Skip to main content

United Nations at 75 plagued by new crises and cash crunch - BBC News / John Gilmartin / Maria Teresa Hevia



Our 75th. What a clarion call
‘If it didn’t exist, we suppose we’d need to invent it’


John Gilmartin


Dears all, herewith a recent article published by BBC which merits to be read....


Warm regards, Maria Teresa Hevia



United Nations at 75 plagued by new crises and cash crunch


By
Imogen Foulkes
bbc.com
6 min
View Original


The United Nations is 75. So are we celebrating?


It was born on 24 October 1945, out of the ashes of World War Two. Just 51 countries were there at the start, and many had only recently stopped fighting each other.


Today most of us have no memory of a time without the UN, so the decision to create a body to prevent conflict and address global challenges might seem obvious.


Back then, in a world dominated by nation states and fading empires, it was a radical move, says Mohamed Mahmoud Mohamedou, Professor of International Relations at Geneva's Graduate Institute.


"Seventy-five years ago the logic of setting up an international organisation like the United Nations was not necessarily obvious," he explains.


"The world was coming out of large-scale conflict, and the dynamics of multilateralism, the very concept of it, was not well known.


"But there was the realisation that this was the moment, if ever, to imagine a different type of world… that you have one place where all nations with one equal vote can come together and debate the questions of the world."


Multilateralism means countries working together to tackle shared challenges or crises, such as climate change or the current pandemic. It also means joint action in areas such as gender equality and universal education.


Those present at the UN's foundation invested huge hope in the new body. US President Harry S. Truman described it as "a victory against war itself… a solid structure upon which we can build a better world".


Britain's ambassador to Washington, Lord Halifax, told the assembled nations their approval of the new UN Charter was "as important [a decision] as any we shall ever vote in our lifetime".

And now?


Fast forward 75 years and the world is facing precisely the type of challenge the UN was created to deal with: a pandemic. The World Health Organization, the UN's health body, should be perfectly placed to get us through Covid-19.


In fact, the WHO's efforts to tackle the pandemic have been marred by bitter criticism from one powerful member, the United States.


Washington claims the WHO failed to communicate the dangers of the disease quickly enough. The WHO disputes this, pointing out that it declared an international public health emergency way back in January.


But the US, unconvinced, has begun the process of leaving the WHO, taking millions of dollars in contributions with it.


That, taken together with the US withdrawal from the UN Human Rights Council, from the Paris Climate Accord, and its abandonment of the UN-backed Iran nuclear agreement, is an existential threat to the UN and multilateralism.

image copyrightGetty Images


How can the UN respond? It will always be dependent on its 193 member states: for funding, as well as for political and moral support. There will always be tension with national governments uneasy at UN scrutiny, in particular by UN human rights teams.


Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, former UN Human Rights Commissioner, believes timidity is the wrong response. The man who famously called Europe's populist leaders "demagogues", and suggested Donald Trump would be a dangerous president, thinks the UN needs to reassert its moral authority.


"The problem is that we have too much of the UN that seeks just to please governments," he says.


"Rather than the UN worry about how governments may react to UN statements, governments ought to worry about what the UN might be saying about them. It's a question of speaking with authority. Seventy-five years of experience in these fields - the UN needs to be reckoned with."
Read more about the UN:


image copyrightunited nations
Is reform needed?


The current UN Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, also acknowledges the inherent weakness of the UN.


This year he tried to get the UN Security Council to pass a resolution calling for a global ceasefire, to enable medical staff to cope unhindered with Covid-19. His efforts were stalled for months by the US, which objected to the WHO being mentioned, and by China, uneasy with the resolution's emphasis on "transparency".


"When we look at multilateral institutions, we have to recognise they have no teeth," said Mr Guterres wearily. "Or, when they do, they don't want to bite."


The structure of the UN contributes to that toothlessness. The five permanent members of the UN Security Council, the ones with a veto to block whatever they like, are the same as they were in 1945, the WW2 victors: the US, Russia (former USSR), France, China and the UK.


