Ocnus.Net
U.N. Not So Clean Anymore
By Bea Edwards and Shelley Walden, Citizen-Times 12/7/08
Jul 17, 2008 - 7:39:04 AM
While a remarkably similar story is currently unfolding, the
allegations above emerged four years ago. Former U.N. employee Dr.
Andrew Thomson witnessed these atrocities in the early part of this
decade and recounted his experiences, together with other staffers, in
his 2004 memoir, "Emergency Sex and Other Desperate Measures." That
book not only exposed sexual abuse by U.N. forces, but also described
senior U.N. officials' inactions in the face of dysfunctional U.N.
security and rampant financial corruption.
Thomson's reward for coming forward with the truth? Initially, he was
fired. Due to media pressure and legal assistance from our group and
others, he was rehired months later and promoted to a position of
greater responsibility. In the wake of Thomson's revelations and the
Oil-for-Food scandal, then-U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan announced
he was working to improve whistleblower protections for all U.N.
workers. In late 2005, Annan issued a whistleblower protection policy
that was a breakthrough for freedom of expression at intergovernmental
organizations. This crucial response had impeccable logic: given the
breadth of the organization, U.N. officials could not possibly monitor
all staff all the time. The organization had to rely on its own
staffers to report on serious misconduct and gross ethical lapses. Fast
forward to a few weeks ago. Eerily similar allegations have emerged
that U.N. peacekeeping troops demanded sexual favors from children in
return for food in parts of the Sudan, Ivory Coast, and Haiti. U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon immediately responded, announcing that a
thorough investigation will take place, adding that he has a "zero
tolerance policy" for these types of actions.
Unfortunately, Ban himself has allowed exactly this type of grotesque
misconduct to fester, as he continually hobbles whistleblower
protection policies and delays establishing an effective internal
justice system that would protect U.N. workers, peacekeeping forces,
and contractors from retaliation when they report internal crimes. It
is precisely these accountability measures - which fight and deter
abuse - which Ban has weakened.
In August 2007, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), a
department rife with allegations of wrongdoing, opted-out of the
jurisdiction of the U.N. Ethics Office, which enforces the
organization's whistleblower protection policy. Rather than challenge
this secession, the Secretary-General issued a rule disarming Kofi
Annan's comprehensive policy, effectively allowing for all U.N. funds
and programs to establish their own codes of ethics. Many have done
exactly that, generating ad hoc ethics offices, improvised
investigative procedures, and whistleblower policies that lack
guidelines or parameters.
Moreover, Ban has proposed that certain categories of U.N. employees -
including peacekeepers - be denied access to the new internal justice
system for U.N. personnel, which is set to become operational in 2009.
This is in direct breach of the recommendations made by a U.N. panel of
external experts, who explicitly recommended that the system apply to
all U.N. personnel, including peacekeepers.
Ban explains his position by arguing that U.N. peacekeeping forces
remain subject to the disciplinary procedures of their home countries.
This position is unrealistic - these forces are deployed and paid by
the United Nations, and they should be accountable, while on missions,
to the United Nations. Countries sending peacekeepers to the United
Nations have no reliable, systematic source of information about their
soldiers' conduct.
The United Nations should effectively monitor the conduct of its
forces. Ban could strengthen whistleblower protections, extend them
uniformly across the U.N. system, strengthen and expand the
jurisdiction of the U.N. Ethics Office, and expediently establish a
reformed internal justice system that both guarantees the rights of
conscientious U.N. workers and holds the renegades accountable. But he
has not done so, and he seems to be set against it.
The world will never know if these crimes against children could have
been averted had the Secretary-General enforced whistleblower
protections for U.N. employees instead of weakening them. Until the
United Nations protects its staff members when they report crimes,
future scandals like these will be repeated.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008