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Il
rapporto dell'ispezione ONU sull'UNDCP di Arlacchi
fonte: http://www.un.org/Depts/oios/reports/a56_83.htm
Fifty-sixth
session
Agenda
items 123, 124, 134 and 143 of the preliminary list*
Crime prevention and criminal justice
International drug control
Review of the efficiency of the administrative
and financial
functioning of the United Nations
Report of the Secretary-General on the
activities
of the Office of Internal Oversight Services
Report on the inspection of programme management and
administrative practices in the Office for Drug Control and Crime
Prevention
Note by the Secretary-General
1. Pursuant
to General Assembly resolutions 48/218 B of 29 July 1994 and 54/244
of 23 December 1999, the Secretary-General has the honour to transmit,
for the attention of the General Assembly, the attached report,
conveyed to him by the Under-Secretary-General for Internal Oversight
Services, on the inspection of programme management and administrative
practices in the Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention.
2. The
Secretary-General takes note of its findings and concurs with its
recommendations and notes that measures are being taken to correct
the issues addressed in the review.
Report of the Office of Internal Oversight Services on the inspection
of programme management and administrative practices in the Office
for Drug Control and Crime Prevention
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Summary
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In February 2001, the Office of Internal Oversight
Services (OIOS) carried out a review of programme management
and administrative practices in the Office of Drug Control
and Crime Prevention (ODCCP) in Vienna. The exercise included
following up on recommendations of earlier in-depth evaluations
of the drug control and crime prevention programmes as well
as the 1997 review of programme management in the Crime Prevention
and Criminal Justice Division.
OIOS recognized that the Executive Director brought
to the helm of ODCCP a keen interest in the subject; his energetic
efforts heightened the global visibility of the Office, raised
its public profile and made it more action-oriented. However,
from the outset of the inspection, a major concern that came
to the fore was the highly centralized and arbitrary manner
in which the Office was run by the Executive Director. The
management style concentrated authority and decision-making
in the Executive Director and his front office without sufficient
checks and balances.
The role of ODCCP as a centre of expertise cannot be
fulfilled without a free exchange of views, discussions and
the involvement of staff in decision-making. However, at the
time of the inspection, corporate mechanisms of collective
advice and guidance and of programme and policy coordination
were not functioning. Also lacking was a consistent system
for programme oversight in the form of monitoring implementation
and assessing results. Important programmatic and administrative
decisions were taken with little or no consultation. Inordinate
delays in approving projects, programmes and specific actions
were common. The absence of clearly defined delegation of
authority from the Executive Director to programme managers
clouded accountability and paralysed decision-making during
his absence from Vienna.
OIOS believes that the major strengths of ODCCP are
clear mandates, its high priority on the intergovernmental
policy agenda and its broad range of expertise in the mandated
areas. Its main assets are a committed, resourceful and talented
staff, a strong field presence and the combination of normative,
analytical and technical cooperation functions within one
organization. However, at the time of the inspection, staff
morale in the Office was low. The staff believed that there
was no transparency in management decisions, especially concerning
personnel matters. While within some units a structured dialogue
on work matters was maintained, overall staff-management communication
was not in place.
Of particular concern was the view expressed to OIOS
by some Member States, including both donors and recipients
of services, that the poor management of the Office had affected
the fulfilment of its mandates and the proper implementation
of some projects.
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At the end of the inspection, OIOS made it clear to
the Executive Director that the management situation at ODCCP
could not be allowed to continue. OIOS urged the Executive
Director and his senior managers to institute drastic and
immediate change.
OIOS took note of a series of measures that had been
taken since January to improve the situation by setting out
procedures, spelling out areas of responsibility and delegating
authority to appropriate levels. OIOS will closely monitor
how the envisaged changes evolve and whether they will indeed
take hold.
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I. Introduction
1. The
United Nations Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention (ODCCP)
is an umbrella entity that includes the United Nations International
Drug Control Programme (UNDCP) and the United Nations Centre for
International Crime Prevention (CICP). ODCCP was conceived in 1997
as action 8 of the Secretary-General’s programme for reform (see
A/51/950, paras. 143-145), which also reconstituted the former Division
for Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice as CICP. It was envisaged
that synergies between the work of UNDCP and CICP would be enhanced,
through, among other things, joint programmes on matters of common
concern. A common managerial structure was put in place under the
Executive Director, and the functions and organization of ODCCP
were defined a year later (see ST/SGB/1998/17).
2. Around
the time of the establishment of ODCCP, OIOS carried out in-depth
evaluations of the United Nations drug control and crime prevention
and criminal justice programmes (see E/AC.51/1998/2 and E/AC.51/1998/3),
in addition to reviewing programme management in the Division for
Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice (see A/52/777, annex). The
related reports contained 47 recommendations aimed, inter alia,
at strengthening strategic management; making collection, analysis
and dissemination of information more effective; enhancing analytical
work in support of policy development and implementation; establishing
an effective system of assessing results and providing feedback;
fostering synergies between the crime and drug programmes; and making
the technical cooperation activities more focused and effective.
3. In
January 2001, OIOS decided to conduct a review of programme management
and administrative practices in ODCCP that would be the first following
the creation of a common management structure. The current inspection
followed up on earlier recommendations and took into account observations
and recommendations made by the Board of Auditors in their reports
to the General Assembly on the financial statements of the Fund
of the United Nations International Drug Control Programme for the
bienniums 1996-19971 and 1998-1999.2 OIOS
also gave due regard to information provided by ODCCP in the narrative
of the proposed programme budget for 2000-2001 on actions taken
to implement recommendations of OIOS and the Advisory Committee
on Administrative and Budgetary Questions.3 Relevant
resolutions and decisions of the intergovernmental bodies concerned
were also taken into account.