That is an astonishing state of affairs; the countries which emerged from colonial rule to gain their independence in the 1960s have never had that kind of power.


What's more, the system is not just outdated, it is regularly ineffective.


Syria is a prime example. For years the UN Security Council has failed to agree on a way to end the conflict, with the US and Russia regularly disagreeing, and Russia sometimes even vetoing vital measures like access for humanitarian aid.


But all attempts to reform the Security Council - Kofi Annan tried, Ban Ki-moon tried - have failed. Reform would have to be approved by the Security Council - an act akin to turkeys voting for Christmas.
What's the UN ever done for me?


It would be easy, given the paralysis over Syria, the disagreement with the WHO (not to mention the complaints of bureaucracy, and even of exploitation) to see the UN as well past its sell-by date.


And yet there are successes. Most of us, if we remember them at all, remember the 1990s as the decade of war in former Yugoslavia, and the Rwandan genocide - both events the UN, if it functioned perfectly, should have been able to prevent.


But Prof Mohamedou points out that the '90s were also the period when the UN pushed the world to set standards on big issues, with UN summits on racism, sustainable development, women, and human rights, culminating in the creation of the International Criminal Court in 1998.


"During those 10 years, you had a series of lead themes being addressed," he says. "That was a moment where I think the UN should be given credit for setting those standards."

image copyrightAFP


Just this week, a low-key UN meeting in Geneva brought together Libya's warring factions and got them to agree a permanent ceasefire, a hugely important move for Libya's long-suffering civilians.


Earlier this month, the UN's World Food Programme was honoured with the Nobel Peace Prize, because of what the Nobel committee called "its efforts to combat hunger and its contribution to bettering conditions for peace in conflict-affected areas".



And in a nod to UN sceptics, the committee said pointedly "the need for international solidarity and multilateral co-operation is more conspicuous than ever".


In fact, there is little we care about these days, from climate change, to migration, to human rights, to gender equality, that the UN is not involved in. Not, its diplomats insist, to order us around, but to encourage us to work together for improvement.


It is easy to be cynical about this huge, unwieldy, rather worthy institution, but Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, despite his concern over timidity, has confidence that the UN "with the brilliant people we have… can experience a revival and capture the imagination of people".


Or, as even sceptical US diplomats tend to admit, "If the UN didn't exist, we would have to invent it".
Related Topics
More on this story


Ditch the ads

Boost your focus and get an ad-free experience with Pocket Premium.
Upgrade
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-54657539


--
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to allmembers+unsubscribe@xunicef.com.

Comments

  1. Dear Maria Teresa,

    Greetings from the seaside village of Viken in Sweden where we are stranded or self isolated due to the famous Covid-19.

    Thank you so much for sharing the article which I read with interests and concern about the future of the UN and its effectiveness. The
    question raised whether we have a better world after 75 years? The article however could have been more understanding or a bit
    fair to the UN by not giving a blanket statement that the UN is “regularly ineffective”. They should have mentioned about the World
    Summit for Children and UNICEF’s efforts in mobilizing countries to help children (the future of the world).

    Overall, I believe we need a strong United Nations for the peace and sustainable development for humankind.

    Again, many thanks for the article and hope you are doing fine and staying healthy.

    Warmest regards.
    Surangkana

    ReplyDelete
  2. Colleagues

    I read with interest the telling article which comes across like a mini report card on the “UN”. I think that people rarely make the distinction between the political power and voice of the UN as against its agenda setting, consensus on development frameworks and the hard work that so many do in the field. That technical agenda has definitely resulted in a better world after 75 years. I think we can prove that.

    But whose failure is it when everything political and technical falls under one banner - that of the “UN”? I think there is some truth in saying that often the UN has held back its political power and voice for fear of losing face with the giving public and governments especially donor governments. Unfortunately that ability to speak up also carries the greatest weight. So in my view, the UN must try to isolate the challenge and improve its positioning while highlighting technical gains. Don’t know how many of you agree with this but it’s how I see it.

