A bit of creative destruction might be just what the United Nations needs.
FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images
Silent partner: The U.N. Global Compact has become little more than a promotional tool for CEOs like Coca-Cola's Neville Isdell.
John
Bolton, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, once famously
mused that the U.N. headquarters building in New York could lose 10
floors and "it wouldn't make a bit of difference." While this could seem like a crazy plan, in some
ways, it might not go far enough. In my time reporting on the United
Nations, I've encountered an alarmingly high number of offices and
positions that could simply be cut without anyone noticing or
caring, and a few whose disappearance might actually improve things. With U.N. headquarters currently undergoing renovation, it's
worth considering a few.
Some U.N. employees are just taking up
space. My publication, Inner City Press, has in recent months conducted
a series of interviews with a U.N. staffer who has literally not done a
single day of work for two years, but is still getting paid. The man
lost his U.N. post to nepotism but lingers on the payroll, engaged in a
Kafkaesque battle with the United Nations' internal justice system.
And
he's not the only one. It's not uncommon for senior U.N. positions to
be created solely as favors to their holders or member states. Former
head of peacekeeping Jean-Marie Guéhenno was, without any formal
announcement, stealthily named under secretary-general for regional
cooperation. Found recently strolling First Avenue in a mink-collared
coat, Guéhenno acknowledged that the United Nations has yet to send him
a single case or piece of work -- despite pressing issues regarding the
African Union, Association of Southeast Asian Nations (which has been
conferring on Burma and North Korea's missile launch), and NATO, whose
upcoming military exercises in Georgia are described as triggering
Russian military moves in South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Despite these
issues, there is apparently no "regional cooperation" work for Guéhenno.
Valuable
space could also be saved by eliminating the offices devoted to the
United Nations' production of fake news about itself. The
secretary-general has an Office of the Spokesperson, which issues
statements generated by his advisors on the 38th floor. Fair
enough -- every large organization needs a spokesperson. But the United
Nations, for some reason, has seen fit to supplement the spokesperson's
office with another U.N. entity -- the U.N. News Center -- a division
of its Department of Public Information that takes the press statements
and produces its own one-sided elaborations of them, not unlike the
pseudo news produced by North Korea's in-house news wire. For example,
U.N. News's coverage of the United Nations' role in the botched
December 2008 attack on the Lord's Resistance Army rebels in northern
Democratic Republic of the Congo omitted all of the concerns regarding
peacekeepers' negligence raised by Human Rights Watch and Doctors
Without Borders. Likewise, this year U.N. News has mentioned the
shelling death of an NGO worker in Sri Lanka without naming the
governmental origin of the shells or reporting on the United Nations'
failure to gain -- or even publicly seek -- the release of U.N. staff
from detention by the Sri Lankan government.
I have repeatedly
asked U.N. officials why the United Nations produces potentially
misleading coverage of itself. No answer to date has been convincing.
Worse, some senior U.N. officials have developed the expectation that
all press coverage should resemble the sycophantic question-and-answer
charade conducted by U.N. News. Once when I interviewed and quoted then
Office of Legal Affairs chief Nicolas Michel about why he accepted rent
subsidies from the Swiss government while working for the United
Nations, he later protested that it wasn't how he wished to be covered.
He did not dispute the veracity of the quote; he only protested that
news coverage -- even coverage of a violation of the U.N. Charter --
should be more positive. At a minimum, the U.N. "information" staff
producing propaganda should be redeployed to provide information that
independent media actually request from the United Nations.
The
organization could learn from Obama spokesman Robert Gibbs's briefings,
which dispense with the press release statements that his U.N.
counterparts start with, and go straight to question-and-answer
sessions. If a factual question cannot be answered at the briefing, the
response is e-mailed later that day to the reporters who were there. At
the United Nations, many questions simply go unanswered.
In the
category of U.N. departments that don't merely waste space, but
actually make the world a worse place, consider the U.N. Global Compact
housed in the annex on the other side of First Avenue. Set up by then
Secretary-General Kofi Annan as the United Nations' interface with
private business, it has become a platform for agribusiness giant
Monsanto to talk at a "VIP" luncheon about how it is solving the food
crisis and for Microsoft's "ambassador to Africa" -- who just happens
to be the brother of the United Nations' caretaker special adviser on
Africa -- to meet with African heads of state.