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Annan Fires Security Chief Over Failures
EFL and followup to Fred's post last night.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan fired one senior U.N. official and demoted another Monday for failing to protect U.N. staff ahead of the Aug. 19 bombing of U.N. headquarters in Baghdad that killed 22 people. Acting on the findings of a scathing report detailing mistakes made by several senior officials, Annan singled out Tun Myat, the U.N. security coordinator, who was asked to resign from the U.N., and did so. The report said Myat and others "appeared to be blinded by the conviction that U.N. personnel and installations would not become a target of attack, despite the clear warnings to the contrary." The secretary-general also chastised his deputy, Louise Frechette, who chaired a steering group on Iraq when the United Nations decided last May that U.N. staff could go back into the country after the U.S.-led war. She submitted her resignation but Annan refused to accept it, U.N. spokesman Fred Eckhard said. The investigation into the United Nations' handling of security was a demand by U.N. staff, many of whom were close to victims of the bombing. The U.N. staff union said Annan's reprimands did not go nearly far enough. Both da Silva and Myat had stepped down temporarily late last year while independent experts assessed responsibility for the security lapses, and Myat is expected to keep his pension. "You have 22 people dead and for the most part, the secretary-general lets people keep their jobs or retire with their pensions," said U.N. union representative Guy Candusso. "Considering the gross negligence and the lapses of security, this does not go wide enough or far enough to hold people accountable."
But they're not allowed to steal take stuff from the UN cafeteria anymore.
Annan's harshest move was reserved for two lower-level U.N. administrators at the U.N.'s Baghdad headquarters in the Canal Hotel. The two - Jordan's Paul Aghadjanian and Pa Momodou Sinyan of Gambia - were charged with misconduct and will face discipline before the U.N. personnel management office. According to a statement released by Eckhard, the two never made any effort to heed a request to buy and install blast-resistant protective film for the hotel windows. Officials have said that flying glass caused the vast majority of the injuries. "These two officers displayed profound lack of responsibility and ineptitude in the manner they sought to implement the request for installation of the film," Monday's statement said. "Their combined response to the issue indicates a lethargy that is bordering on gross negligence."
They were incompetent in more ways than just that.

Posted by: Steve White 2004-03-30
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=29356