    Christine Norton
    cnorton6@me.com
    868.474.7922

    ReplyDelete
    Replies

    1. Victoria Haeri
      5:33 AM (5 hours ago)
      to Suresh, agop, Christine, thai, Maria, allmembers@xunicef.com

      Very good point christine. I remember being introduced to the mayor of a New Jersey town and he said ‘O you work for the UN, why don’t you pay your parking tickets?’ At the time there was controversy about unpaid parking and traffic tickets. I spent ages trying to explain the difference between staff at the national UN Missions with diplomatic immunity and those of us who worked for UNICEF, the Secretariat, etc. on a completely different basis and had no such immunity But Im afraid I don’t think I convinced him —indeed I don’t think he actually wanted to understand!
      Best Vicky

      Delete
  3. 'agop kayayan' via xUNICEFers
    Sat, Oct 24, 4:51 PM (15 hours ago)
    to Christine, thai, Maria, allmembers@xunicef.com

    All that you mentioned is correct. However, there are some issues in which the “UN” can set down its foot and say with a little more courage and self respect,” We are not taking those unqualified people”. This is, up to a certain point, an issue of self respect. I have seen a caase in which one UM agency accepted the pressure and took a completely unqualified person for an L-4 position, because “ his government is strong and pressured hard. We become like corrupt governments if we do not AT LEAST say what we believe technically, We also cannot remain, as an organization, with out mouth shut when we see posts “reserved” for certain nationalities. That to me in condoning corruption. If one SG hands his/her appointment to complain, many powerful governments will learn a lesson.

    Another issue is related to the previous, is a form of corruption which I believe to be the same a putting the hand in the pot and taking some money. That does happen in the form of appointment of unqualified people but also in the form unnecessary travel and fat per diems “serving the needs of poor people. The UN as a whole should sincerely look into these issues which unfortunately real. We are talhing about people costing, doing nothing, tens of thousands of dollars. It is our money feeding greed. It is money that should at be said how it could be better spent.

    The UN is one of the best things humanity created. For that same reason it should be much more courageously defended. The UN does wonderful things that would not be done if it did not exist. The UN creates a space where governments and civil society can express themselves in a peaceful environment.

    THE UN IS TOO GOOD TO BE LEFT TO THE WHIM AND GREED OF SOME HIGH LEVEL POWERFUL POLITICIANS.



    Sent from Mail for Windows 10

    Agop Kayayan

    ReplyDelete
  4. Suresh Kishanrao
    12:10 AM (8 hours ago)
    to agop, Christine, thai, Maria, allmembers@xunicef.com

    Thank you for sharing the article,
    It makes interesting reading.
    The main attention-drawing point or allegation (if you wish to call it so) in the document is stress on documentation even at the cost of leading the child-friendly interventions.
    Recalling my initial few years of the UNICEF's (early 1990's) filed offices were motivated to field test working with Government colleagues new intervention or method on an implementational scale (e.g a district in India)
    and on success promote going to scale. which Governments took up.
    I can recall establishing a fixed day strategy for routine Immunization, the establishment of the cold chain, the use of auto-disable syringes, BDCS strategy, IMNCI.
    If I compare those initiatives with what is happening today in the context of Comprehensive Primary Health Care, I feel like endorsing the lacunae brought out in the report
    I was told about a year ago that this is a priority strategy/activity for the current MPO, but hardly see anything happening on the ground
    If each field office can demonstrate the field implementation of CPHC for achieving UHC, UNICEF can set an example.
    It is just not UNICEF in Inda but The UN as a whole should sincerely look into these issues which unfortunately real.
    The UN should create a space where governments and civil society can express themselves in a peaceful environment.
    We need to think out of the box, experiment, demonstrate feasibility by soiling hands and feet, and mobilizing funds for the betterment of not just the lives of children and women but Universal Health Achievement and SDG 2030

    K Suresh
    Retd. Health Officer
    UNICEF, India Country Office.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Richard Jolly
    4:39 AM (4 hours ago)
    to agop, Christine, thai, Maria, allmembers@xunicef.com