4. The
OIOS team visited Vienna from 5 to 16 February 2001. Prior to the
visit, OIOS had sent to 124 UNDCP managers and staff a 39-point
questionnaire on a wide range of programmatic, managerial and administrative
issues. Sixty-three written responses (51 per cent of the total)
were received. In Vienna, the OIOS team met with the Executive Director
and his senior staff and conducted interviews with most of the Professional
staff and management of ODCCP, as well as with representatives of
Member States. While in Vienna and upon its return to New York,
the team also examined extensive documentation.
5. The
comments of management were sought on the draft report and are reflected,
as appropriate, in the present final version. OIOS greatly appreciates
the cooperation extended to it by the staff at various levels during
this review.
II.
Programme management
6. ODCCP
is an organization that relies almost entirely on voluntary funding
for its operations. It is therefore extremely important that it
operate within an environment that facilitates efficiency and effectiveness
in order to provide reasonable assurance that its resources are
managed in the best possible way. To determine whether that is the
case, OIOS looked at the programme cycle in the two entities of
ODCCP, from planning and organization to the delivery of services,
the evaluation of results and the formulation of lessons learned.
The focus was on how resources were utilized in addressing the programme
objectives.
A. Planning
7. OIOS
was not provided with copies of written guidelines on preparing
annual work plans, nor was there evidence of an established mechanism
for the coordination and approval of the work plans of the ODCCP
entities. The large majority of plans remained in limbo without
any executive indication as to whether they had been approved or
not. For example, at the time of the inspection, the work plan of
CICP for 2000 had not been commented on or approved by the Executive
Director. Even when such plans were perceived as having been accepted,
they were sometimes subject to sudden changes and reversals, and
the rationale for such actions was rarely, if ever, explained. OIOS
found that consistency of the planning process was often disrupted
by ad hoc and impulsive executive decisions. New and substantial
commitments were made without any prior in-house review or coordination
with donors.
8. In
some instances, the legislative priorities were not translated into
a consistent and robust programmatic follow-up. For example, in
response to the Political Declaration adopted by the General Assembly
at its twentieth special session, in 1998 (resolution S-20/2, annex),
which envisaged the elimination of or a significant reduction in
the supply and demand for illicit drugs by 2008, UNDCP developed
a global programme to monitor the cultivation of illicit crops and
a global assessment programme on drug abuse. UNDCP considers that
regarding the programme on illicit crops, it has developed in a
short period of time the capacity to produce annual data on the
extent of cultivation. However, the expert panel established to
validate and ensure transparency of the monitoring methodologies
proposed by the programme recommended, in June 2000, that a significant
effort be undertaken to improve the operational character of the
work. At the end of 2000, this programme team was downsized and
its chief technical adviser was reassigned to other functions. The
global assessment programme on drug abuse was just launched last
year. Initial delays in this area of work — identified as a priority
area in the Political Declaration — were attributed by UNDCP to
a staffing issue.
9. OIOS
noted that CICP had identified three priority areas for its work,
namely, transnational organized crime, trafficking in human beings
and corruption. However, the organizational arrangements to address
those priorities did not ensure the optimal use of limited resources.
The Centre’s programme of work as a whole appeared to be fragmented
and to not be coordinated into a comprehensive programme structure.
The fragmentation of the programme had been translated into an organizational
structure and working arrangements that did not provide an adequate
framework for effective implementation. The problem was compounded
by ineffective oversight and the absence of quality control. With
resources spread thinly and sometimes haphazardly, the ability of
the Centre to deliver has suffered.
10. OIOS noted that
staff members who were recruited for their specific expertise were
assigned line management duties for which they were ill-equipped
and that absorbed a lot of their time. This situation gave rise
to overlap with and duplication of the work of the staff of the
Operations Branch. In fact, more than half the projects launched
under the three priority areas in the context of the programme of
work for the biennium 2000-2001 remain either totally unfunded or
are only partially funded. Despite the limitation of resources,
management spread its work even more thinly by outposting new appointees
to the regional offices of ODCCP. Overall, OIOS was not able to
identify synergies that were realized between UNDCP and CICP activities,
either in Vienna or in the field.
11. A number of donor
State representatives interviewed by OIOS stated that the Executive
Director had presented a number of new initiatives as equally urgent
and important. Relevant projects were launched without an adequate
assessment of funding availability. Comprehensive and systematic
reporting allowing donors to keep track of progress made in implementing
previous initiatives was not adequately developed. OIOS is of the
view that new demands made on donors have to be reconciled with
the need to sustain previous initiatives through a realistic assessment
of the availability of funds. (This issue is addressed in greater
detail in the triennial review by OIOS of recommendations made by
the Committee for Programme and Coordination to UNDCP (E/AC.51/2001/5,
para. 34)).
12. Given that voluntary
contributions form the resource base of ODCCP, it is important that
any large-scale initiatives requiring long-term commitments of resources
be made in concert with donors. In this regard, OIOS noted that
a Commission on Narcotic Drugs resolution adopted in March 2001
made provisions to further enhance UNDCP consultation with all stakeholders.
Experience shows that any unilateral executive initiatives of significant
magnitude might result in an erosion of donors’ trust and support
and could negatively affect the credibility of ODCCP. Three particular
instances were brought to the attention of OIOS when such executive
commitments were made without adequate risk analysis and resource
calculation and without sufficient advance discussion with major
donors. Those instances are described below.
Afghanistan
13. On 30 October 1997,
the Executive Director announced a new $250 million alternative
development programme in Afghanistan.4 He said that it
was a part of his global programme to eliminate the cultivation
of opium poppies and coca within 10 years and that the Afghan development
project would cost $25 million a year for 10 years, stressing his
confidence in being able to convince world governments to fund the
programme. The donors’ enthusiasm, however, was overestimated. An
appraisal by major donors recommended the preparation of a more
coherent policy framework for drug control in Afghanistan, the setting
of a realistic time frame for planning and implementation and the
establishment of mechanisms to ensure that lessons learned on the
ground were fed back into policy and strategy planning.
