Posted on 12/30/2005 8:57:23 AM PST by cope85
Congress Should Investigate the United Nations Tsunami Relief Effort
This week marks the anniversary of the tsunami disaster which struck large sections of Southeast Asia, South Asia, and East Africa on December 26, 2004. The tsunami claimed some 231,000 lives and displaced 2 million people. The disaster prompted an outpouring of humanitarian help from around the world, with an estimated total of $13.6 billion in aid pledged, including $6.16 billion in government assistance, $2.3 billion from international financial institutions, and $5.1 billion from individuals and companies.[1]
The huge international relief effort is being co-coordinated by the United Nations, and involves an astonishing 39 U.N. agencies, from the United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF) and United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), to the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Labour Organization (ILO).
The Financial Times Inquiry
When the U.N. took over the tsunami relief operation in early 2005, the world body pledged full transparency, in light of its disastrous handling of the Iraq Oil-for-Food Program. The U.N.s under-secretary general for humanitarian affairs, Jan Egeland, boasted in an opinion editorial that only the UN has the universal legitimacy, capacity, and credibility to lead in a truly global humanitarian emergency.[2] Egeland had earlier criticized the U.S. contribution to the tsunami relief effort as stingy.[3]
A recent investigation by the Financial Times, however, has raised serious questions regarding the U.N.s handling of the tsunami relief effort, in particular the way in which it has spent the first $590 million of its $1.1 billion disaster flash appeal. The appeal includes nearly $50 million from the United States.[4] The two-month FT inquiry revealed that as much as a third of the money raised by the UN for its tsunami response was being swallowed up by salaries and administrative overheads.[5] In contrast, Oxfam, a British-based private charity, spent just 10 percent of the tsunami aid money it raised on administrative costs.[6]
Unable to obtain figures from the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the FT approached several U.N. agencies directly to establish exact numbers for tsunami relief expenditure. Many declined or ignored requests for information, while others offered incomplete data. The newspaper found that of the $49 million spent by the World Health Organization as part of the tsunami appeal, 32 percent had been spent on personnel costs, administrative overheads, or associated miscellaneous costs. At the World Food Program (WFP), 18 percent of the $215 million spent by the agency went toward staff salaries, administrative overheads and vehicles and equipment.[7]
The Financial Times concluded that a year after the tsunami, pledges of transparency and accountability for the UNs appeal appear a long way from being realized. This is primarily blamed on dueling UN bureaucracies and accounting methods plus what in many cases appears to be institutional paranoia about disclosure.[8]
Accountability and Transparency is Needed at the U.N.
The FTs findings should raise significant concern over the U.N.s ability to manage a huge, multi-billion dollar humanitarian relief operation. The last such operation that the U.N. oversaw, the Oil-for-Food Program, was an unmitigated failure. The investigations into the scandal by the Security Council-appointed Independent Inquiry Committee (IIC), in addition to several congressional committees and U.S. federal agencies, cast a spotlight on widespread corruption, mismanagement and incompetence within the U.N., and exposed a deeply rooted culture of secrecy at the heart of the United Nations Secretariat. The scandal gravely tarnished the image of the world body as well as its leadership, including Secretary General Kofi Annan.
The Oil-for-Food revelations coincided with a wave of other U.N. scandals, including widespread abuse of refugees by U.N. peacekeepers in the Congo, sexual harassment at the top of the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and the United Nations Electoral Assistance Division (EAD), and significant corruption at the U.N. World Meteorological Organization (WMO), all of which seriously damaged the U.N.s global standing.
With public confidence at an all-time low, it is imperative that both Congress and the Bush Administration seek assurances that U.S. and international donations for tsunami relief are both properly spent and accounted for.
Key Recommendations
Congressional Hearings and Investigations Both the House and Senate should hold hearings on the U.N.s management of the tsunami relief program and call for senior U.N. officials, including Jan Egeland, to testify before Congress. The Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, chaired by Senator Norm Coleman (R-MN), and the newly created House International Relations Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, headed by Congressman Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), should strongly consider extending their investigations into the Oil-for-Food Program to the U.N. tsunami relief operation.
Bush Administration Pressure The White House and State Department should call on the U.N. to give a full accounting of all its expenditures on tsunami relief operations, including its payments to international aid consultants, who are paid as much as $10,000 a month.[9] All U.N. expenditures on relief efforts should be made publicly available and open to scrutiny.