    Dear Agop and others,
    And I saw how UNICEF under Jim Grant almost always resisted such pressures. When the Italians provide an extra $100 million for combatting famine in 26 African countries, they initially gave UNICEF a list of Italians to be taken on. Jim Grant agreed that some additional Italians should be employed - but to a formula related to 50% of the additional funding- the other 50% for developing countries. Even then UNICEF insisted that the list of the Italians could be submitted but that UNICEF would follow normal procedures in making the selection. Pressures can be resisted. Richard

    ReplyDelete
    Replies


    1. From the $100 million, we also were supposed to buy Italian-built Iveco 4x4 trucks, to break the Japanese Monopoly. We bought some Fiat Pandas 4x4 instead, which self-destroyed on the roads of Mogadishu before a single bullet was fired, and in Khartoum and elsewhere. But I always liked to work with our cheerful Italian UNICEF experts.



      Detlef

      Delete
  6. Victoria Haeri
    5:33 AM (3 hours ago)
    to Suresh, agop, Christine, thai, Maria, allmembers@xunicef.com

    Very good point christine. I remember being introduced to the mayor of a New Jersey town and he said ‘O you work for the UN, why don’t you pay your parking tickets?’ At the time there was controversy about unpaid parking and traffic tickets. I spent ages trying to explain the difference between staff at the national UN Missions with diplomatic immunity and those of us who worked for UNICEF, the Secretariat, etc. on a completely different basis and had no such immunity But Im afraid I don’t think I convinced him —indeed I don’t think he actually wanted to understand!
    Best Vicky

    ReplyDelete
  7. MARCO VIANELLO-CHIODO' via xUNICEFers
    5:35 AM (3 hours ago)
    to Richard, agop, Christine, thai, Maria, allmembers@xunicef.com

    in the end, very few Italians were taken on, and all good!
    Marco (Vianello-Chiodo)

    ReplyDelete
  8. Umberto Cancellieri
    6:46 AM (2 hours ago)
    to MARCO, Richard, agop, Christine, thai, Maria, allmembers@xunicef.com

    Indeed. Quality versus quantity!
    This said, this package was made in addition to a series of increments to Italian regular contributions.
    When Jim took over in 1980, the Italian contribution was of USD 400,000 per year if my memory serves me well.
    Jim regularly visited Italy and managed to put in good use the Italian potential.
    This potential included:
    A) the incredible advocacy machine of the Italian Committee under Aldo Farina’s leadership. One of the most successful NatComs during these days;
    B) the use of the Innocenti Centre;
    C) The 1984 session of the Executive Board in Rome for which the Italian contributed USD one million to cover various related costs. Since then the Board always met in New York. The Rome Board concluded a series of Board meetings outside New York (Santiago in Chile and Manila).
    D) Las but not least in 90’s, hundred million dollars was an incredible amount of money. I leave our talented economists to value it in today’s economic value.
    In a nutshell, those were the days and as Richard said, UNICEF successfully managed to convey its principles and viewpoints to its donors.
    Bonne fin de week-end and stay safe.
    Umberto

    ReplyDelete
  9. carlos Santos-Tejada
    7:50 AM (1 hour ago)
    to Umberto, Christine, MARCO, Maria, Richard, agop, allmembers@xunicef.com, thai

    “Who pays for the orchestra chooses the music“
    One of the most important advantages that UNICEF enjoys over other UN Agencies is the existence of NatComs, since they are the source of substancial unrestricted funds, thus reducing the vulnerabilities related to donor funding
    This being said, it does not mean that UNICEF was/is immune to donors’ pressure. As a former Chief of Contributions, l would say that outright “tied contributions” were not accepted but some “creative manouvering” was frequently used to acquiesce to donor demands or complaints (staffing and procurement), ie to buy “generic items for CPH stockpiles, as opposed to buying donor country-manufactured vehicles that would have no practical use in the assisted countries, or a “sudden” rush to hire nationals of a given donor country worldwide, as opposed to project-specific
    UNICEF’s negotiating skills have prevented a more intrusive pretension from many donors
    Carlos
    --