14. Notwithstanding
those recommendations, ODCCP commenced the project, albeit at a
scaled-down cost of $2 million a year, drawn mostly from general-purpose
funds. By the beginning of 2000, funds for the project had all but
dried up, and there were no potential donors in sight. Of the four
modules of the project, one was terminated, another was halved and
a third was seriously downsized.
15. On 17 September
2000, the media reported the statement of the Executive Director
that UNDCP had decided to wrap up its anti-poppy cultivation programme
in Afghanistan at the end of the year because of a lack of funds.
It is worth noting that UNDCP staff in Afghanistan only learned
about that decision from the media and did not receive written instructions
or communications prior to that announcement.
Pakistan: Dir district development project
16. During his official
visit to Pakistan in July 1999, the Executive Director promised
to extend the UNDCP-funded crop-substitution project in the Dir
district for another 10 years to consolidate the gains made in alternative
development. Another promise was made to establish at least 20 treatment
and rehabilitation centres at a cost of about $2 million.
17. However, UNDCP
did not have sufficient in-house expertise or funding to carry out
the 10-year consolidation project without the involvement of other
development agencies of the United Nations system. While $500,000
was disbursed from July to December 1999 to support the Executive
Director’s promise, the future of the programme remains uncertain
and will depend largely on evolving political factors. A project
document for the establishment of a network of treatment centres
has been drafted and is currently in the final approval stage. Project
launch is envisaged in mid-2001, and funding has already been secured
for UNDCP financial input of $547,000. According to UNDCP, the Government
of Pakistan will contribute 17 million rupees ($277,000). Thus the
overall scale of the treatment centre project shrank to about $800,000
from the promised $2 million.
Tajikistan: drug control agency
18. A bilateral protocol
signed in April 1999 in Vienna established a national drug control
agency in Tajikistan. Through a bilateral agreement of November
1999, UNDCP committed to provide $11,481,000 within the next three
years, and government inputs were to amount to $800,000. The UNDCP
commitment has since been revised downward to $6,100,000. Also,
according to UNDCP, only $4.7 million has been secured to date for
the project from donors and from the general-purpose fund, leaving
an additional $1.4 million to be raised over the coming year. In
this connection, OIOS noted from UNDCP records that management had
attempted, at the inception of the project, to divert contributions
earmarked for other purposes to finance the agency. Only after protests
from the donors were the funds withdrawn.
19. Given that general-purpose
funds used as “seed money” have to be reimbursed at some point,
funding for the drug control agency remains less than sound. This
is of concern as UNDCP has created a well-trained, mobile and armed
entity (whose staff is salaried at a level considerably higher than
the national one) within a rather difficult environment. The implications
of this force being left without sufficient wherewithal after the
termination of UNDCP support could be serious. OIOS is of the view
that a proper strategy, including organizational arrangements and
follow-ups, should be designed without delay for the role of UNDCP
vis-à-vis this agency.
20. OIOS also shared
the concern repeatedly expressed by the Board of Auditors over the
reliability of UNDCP financial management information systems. This
is further exacerbated by the fact that a number of projects have
been approved by UNDCP without adequate analysis of the feasibility
of obtaining contributions. In this regard, OIOS was gratified to
note that a revised donor funding policy and a requirement to obtain
at least 50 per cent of funding before launching projects had been
introduced recently. OIOS will keep implementation of these new
provisions under review.
B. Organization
21. According to the
Secretary-General’s bulletin on the organization of the United Nations
Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention (ST/SGB/1998/17), the
Executive Director is responsible for all the activities of the
United Nations Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention, as
well as its administration; the functions of the Office of the Executive
Director are combined with those of the Office of the Director-General
of the United Nations Office at Vienna; the Executive Director of
ODCCP is also the Executive Director of the United Nations International
Drug Control Programme; and the Centre for International Crime Prevention
is headed by a Director, who is accountable to the Executive Director.
22. OIOS found that
the organizational structure of UNDCP did not dovetail with actual
reporting lines and responsibility centres. Staff were often not
familiar with the overall organizational picture. The main divisions
and three programmes were headed by officers-in-charge rather than
full-fledged managers. Furthermore, it was not uncommon for instructions
to be given to working-level staff, circumventing heads of sections.
A prominent feature of the de facto organization was that the front
office absorbed most of the decision-making responsibilities that
should normally have resided with the programme managers.
23. OIOS found that
the Centre for International Crime Prevention was also operating
under a set of informal working arrangements and post distribution
pattern that differed from the organizational structure and post
distribution approved for the biennium 2000-2001. The improvised
and informal structure clustered a number of posts under three global
programmes, which became de facto responsibility centres. The respective
responsibility and authority of these new responsibility centres
remained unclear. Also unclear were their linkages with the functions
of other responsibility centres, particularly the Operations Branch
and the Analysis Branch. In the view of OIOS, such clustering is
more appropriate for a task force than for an established organization
that needs clearly defined responsibilities and lines of authority.
OIOS believes that a proper organizational structure is essential
for implementing programmes and priorities.
24. A related issue
is that of the ODCCP staffing table. OIOS tried to reconcile the
responsibilities of the various units, as per the Secretary-General’s
bulletin, with the staffing table on the one hand and the working
arrangements on the other. The attempt was unsuccessful. For example,
money-laundering and terrorism-prevention activities were under
the direct supervision of the Executive Director rather than under
CICP. Because of the confusion arising from the situation described
above, OIOS attempted to determine the responsibility centre for
staffing table control. That attempt was also unsuccessful. Thus,
the rationale for redistributing posts from one area to another
remained unclear to OIOS.
C. Programme
delivery
25. The overall review
of substantive programmatic issues is provided in the report of
OIOS on the triennial review of the implementation of the recommendations
made by the Committee for Programme and Coordination at its thirty-eighth
session on the in-depth evaluation of UNDCP (E/AC.51/2001/4). This
report focuses on management factors that have hampered the efficiency
of programme implementation.
