The decision by Ban marks a major reversal of course from less than a year ago, when he announced that the U.N. Secretariat does not enjoy the jurisdiction over protection of whistle-blowers who expose wrongdoing at UNDP, the U.N.s development arm, or other agencies in the labyrinthine U.N. system.
At the time, a broad spectrum of U.N. reformers complained that Ban had ceded those powers, as well as the management of anti-corruption probes, to UNDP and its sister agencies, turning a unified anti-corruption system into a jumble of potential conflicts of interest and differing standards.
Since then, UNDP has been hit with a variety of other scandals including a FOX News investigation last month into UNDPs procurement of $2.3 million worth of airport scanners for the customs service of the radical Chavez government of Venezuela, which the U.S. manufacturer of the equipment said it never shipped.
Yet another important scandal surfaced last week, when a UNDP whistle-blower demanded an investigation by Bans Secretariat into UNDP support for a Somali financial company with ties to terrorist organizations on the U.N.s own sanctions list. The whistle-blower, Ahmed Ismael, claims that he was fired after bringing the issue to UNDPs attention. (A UNDP spokesman told news agencies, Clearly UNDP takes all these allegations extremely seriously and we are in fact investigating them thoroughly.)
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