    Carlos Santos Tejada

    ReplyDelete
  10. MARCO VIANELLO-CHIODO' via xUNICEFers
    8:19 AM (31 minutes ago)
    to Detlef, Richard, agop, Christine, thai, Maria, allmembers

    alas, we had to buy Pandas because FIAT had just stopped producing the Campagnola 4x4... I remember a meeting in Abidjan (1985?) where Baboucar N' Jie shouted at me "This is prostitution!", and I replied "yes, it is prostitution. One hundred million dollars. That's my price, what's your price?"... He grumbled but did not reply.
    But the huge Italian contribution, so huge that when I told him Jim was first silent and then said "Holy shit", started the whole immunization programme, and the rest of the world followed. Worth the few strings attached!
    Marco

    ReplyDelete
  11. Let me chime in here in response to Richard, Marco and Umberto's comments on JPG's success in leveraging the Italian government's contribution to UNICEF and the quid pro quo of recruiting Italian staff in UNICEF.

    The Italian NatCom was always among UNICEF's best performing NatComs and continues to be so even now. I too recall fondly Aldo Farina's colorful personality and how he managed to put UNICEF on Italy's map.

    In terms of the Italian government contribution to UNICEF, there certainly was a breakthrough in the 1980s and up to the mid-1990s during the JPG era, and with Marco at UNICEF. From being an insignificant donor to UNICEF RR (less than $1m/year), Italy rose to become the 4th or 5th largest donor to UNICEF at one point. I recall that was partly because of parliamentary pressure by the small Radical Party (influenced by the Italian NatCom's excellent development education program aimed at the Italian public & schools) to increase Italy's ODA, and the fact that Italy did not have a big bilateral aid program then and UNICEF was the most popular multilateral agency in Italy.

    I recall following the large JNSP funding and later UCI funding for Africa, UNICEF had a huge spike in the number of Italians recruited. But during the late 1990s/early 2000s, total Italian funding plateaued and started declining.

    I recall the big drama that took place at the UNICEF Executive Board when the Italians proposed establishing the Innocenti Center in Florence, and Prime Minister Andreotti officially committed (in writing) that Italy would provide full funding for the basic operations of Innocenti "in perpetuity" to convince skeptical Board members that it would not one day turn into a "white elephant" that other donors would need to fund.

    In the early 2000s, when I was DED and Chair of the Advisory Committee for Innocenti, I noticed that the Italian government began to argue that because of the good job Innocenti was doing UNICEF should allocate some RR to fund Innocenti and get other donors to start "burden-sharing". While I was supportive of diversifying the funding sources for Innocenti's program work, I reminded the Italians of their government's commitment to provide FULL funding for the Centre's basic operations "in perpetuity". They did not like that reminder and tried to concoct ingenious ways to get out of that commitment citing things like the switch from Italian Lira to the Euro that had changed the original commitment. Some Nordic donors who did not have the historical institutional memory of Andreotti's commitment also started lobbying for UNICEF to allocate more and more RR to Innocenti's basic operations. The rest, as they say, is history.

    As the Italian government contribution to UNICEF gradually declined in the 2000s, I reminded some of our Italian counterparts (tongue in cheek) that we now had a situation in which UNICEF had a disproportionately large number of Italian staff "in perpetuity", even as Italy wriggled out of its commitment to provide substantial funding for UNICEF/Innocenti "in perpetuity". A comparative analysis in the late 2000s showed that the Italians were actually over-represented in UNICEF compared to Italy's funding. Fortunately, we had many (but not all) very high caliber Italians who went on to senior leadership positions in UNICEF.

    The attached UNICEF Funding compendium from 2019 shows that although Italy is a G-7 country, its government contribution - total as well as RR - is towards the bottom of the list. As in the case of France (another G-7 country that is towards the bottom of the list), thankfully, the Italian NatCom provides 90 % of the fund it raises (i.e. around $39 million) to RR, compared to the Italian government's miserly $5 million!

