course.

Of the side-story of Ban's subsequently-cancelled plan to fly from the Far East to New York to attend half of a Carnegie Hall concert to raise funds for a cultural center in South Korea, Orr laughed and said he hadn't heard of it while in Bali. Another reporter doubted this, since Ban nevertheless appeared at the concert by video message, apologizing. But maybe things really were that busy in Bali.

The UN Development Program had issued a report calling on China and India to commit to emission caps, a position with which the UN's Dr. Pachauri publicly disagreed. Inner City Press asked Orr about this split, but did not get an answer. Video here. Monday night, UNDP's Ad Melkert brushed off a request for a read-out on his UNDP-funded time in Bali. Perhaps we'll hear more, from Mr. Ban himself. It is said that when he returned to the Bali meetings on Saturday, the hall broke into applause. "They wanted a deal," Orr interpreted. We'll see.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/bali121807.html