26. OIOS came across
many instances where missions, which were an essential part of programme
implementation activities, were cancelled or postponed at the last
minute by executive decision. As a result, major partners had to
put on hold their participation in joint activities. A number of
intergovernmental meetings and missions had been postponed indefinitely,
sometimes just a few days before the event. These included events
for which the presence of ministers, senior government officials
or members of parliament had been requested. UNDCP also discontinued
attending international meetings on drug abuse issues central to
its mandate, although those meetings are still attended by organizations
such as the International Labour Organization, the World Health
Organization and regional organizations. Ongoing work at those meetings
continues without the perspective of UNDCP being heard, and its
interest in those issues and its leadership role are being questioned.
27. At least two United
Nations organizations implementing pilot programmes jointly with
UNDCP found that, after the successful conclusion of the programmes,
UNDCP failed to explore the possibility of expanding the programmes
in other countries of the region. A highly publicized collaboration
agreement with an international agency required further consultations
at the top management level, but it was not followed up. The agency
had to proceed on its own with partial and preliminary implementation
of the agreement. A unit responsible for implementing a new demand-reduction
initiative promoted by the Executive Director did not receive any
executive guidance over a two-year period, despite multiple requests.
Based on the approved implementation plan, contributions had been
made by donors but were not allocated to the unit for a full year.
28. OIOS found that
one of the main difficulties with the operational activities of
ODCCP was the insufficient capacity to generate reliably funded
projects combined with inadequate planning of technical cooperation.
Ad hoc commitments for mega-projects often starved projects in other
regions of funds. General-purpose funds used to be available for
initiating projects, but they have been diminishing. As there was
no sufficiently transparent and fair system for using them, donors
were hesitant to continue making such contributions. OIOS noted
with satisfaction that ODCCP had started, in March 2001, a process
of structured consultations with Member States on the future use
of general-purpose funds.
29. Another concern
with the operational performance of ODCCP was the absence of a consistent
and well-structured procedure for project review and approval. While
project processing was functioning relatively well in some areas,
in others it had degenerated into an excessively drawn-out process,
sometimes taking months to get the Executive Director’s approval
for a project. Every such delay negatively affected the credibility
of ODCCP, both with counterparts in recipient countries and with
donors.
30. The existing practice
also suffered from a lack of objective quality control and priority
verification. A viable and effective mechanism for these should
be reintroduced. In addition, an impartial and professional appraisal
unit should be set up to provide staff support to an appropriate
committee. The appraisal unit’s terms of reference would stipulate
that it does not interfere with substantive issues. Its function
would be to ensure that every submission supported work programme
priorities and adhered to established policies, guidelines and procedural
requirements. The committee would then make recommendations on projects
for consideration by the Executive Director. Such a system would
remove the problem of pet projects with questionable rationale and
uncertain funding, support the consistent quality of project document
preparation and ensure the corporate ownership of the entire scope
of operational activities. OIOS noted that ODCCP management had
taken steps in March 2001 to establish a Programme and Project Committee.
OIOS will assess the functioning of the Committee to ensure that
it has met the concerns expressed above.
31. The major concern
of OIOS with CICP was its capability to deliver its programme in
view of its low implementation capacity. As at 31 December 2000,
total expenditure, including unliquidated obligations under trust
fund projects, did not exceed 58 per cent of the budgeted amounts.
Eighty per cent of the total was under the regular budget of CICP
and the average was 67 per cent when all accounts were considered,
including programme support.
32. The current focus
of CICP is on the three global programmes of transnational organized
crime, trafficking in human beings and corruption. OIOS found that
a relatively large number of projects in those areas remained either
unfunded or partially funded under the technical cooperation programme
for the biennium 2000-2001. During the same period, projects formulated
under the non-priority areas of crime prevention were fully funded.
This would suggest that the Centre’s capability to generate fundable
projects under the latter areas of work are more advanced than under
the former. This situation was attributable mainly to the internal
organizational arrangements whereby newly appointed staff members
with little or no exposure to technical cooperation in international
organizations were given primary responsibility for formulating
projects as well as negotiating with donors and recipients. ODCCP
needs to strengthen the capability of the Centre in the priority
areas by drawing on the accumulated knowledge and experience already
available.
33. The analytical
component of ODCCP programme delivery consists mostly of outputs
that are technical publications, such as those by the International
Narcotics Control Board on narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances,
as well as manuals to set standards and harmonize analytical methods
(such as the revised Terminology and Information on Drugs5)
and training guides (such as the Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Training
Guide). The UNDCP database on estimates and long-term trend analysis
was used in the preparation of a statistical and analytical publication
entitled Global Illicit Drug
Trends.6
34. One of the UNDCP
flagship publications — the World
Drug Report — appeared for the first time in 1997 with the mission
of presenting comprehensive and balanced information about the world
drug problem. In 1998, work started on the second edition of the
report,7 scheduled for publication in 1999. After three
years in the making and several executive reorientations, the 2000
edition of the report was finally released in early 2001. The substantive
flaws in the thrust and coverage of that report are reviewed in
the report of OIOS on the triennial review of the implementation
of the recommendations made by the Committee for Programme and Coordination
on the in-depth evaluation of UNDCP (E/AC.51/2001/4, paras. 26-28).
The report addresses the issues of the organizational set-up.
35. OIOS found that
in the preparation of the 2000 edition of the report, standard United
Nations system-wide mechanisms to mobilize collective expertise
and policy advice were not utilized. For example, no steering committee
was convened to oversee the process and the quality of the product,
no task forces were assigned to work on specific issues, and there
was no transparent in-house peer review. Decisions on the structure,
substance and content of the report were taken directly by the Executive
Director. The result was, in the view of stakeholders and academic
experts consulted by OIOS, a step back, quality-wise, compared with
the 1997 edition.