Withhold Funds From the United Nations The growing doubts over the U.N.s handling of the tsunami relief operation reinforce the need for Congress to withhold funds from the U.N.s assessed budget unless a series of reform measures are implemented by the world body. These must include the establishment of an independent oversight body for the U.N., a far greater degree of openness and transparency, as well as independent auditing procedures.
Conclusion
The growing scandal over the U.N.s handling of the tsunami flash appeal should set off alarm bells in Washington. A picture is beginning to emerge of yet another U.N. operation mired in secrecy, hugely lacking in transparency and oversight, and without a doubt open to widespread mismanagement and corruption. It is increasingly clear that the U.N. has learned little from the Oil-for-Food scandal, and is continuing to operate in a fashion that is out of step with the expectations of U.S. taxpayers, who fund the U.N. to the tune of $3 billion a year.
Both Congress and the Bush Administration must demand answers from the U.N. bureaucracy, and expect that all donations are spent appropriately. It is imperative that tsunami relief go directly to the impoverished victims of the disaster, and not be used to subsidize the salaries or administrative overheads of a vast army of U.N. bureaucrats and consultants. A clear signal must be sent from Washington that any misuse of international funds will not be tolerated. If it is to maintain the long-term support of the United States, the United Nations will have to be substantially reformed and must operate as an efficient, honest, and accountable public body.
Nile Gardiner, Ph.D., is the Bernard and Barbara Lomas Fellow at the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom in the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies at the Heritage Foundation. The author is grateful to James Dean, Deputy Director of Government Relations in Foreign and Defense Policy at the Heritage Foundation for his advice and suggestions.
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[1] Figures quoted in Responses to the Boxing Day Tsunamis, Financial Times, December 23, 2005.
[2] Jan Egeland, Sobering Lessons for the United Nations, Financial Times, March 30, 2005.
[3] See Bill Sammon, UN Official Slams US as Stingy Over Aid, The Washington Times, December 28, 2004. In response to Egelands statement, it should be noted that the U.S. Congress approved $656 million towards post-tsunami relief and reconstruction in May 2005. Total U.S. assistance to countries hit by the tsunami amounted to $840 million in 2005. Nearly 600,000 tsunami victims have benefited from U.S. support. Private U.S. donations amounted to more than $1.8 billion. See U.S. Assistance Exceeds $840 Million One Year After Tsunami, U.S. Agency for International Development Fact Sheet, December 21, 2005.
[4] According to the Financial Times, the flash appeal covered the money donated by governments to the UN in the first weeks after the disaster to fund early aid work.
[5] Shawn Donnan, Little Clarity on How Aid Gets Spent, Financial Times, December 23, 2005.
[6] Ibid.
[7] Ibid.
[8] Ibid.
[9] This salary figure is cited by Shawn Donnan, ibid.
Republican better wake up ,they will stay home and not vote
SSDD.
United Nations Grants National Abortion Federation NGO Status
NEW YORK, January 14, 2005 (LifeSiteNews.com) The United Nations Committee on Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) recommended 22 new NGOs for consultative status last week, including the US National Abortion Federation (NAF).
The new status means that NAF will have a greater voice at the UN: organizations that have consultative status can attend meetings of the Council, circulate statements, speak at meetings and propose items for the Councils agenda.
The NAF revealed its low level of morality with its 1994 soap campaign. At a NAF conference that year, a woman stood up to introduce the "campaign," explaining to the assembled pro-abortion women that "when you sleep with your senators and your congressmen, you take a bar of soap... and when it comes time for him to vote, you mail him the soap from that hotel and you remind him of where his vote needs to be."
The NAF was instrumental in blocking the implementation of US President George W. Bushs partial-birth abortion ban. In 2002, Life Dynamics Inc. exposed a partnership between the National Abortion Federation and men who sexually abuse underage girls.
In 2001, the National Abortion Federation (NAF) launched a $2 million ad campaign to promote the abortion drug RU-486 in popular womens magazines.
A representative of the Holy See opposed the NGO status of the NAF, stating that no human right to abortion existed and that abortion contradicted the essence of the human rights to life. The United Nations did not support or promote abortion as a method of family planning, he said, and the Committee should, therefore, question its current policy on abortions to ensure that its activities did not erode the most fundamental human right to life.