    So Agop's point about the need to be careful to withstand undue donor pressure (he calls it corruption) in getting their nationals recruited as a quid pro quo for funding remains largely valid.

    Kul

    ReplyDelete
  12. Richard Jolly
    10:36 AM (1 minute ago)
    to Kul, Umberto, MARCO, agop, Christine, thai, Maria, allmembers@xunicef.com, Marta

    Wise words and clear memories from Kul as always.
    My memory of the initial Italian offer is more humorous. After many Board members had expressed suspicions, the UK took the floor reminding everyone of the capacity of Europeans to be suspicious of each other. He cited Talleyrand asking why the Russian delegate had not turned up for the post -Waterloo meeting . He was told that the Russian had died. Yes, said Talleyrand, but what was the real reason!
    Perhaps Marco remembers the details better I do.
    Love to all, Richard

    ReplyDelete
  13. 'Staffan De mistura'
    dear Unicef friends
    i found it fascinating to follow your comments which I share..
    So , allow me to reveal a related “ inside story “...
    I was at that time recruited by Jim and sent to Sudan to prepare and implement the Sudan part of the Italian contribution for vaccinations ..
    and indeed was also using a panda 4/4...!)
    - the first challenge was the insistence by local authorities to obtain for their own use many more pandas .. but I could resist that when they saw the fragility of these charming but not ideal cars for the non existent sudanese roads..
    - but the real challenge came when the italian min of cooperation mr Francesco Forte ( a very bright , with regrettably a reputation of being of a bad caracter , often drunk in the evening and having a shade of corruption ..)showed up in Khartoum to see me .. we had dinner at the italian embassy him , the amb and myself ..
    i will never forget the way and what he told me : “ de Mistura , look at my eyes : you and Unicef Sudan will not ge a single dollar from the promised italian contribution ... until your colleagues in 2 other african countries ( i forgot which ones ..but can check in my notes ..)
    will start implementing the actual vaccinations !! I, am being pested and criticised by mr Pannella in the parliament every week about the implementation of the vaccinations ! ( what he forgot to tell me is that he was desperately in need to provide “ good news’’ about a highly credible and noble project such as the Unicef donation , in order to cover up for allegations regarding improper and murky purchases of useless steel silos sent to Africa under a much larger sum of money meant to fight Hunger ..)
    i was devastated .. i told him “ I am allmost ready .. i have convinced the local authorities to start in one month time ..why should you penalize Sudan for delays elsewhere ??
    he ignored my requests and abruptly left the dinner ..

    I was furious and confused ..
    16 million US dollars for vaccinations vanished in 10 minutes!
    i could not complain pubblicly since this could have jeopardised the whole global donation..
    so ,out of desperation , I devised a stategy based not on “complaint “but rather on “ super thankyou” and got a informal green light to go ahead from Jim:
    let me elaborate :
    1) i approached the Usa , dutch , german ambassadors suggesting them to join a massive vaccination campaign « triggered “ by a generous italian promise of funds ( the promise..)
    2) each one provided some(albeit small ) contributions in order to be part of “a success story “
    3) i then used such contributions to finance the “ launching ceremony “ of the future vaccination campaign
    in Wadi Alfa thousands of chanting children , diplomats , italian and other press was invited , the sudanese government health minister , a famous local singer ( who had been affected by polio) entertained in a large full arena everyone with songs in favour of vaccinations .. to everyone I reccomended to ensure that they would all loudly and pubblicly praise Mr Forte for his utmost generosity ...

    the italian journalists returned to Rome very impressed and in a TV programme / roundtable ,in the presence of mr Forte , they showed the images of the hugely successful “ inauguration” and congratulated warmly mr Forte for his decision to disburse 17 million dollars for such a worhy cause ...
    on the tape of the round table which i later saw he looked surprised and at a little embarassed and simply confirmed with a touch of false modesty that “ he was proud of such a initiative “...

    then sent me a slightly rude but useful message :“ I have decided to disburse immediately 17 million dollars and .. I hope to never meet you again ..”
    the campaingn went on and was a very meaningful one ..