36. OIOS also reviewed
the documentation submitted by CICP to the Tenth United Nations
Congress on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders,
held in Vienna in April 2000. Of the 19 documents submitted, 10
reported mainly on workshops and preparatory meetings conducted
at the regional level, and consisted basically of background material.
The working papers prepared by the secretariat were descriptive
in nature, highlighting the issues involved in the matter under
discussion. In the view of OIOS, they served the purpose of sensitizing
public opinion about the problems involved in crime prevention.
However, they did not reach the qualitative level of providing policy
options or preparing concrete proposals for which guidance or endorsement
by Member States was needed. For instance, the Vienna Declaration
on Crime and Justice: Meeting the Challenges of the Twenty-first
Century, (General Assembly resolution 55/59, annex) was general
in summing up those challenges and concluded that CICP would need
additional resources to enable it to support Member States in their
efforts to ratify the Convention and its protocols and to implement
their provisions. However, the order of magnitude of the resource
requirements or the strategy and priorities envisaged were not spelled
out.
D. Waste
of resources
37. OIOS came across
a number of cases in which poor decision-making resulted in a direct
waste of resources. The following are the most notable examples:
(a)
The distribution of a publication was ordered to be stopped
without any reason or explanation given;
(b)
An elaborate longer-term business plan prepared by a section
with considerable investment of staff time was never seriously discussed,
considered, amended or approved;
(c)
In various entities, work plans had to be redrafted numerous
times without any executive guidance or feedback;
(d)
A consultant was appointed and brought across the world to
a field office, only to be told that his contract had been cancelled
and that the project would be done with UNDCP resources. However,
owing to the shortage of in-house expertise, project implementation
was delayed by many months, negatively affecting overall programme
performance in the geographical areas concerned;
(e)
An abrupt curtailment of travel resulted in a number of joint
projects of ODCCP with other important international partners being
aborted because ODCCP representatives could not participate;
(f)
An international seminar was repeatedly put on hold on the
eve of the participant’s travel, which raised its costs;
(g)
Project proposals were developed by various operational entities
(with months of staff time invested), cleared by substantive offices,
found to be of good quality and assessed as having good funding
prospects, but then were rejected without any explanation.
E. The “Boat Project”
38. OIOS had received
several allegations of misconduct and mismanagement concerning a
project at UNDCP known informally as the “Boat Project”. The initial
idea for the project was to have UNDCP sponsor a solo voyage around
the world by a sailor on a 90-year old wooden boat in order to raise
awareness of UNDCP activities. Because of the seriousness of the
allegations, OIOS conducted a thorough investigation into the matter.
A separate report on the investigation has been submitted to the
Secretary-General.
F. Monitoring and evaluation
39. Examination and
verification of results achieved is essential for effective programme
management. However, project monitoring and evaluation in ODCCP
were both uneven — being done more consistently in some geographic
regions than in others. The evaluation function had been handicapped
after the Planning and Evaluation Section and relevant peer review
committees were dissolved. At the time of the inspection, the evaluation
function was performed by a single staff member. Overall, the evaluation
function had deteriorated significantly.
40. Thematic evaluations
were few and had not led to much-needed substantive discussions
or changes in practice. There was no mechanism to formulate lessons
learned and to feed them back into programme formulation and delivery.
OIOS noted, however, that since the end of 2000, ODCCP had undertaken
to formulate a new concept of thematic evaluation, with emphasis
on the learning aspect and with the assistance of outside experts.
41. OIOS found that
the monitoring and evaluation activity at ODCCP was very much ad
hoc. Its intensity and quality varied from country to country and
from region to region, depending on priority and the availability
of funds. For the projects evaluated, the reports until recently
were not widely available. This has improved with the recent appointment
of a senior evaluation officer, who facilitated the posting of summaries
of evaluation reports on the Intranet. Another task that is required
is the creation and maintenance of institutional memory, including
an inventory of lessons learned in different subject areas and countries
under a variety of circumstances and situations. ODCCP management
has acknowledged the importance of this issue and has committed
to addressing it through practical measures.
42. OIOS was not presented
with satisfactory evidence that CICP had established a systematic
monitoring and evaluation function as a management tool to effectively
oversee the programme of work, identify weaknesses in implementation
and assess results against established objectives. The ad hoc approach
that is in place neither provided management with an informed basis
for allocating resources nor ensured feedback on their utilization.
III.
The outcome of consolidation
43. The rationale behind
the consolidation of the two ODCCP entities was to strengthen the
crime programme by elevating its status and establishing a common
managerial structure for the Centre and the United Nations International
Drug Control Programme under the aegis of ODCCP. As stated previously,
the Centre is headed by a Director who is accountable to the Executive
Director. There was compelling evidence, however, that the intent
behind the reform measures and their very purpose had been misread.
Instead of simply being provided with policy guidance and oversight,
the Centre was being micromanaged and had been subsumed by rather
than having its activities coordinated with UNDCP. As a result,
the Centre was losing its distinct identity and its management was
being marginalized. In the view of OIOS, the Centre today has much
less operational independence to manage its resources and to organize
its work than the Division for Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice
had in 1997.
44. At the time of
the inspection, there was no documented delegation of authority
from the Executive Director to the Director of CICP. The latter
had little or no authority over the Programme’s human and financial
resources. Documented evidence showed that the Office of the Executive
Director retained the authority to approve the recruitment of all
staff, Professional and General Service, as well. The same applied
to the use of the financial appropriations of the Centre. Matters
relating to day-to-day management were also subject to the Executive
Director’s approval. For instance, the internal reassignment of
staff to address the priorities agreed upon needed the clearance
of the Executive Director. Similarly, operational projects formulated
and agreed upon with donors and beneficiaries had to be cleared
before proceeding. The holding of seminars and workshops within
the context of the work programme also needed clearance. The Director
of CICP was not permitted to communicate with governments or outside
entities without executive approval. In the opinion of OIOS, the
function of the Director of the Centre had been reduced to simply
processing work rather than managing a programme.