Meanwhile, Feminists for Life of America, a national organization trying to secure, through non-violent means, the basic human right to life for all people from conception until natural death, was also granted NGO status.
Germany and Cuba voiced objections to the Feminists for Life inclusion as an NGO, arguing that there should be a level playing field in the Committee regarding applications from organizations that dealt with reproductive rights.
Considering the large number of pro-abortion NGOs and the UNs general strong support for abortion and population control, there is anything but a level playing field at the UN when it comes to life issues.
See related LifeSiteNews.com report:
Pro-Abortion Feminist Movement Morally Depraved
http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/1998/jul/98070901.html
See the Life Dynamics Special Report on Child Predators Online, exposing the partnership between Planned Parenthood, the National Abortion Federation and men who sexually abuse underage girls:
http://www.childpredators.com/ReadReport.cfm
They should stop funding the UN and close down all their facilities in this country.
Did you know that Pres. Bush gave them permission to go down to Missisippis and Lousiana after Hurricane Katrina? They set up offices to investigate whether there were 'human rights' violations caused by our government after the disaster. So now they are embedded outside the UN in New York with the full permission of our federal government and operating for the purpose of undermining our government and our society.
Until Americans wake up and actually do something about this most corrupt organization on the planet, all the investigations by Congress are nothing more than blowing smoke.
UN Turns a Blind Eye to Reports of Million-Dollar Aid Fraud
By Kate McClymont
TSUNAMI reconstruction funds worth $US500 million are being lost to fraud and corruption because of the failure by the United Nations to implement its own anti-fraud measures.
This claim is made by the UN's former deputy director of investigations, Frank Montil, a former ASIO officer who for a decade was the deputy director of the UN's internal watchdog unit, set up to investigate fraud and corruption within the UN and its agencies. In an exclusive interview with the Herald, Mr Montil said "the oil-for-food scandal taught them nothing". The fraud and corruption which had been occurring during the tsunami reconstruction period would come back to haunt the UN, which had wilfully ignored all the warning signs.
As a senior UN investigator, Mr Montil was sent to the devastated areas of Indonesia after the tsunami. His task was to assess the risks of fraud, waste and mismanagement to the public funding that the tsunami public appeal generated and for which the UN was responsible for allocating. "When you have a disaster zone, you have all sorts of drifters and conmen walking in. It is the equivalent to the old goldrushes," Mr Montil said.
His findings made for frightening reading. His inquiries revealed that every project would automatically attract a 10 per cent premium to cater for bribes "to a variety of parties who may have an influence on whether or not a project will go ahead."
In large infrastructure and building procurement, his team learnt that there was almost always collusion between the winning company and public officials. In the instances where there was no government involvement, there was collusion between large contractors who operated an invisible roster.
Mr Montil's report says the company which won the contract through a "fake" lowest bid - inevitably overpriced as it had already been determined it would win - would then offer subcontracting jobs on the project to the unsuccessful bidders.
" These government bodies are duplicating, tripling and even quadrupling their approaches to the various foreign aid and UN agencies for the very same equipment," Mr Montil warned the UN General Assembly in his report.
" As such there is a risk for fraud, in that a government body could secure excess office space, and twice, three times or even four times its equipment requirement - including motor vehicles."
But the report lay on the desk of the former secretary-general, Kofi Annan, for eight months, Mr Montil said.
" My estimations of fraud were that at the bare minimum in Banda Aceh alone there would be at least $US80 or $US90 million disappearing in fraud and corruption. That's only in emergency funds. That doesn't include the half a billion that will be lost to fraud and corruption in reconstruction funds," he said.
When the Herald contacted the UN, a spokesman provided the General Assembly's response to Mr Montil's report. Tabled last December, it read in part: "The Deputy Secretary-General indicated that a number of funds and programs had expressed the view that their tsunami activities had already been extensively audited and that a further consolidated report would be superfluous."
Mr Montil said this response was one of "wilful abdication of the UN's obligations" and followed its failure to act when rumours of the oil-for-food scandal emerged. It was later revealed to the UN's embarrassment that the Australian Wheat Board was paying kickbacks to Saddam Hussein.
For some reason google's search link is not working; when i copy it, and paste it.
So go to google and do this search:
Frank Montil ASIO United Nations
and about ten current; October 6, 2007 articles come up for your perusal.
Thanks for the information and link.
Have you seen this yet?
BTTT
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