    bottom line : true, in many large donations there were strings attached and sometimes the strings were even unacceptable
    our job , based on the advice of Jim was : we are grateful and flexible but will never give up on our mission to make a difference to children in need !

    warm wishes to all
    Staffan

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Richard Jolly
      10:36 AM (36 minutes ago)
      to Staffan, carlos, Umberto, Christine, MARCO, Maria, agop, allmembers@xunicef.com, thai

      Lovely memories well and honestly told, the inside stories. Richard

      Delete
    2. Kul Gautam
      11:57 AM (4 minutes ago)
      to carlos, Staffan, Umberto, Christine, MARCO, Maria, Richard, agop, allmembers@xunicef.com, thai

      Fascinating, Staffan.

      I too remember some of Francesco Forte's arm-twisting!.

      Delete
    3. Dorrit Alopaeus-Ståhl
      6:47 AM (2 hours ago)
      to Staffan, carlos, Umberto, Christine, MARCO, Maria, Richard, agop, allmembers, thai

      Dear Staffan, thank you for sharing this experience. As we all know, there are many powerful people with more self interest than solid honesty in international development work. Your own steadfast integrity and diplomatic skills are impressive and unforgettable.

      P.S. We were many here in Sweden who thoroughly enjoyed your Summer Talk on the Swedish Radio. Thank you and congratulations. D.S.

      Delete
    4. Franziska von Vietinghoff-Riesch
      Sun, Oct 25, 10:31 PM (10 hours ago)
      to Kul, carlos, Staffan, Umberto, Christine, MARCO, Maria, Richard, agop, allmembers@xunicef.com, thai

      Staffan, thank you. Your fascinating story begged to be told.
      Franziska
      FvVietinghoff
      Malmö Sweden

      Delete
  14. Fritz Lherisson
    3:26 PM (41 minutes ago)
    to R.Jolly, Kul, Marco, agop, Umberto, cnorton6, Maria, msantospais, Videotron, me, france2@yahoo.com, csantostejada52, xUNICEFers

    Dear all,

    Let me come in in this trail of exchanges regarding the Italian contribution of US$ 100 million for the UCI programme. I was in Rome attending the SID annual Conference when Mr Grant asked me to review with Marco the draft agreement of the Italian donation. Yes, I was surprised and shocked to note as one of the terms of the agreement is the obligation by UNICEF to employ Italian doctors and purchase Italian made vehicles and other supplies. I did express my objection to have such a request included in the agreement underlining the UN procurement rules and regulations and DHR recruitment procedures and also what it will entail as problem for the organization. I was told that was the expressed request of the Italian government and if not accepted there will be no donation.

    I brought this to the attention of JPG underlining the potential problem that UNICEF will face if he signs the agreement with this obligation stating also that the vehicles might be more a hindrance to the recipient countries than a help as the national fleet of vehicles may be of different makes. JPG looked at me and said: " Fritz where do you think we can have just like that US 100 million dollars for UCI?" I replied saying Mr Grant "that depends at which door one knocks; there might be many other doors that can be opened". Silence! That was the end of the conversation.

    Dr Steve Joseph and I accompanied JPG to the Ministry of Cooperation where Marco was waiting. Minister Forte and JPG signed the agreement complimenting each other for this noble objective to save millions children lives with immunization. Minister Forte added that the Italian government was indeed proud to participate in this endeavour. JPG replied thanking the Italian Government for this generous contribution that will certainly help reach the UCI objective.

    What I want to affirm is that JPG knows very well that it was a tight contribution and also the problem that will ensue with the recruitment of the Italian doctors and the purchase of the Italian vehicles circumventing the rules and procedures. But this was JPG. He knows of the stumbling- blocks ahead, but he was not afraid and was prepared to face the problems for the noble cause.

    Best regards

    Fritz

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

If you are a member of XUNICEF, you can comment directly on a post. Or, send your comments to us at xunicef.news.views@gmail.com and we will publish them for you.