45. The work of the
Centre suffered from the absence of a work plan for CICP as a whole,
as well as from delays (ranging from four to eight months) in seeking
executive approval for projects that were finalized and for which
Governments had pledged funding. The unit and individual work plans
were uneven in defining objectives, activities and outputs. In the
absence of an overall CICP plan, there was no mechanism to reflect
the strategy and linkages within ODCCP. Such a piecemeal approach
to programming led to the fragmentation of efforts and resources.
46. OIOS noted with
concern the low morale of the Centre’s staff, which was in sharp
contrast with the situation in 1997. The spirit and motivation that
prevailed at that time had faded. Overall, OIOS concluded that the
consolidation, in its current shape and form, had had a negative
impact on the Centre.
IV.
Funding concerns
47. The Executive Director
reported in January that the financial situation of UNDCP had continued
its upward trend since 1998, when income, which had been declining
since 1992, increased by 35 per cent over that of 1997. During the
biennium 1998-1999, income had further increased by 37 per cent,
to $142 million (E/CN.7/2001/7, para. 6). This trend, however, appears
to have tempered currently, as the revised total income for 2000-2001
is estimated at $144.2 million, only 1.6 per cent higher than in
the previous biennium, and reflects a reduction of $11.8 million
compared to the initial estimate of $156 million (see E/CN.7/2001/9,
para. 6 and table 1). The bulk of the reduction against initial
estimates falls under general-purpose income, which, at the level
of $30.3 million, is $9.9 million lower than the initial estimates
and $3.3 million less than the actual level in 1998-1999. The low
level of general-purpose income, which currently stands at 21 per
cent of total income (about 3 percentage points lower than in the
previous biennium), remains a pressing concern. In that regard,
OIOS noted the observation of the Advisory Committee on Administrative
and Budgetary Questions that the report of the Executive Director
did not seem to suggest effective proposals that could address the
continued low level of general-purpose income, and that one means
of addressing the imbalance would be the introduction of greater
precision in the formulation of the core programme (E/CN.7/2001/10
and Corr., para. 5).
48. The overall balance
of the Fund of UNDCP currently stands at around $58 million and
is expected to go down to $53.6 million by the end of the year.
As the expenditure of general-purpose funds was much higher than
the new contributions, the general-purpose fund balance declined
from $28.5 million in 1998 to $20.9 million in 1999 and was expected
to fall to $3.8 million by 2003 (see E/CN.7/2001/8, table 3). This
is a matter of concern, as these unearmarked funds are used to support
core staff as well as to have flexibility in conducting research
and initiating the activities needed to support operational projects.
This flexibility is threatened, as at the end of 1999, 89 per cent
of the general-purpose fund balance was committed to ongoing activities,
with the balance of 11 per cent also being fully programmed in 2000-2001
(see E/CN.7/2001/9, para. 31). ODCCP needs to examine the implications
of this limitation on its programme of work and to take expeditious
and effective remedial measures. ODCCP informed OIOS that as regards
the position and management of the general-purpose funds, proposed
guidelines aimed at providing a sound basis for the use of general-purpose
funds and improving the accountability and transparency in their
use were submitted in March to the Commission on Narcotic Drugs
at its forty-fourth session, which welcomed the guidelines. OIOS
will keep this matter under review.
49. UNDCP stated that
it had increased the average size of its projects and reduced their
number from 260 in 2000 to 150 in 2001. All those projects were
grouped into 25 national, regional and global programmes with clearly
identified subprogrammes along four thematic areas (ibid., para.
16). UNDCP indicated that it had finalized a revised funding policy
intended to avoid the risk of initiating projects that might be
discontinued because of lack of funding. The new policy foresees
the circulation of project outlines to donors before a decision
is made on the full development of projects. Since past attempts
to establish such procedures within the programme and between the
programme and donors were not sustained, management needs to ensure
the faithful implementation of this policy.
V. Technical
cooperation issues
50. In the area of
technical cooperation, the focus of OIOS was on the effectiveness
and efficiency of modalities for project execution, especially in
the light of recent measures to promote self-execution as a cost-saving
device.
Relations with the United Nations Development
Programme
51. For government-
or self-executed projects in the field, UNDCP relies entirely on
the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) for all administrative
and financial support. The 1997 working agreement with UNDP was
an update of the initial agreement of 1993. After the 1997 agreement
came into force, UNDCP began decentralizing activities to the field
to strengthen operations. At the same time, UNDP began to downsize
its field operations even as its mandates increased. Cost recovery
became the priority of every UNDP field office as they struggled
to continue to deliver their own programmes, as well as to administer
all other operations under agreements with United Nations entities.
UNDP issued guidelines in November 1999 on cost recovery, but they
have not been fully accepted by the other United Nations entities.
The ongoing dispute with UNDP on charges is hampering the efficiency
of the work of the UNDCP field offices. ODDCP management needs urgently
to conclude the agreement with UNDP.
Execution modalities
52. UNDCP practices
a variety of execution modalities, depending on the type of project,
the location and other considerations. Recently, as donor funding
for new projects has become more restrictive, UNDCP has placed emphasis
on self-execution in order to garner a larger share of project support
costs. OIOS believes that self-execution should be considered only
when sufficient internal capacity exists or it is cost-effective
to develop such a capacity. In the case of ODCCP, the cost of building
up a self-implementation capacity would include additional staff
and financial and administrative outlays, including legal advice,
contract administration, management of financial risks, insurance
payments and the like. Every project should, therefore, be judged
individually and objectively to determine the correct execution
modality. Relevant guidelines should elaborate on considerations
that should be factored into such decisions.
VI.
Overall management
A. Management
style
53. Secretary-General’s
bulletin ST/SGB/1997/5 identified nine functions of heads of departments.
Among these is “carrying out management activities or making managerial
decisions to ensure the effective, efficient and economic operation
of the programme concerned, including appropriate arrangements for
programme performance monitoring and for evaluation”. In the course
of the inspection, the style and conditions of management and their
impact on staff morale and productivity emerged as the major concern
in ODCCP from managers, staff and Member States.
54. On 1 April 1998,
ODCCP promulgated a set of 10 management instructions to make the
office less bureaucratic, more flexible and proactive. The content
was promising. However, in the next three years, a number of the
written instructions were superseded by executive decisions. OIOS
observed that the attempt to streamline responsibilities and procedures
did not improve the situation and in some cases made it worse. The
delegation of authority to senior managers was rarely respected
and observed; actions formally approved could be revised at the
last moment; and consultative input into executive decision-making
was brought to a minimum. Administrative actions initiated to implement
approved programmes — such as travel, organization of meetings and
the hiring of experts — could be questioned and stopped at any moment
by the Executive Director or his office.
55. Although it was
reported at the end of December 2000 that the Executive Director
had delegated programme managerial responsibilities to ODCCP programme
managers and that they would be held accountable for the implementation
of programme activities and the efficient use of human and financial
resources, at the time of the inspection OIOS found no documentary
evidence specifying the parameters of such delegation and the mechanism
of accountability. Instead, the lines of authority and responsibility
were not clear. It was common for junior staff to receive assignments
from senior management without their direct supervisors being informed.
56. OIOS concluded
that the concentration of decision-making and authority in the Executive
Director and his expanded front office (staffed on an ad hoc basis
by staff from different substantive sections), which acted as a
proxy for him in most instances, led to a highly centralized management
of the Organization from the policy level to minute details. The
management style was not transparent, and in many cases the rationale
for executive decisions was not clear to line managers.
57. Growing concerns
and discontent led to the conduct of a management workshop during
January 2000 with the theme of “creating a spirit of collegiality”.
The workshop arrived at a number of very positive and appropriate
conclusions, but only one of the 10 changes envisaged had materialized
a year later.
B. Human resources
management and staff-management relations
58. By early 1999,
top management’s view of the health of ODCCP and that of the staff
at large became widely divergent. This was reflected in a Staff
Council circular of December 1999 that stressed that staff concerns
were of a recurring and widespread nature and that they amounted
to a general climate of fear and intimidation affecting the productivity
of staff. It was also felt there was a lack of transparency in decision-making
and in the application of the Staff Rules. OIOS observed that the
majority of ODCCP staff were well-qualified, hard-working and committed
to the objectives of ODCCP, but that their productivity was hampered
by prevailing management conditions. The staff morale in ODCCP was
described as being low to very low. Many staff members appeared
disillusioned and sceptical that positive change was possible.
59. For an organization
with a considerable field presence, a fair and transparent system
of staff rotation between Vienna and the field is important. Such
a system, albeit not a perfect one, was set out in an information
circular of March 1997. However, OIOS found no system or policy
in place for rotation between Vienna and field posts. Rather, a
practice of rotating staff on a case-by-case basis had evolved.
The lack of transparency gave rise to suspicions of preferential
treatment of those staff who were placed in “favoured” duty stations,
and that staff who were assigned to hardship areas were being sanctioned.
60. In a number of
cases, the rationale for placements and promotions and the related
procedures in recent years were not transparent and were widely
questioned by the staff. A particular case was drawn to the attention
of OIOS of a junior Professional who was recruited despite the absence
of an academic or practical background in the substantive areas
covered by ODCCP, and whose familiarization and training tour appeared
excessive in terms of scope and entitlements. OIOS was further informed
that while there was a stated universal policy for the extension
of contracts, it appeared to be applied inconsistently.
61. OIOS was gratified
to learn of the recent attempts by the Human Resources Management
Section of the United Nations Office at Vienna to instil some degree
of discipline in all programme managers regarding the selection
and interview process, in particular through guidelines issued in
January 2001. This is one of the first and most important steps
in addressing the problems, and OIOS encourages the Human Resources
Management Section to do this work in close cooperation with ODCCP
top management and the Staff Committee.
C. Recent developments
62. OIOS took note
of the self-critical and forthcoming reaction of the Executive Director
to the preliminary findings of this inspection as presented to him
during the exit interview. He expressed his commitment to undertake
a thorough and resolute overhaul in his style and system of management.
OIOS regards these assurances very seriously.
63. OIOS noted that
at the time of the inspection, several reorganizational measures
were taken. An ODCCP Senior Management Group was established. A
deputy to the Executive Director was designated on 9 February, with
full authority to assume the latter’s duties and responsibilities
in his absence; the deputy’s responsibilities were spelled out on
16 March. On 16 February, three working groups were established
to review the organizational functions and structure, delegation
of authority and communications. By 28 February, those groups had
submitted their reports, which were commented upon by middle managers.
The ODCCP Programme and Project Committee was established on 15
March. The review of human resources management practices and procedures,
with a view to clarifying delegated authority, responsibility and
accountability, was launched on 23 February. Organizational changes
reducing the number of entities reporting directly to the Executive
Director were also made.
64. All those measures
are steps in the right direction. It remains to be seen, however,
whether those changes will be implemented and prove to be sustainable.
OIOS will watch the situation closely and will review the results
during the course of 2001.
VII. Conclusions
65. OIOS believes that the
major strengths of UNDCP and CICP are their clear mandates, their
high priority on the intergovernmental policy agenda and their broad
range of expertise in the mandated areas. Their main assets are
committed, resourceful and talented staff, a strong field presence
and the combination of normative, analytical and technical cooperation
functions under one roof. ODCCP has the unique advantage of serving
as a catalyst and coordinator in bringing together disparate views
and positions to act in concert against common global threats of
drugs and crime. It is able to work multilaterally in very sensitive
fields and to mobilize resources and support for activities that
bilateral donors would not or could not undertake. In several areas,
the Office has set best practices and worldwide norms and standards.
66. OIOS found that the major
weaknesses of ODCCP stem from over-centralized and heavily personalized
decision-making and the absence of institutional mechanisms to ensure
that programmes are properly conceived and efficiently executed and
that results are assessed. This gave rise to inadequate planning,
an insufficiently focused fund-raising strategy lacking a long-term
perspective, lack of transparency in decision-making and a breakdown
in communication between staff and management. The overall team spirit
was weak, and corporate mechanisms of consultation, advice and assessment
were either fragmented or absent altogether. External confidence in
the management of ODCCP resources was low.
67. OIOS noted that the thrust
of the corrective measures currently under way in ODCCP was in line
with the recommendations of the present report. The effectiveness
of those measures will be known only when their tangible results
become verifiable. OIOS believes that any corrective measures can
be successful under one key condition — the competence, professionalism
and integrity of top management, which is transparent and collegial
and enjoys the trust of the staff.
VIII. Recommendations
68. Management should develop
comprehensive annual plans for both UNDCP and CICP. Based on those
plans, areas of joint work should be identified and pursued (paras.
7-10) (SP-01-001-01).
69. ODCCP should not undertake
any large-scale, long-term commitments without appropriate conceptual
studies, feasibility research and reasonable assurances of donor
support. Furthermore, such projects should be prepared in collaboration
with implementing partner organizations (paras. 11-20) (SP-01-001-02).
70. A comprehensive evaluation
of the Tajikistan Drug Control Agency’s operational efficiency and
effectiveness should be conducted immediately and then repeated
annually. ODCCP should consider the possibility of assigning a group
of international instructors to observe its work and to provide
necessary training on-site. ODCCP should work out jointly with the
Government of Tajikistan and donors a plan for the longer-term financial
sustainability of the Agency (paras. 18-19) (SP-01-001-03).
71. ODCCP should put in place
an organizational structure that provides an adequate framework
for its activities and reduces the lines of authority reporting
directly to the top. The organization chart should be documented
and should delineate clearly the functions and responsibilities
of each responsibility centre, namely, by branch, section and unit,
and should ensure that those functions are mutually supportive.
The structure should correspond to the authorized staffing table
(paras. 21-24) (SP-01-001-04).
72. ODCCP should expeditiously
re-establish the corporate review mechanisms for projects and programmes
drawing on proven system-wide best practices. Such mechanisms should
be provided with sufficient staff support to ensure their continuity
and effectiveness (paras. 29-30) (SP-01-001-05).
73. A determined effort should
be made to enhance the skills of those engaged in technical cooperation
activities at CICP through training in project formulation, implementation
and appraisal. The CICP Operations Branch should develop a strategy
for technical cooperation and ensure that the activities and projects
developed are in line with this strategy. The Branch should be involved
in all stages of project development and should oversee the preparation
and finalization of project documents, monitor implementation and
assess the results achieved (paras. 31-32) (SP-01-001-06).
74. Quality control for research
conducted and documents produced should be established through peer
review and steering committees. The research capacity of ODCCP should
be enhanced by engaging external experts for analytical work, including
conceptual, methodological and strategic thinking (paras. 33-36)
(SP-01-001-07).
75. Immediate measures should
be taken to strengthen financial oversight at ODCCP. They should
include providing programme managers with clear guidelines on budgetary,
financial and personnel matters. The authorities and responsibilities
delegated to them should not be infringed upon. Programme managers
should be held fully accountable for exercising them properly (para.
37) (SP-01-001-08).
76. Adequate programme oversight
in ODCCP should be established without delay. Monitoring and evaluation
of programmes and projects should be strengthened through effective
peer reviews and involvement of donors and recipient countries.
Each manager should be kept abreast of all aspects of programme
evolution, problems encountered, costs involved and results achieved.
The system should provide regular feedback to top management and
donors (paras. 39-42) (SP-01-001-09).
77. The Executive Director
should, as a matter of urgency, delegate authority empowering the
Director of CICP to control and certify all the resources appropriated
to the crime programme (paras. 43-46) (SP-01-001-10).
78. UNDCP should analyse
the decline of the general-purpose fund margin available for future
activities and make efforts to establish it at a level that would
preclude a financial crisis in case unfavourable circumstances arise
(paras. 47-49) (SP-01-001-11).
79. Management should give
priority to concluding the UNDCP-UNDP working arrangement containing
a new, comprehensive and transparent system of cost recovery by
UNDP (para. 51) (SP-01-001-12).
80. ODCCP should establish
guidelines on the modalities of project execution that would allow
it to assess objectively and realistically the comparative advantages
of various options and decide whether and when self-execution is
cost-effective (para. 52) (SP-01-001-13).
81. ODCCP should ensure that
its human resources management practices conform to United Nations
regulations and rules for fairness, transparency and objectivity.
It should include a proper staff rotation system (paras. 58-61)
(SP-01-001-14).
82. In its comments on the
draft of the present report, ODCCP indicated its acceptance of all
the recommendations and provided OIOS with a detailed description
of measures either adopted or envisaged to be adopted to implement
the recommendations. OIOS appreciates this expeditious and positive
reaction to its recommendations and will keep the viability and
impact of those measures under review.
(Signed)
Dileep Nair
Under-Secretary-General
for Internal Oversight Services
Notes
1
Official Records of the General Assembly,
Fifty-third Session, Supplement No. 51 (A/53/5/Add.9).
2
Ibid., Fifty-fifth Session, Supplement No. 51
(A/55/5/Add.9).
3
Ibid., Fifty-fourth Session, Supplement No. 6 (A/54/6/Rev.1),
vol. II, pp. 483-490 and 531-539.
4
New York Times, 14 November 1997, “Top
UN Drug Aide Hopes to Rid Globe of Poppy and Coca Crops”.
5
United Nations publication, Sales No. E.99.XI.7.
6
Ibid., Sales No. E.00.XI.10.
7
Ibid., Sales No. E.GV.00.0.10.
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