[A2k] (Fox News) One for the Ages: U.N. Official Uses Two Birthdates

Thiru Balasubramaniam thiru@keionline.org
Wed Feb 28 08:59:00 2007


http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,255098,00.html

One for the Ages: U.N. Official Uses Two Birthdates

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

By Claudia Rosett


  The phrase =93born again=94 is taking on a whole new meaning in a scandal
now brewing at a little-known but important United Nations agency based
in Switzerland, where an auditor has discovered that the director
general, Kamil Idris, has for almost 24 years been using two different
birthdates, nine years apart. In recently amending the discrepancy,
Idris has changed his current age in U.N. records from 61 to 52.

That would be bizarre in any context, but it is an alarming discovery
at the World Intellectual Property Organization, or WIPO, a U.N. agency
with an annual budget of more than $200 million that is supposed to be
one of the world=92s great bastions of accurate record-keeping. Based in
Geneva, WIPO=92s mandate is to promote the global protection of
intellectual property rights. Launched as a U.N. agency in 1974 and
rooted in more than a century of international treaties, WIPO serves as
a registry, database guardian and guide for international copyrights,
patents, trademarks and intellectual property law.

Nor is this the only scandal to entangle WIPO and Kamil Idris, a
citizen of Sudan who has run WIPO since 1997. Idris is only the second
man to serve as WIPO=92s director general since it became a U.N. agency,
and he has earned a reputation for ruling in a vice-regal style. Plans
for a lavish, $50 million renovation of WIPO=92s headquarters in Geneva
led to concerns about possible bribery. The Swiss criminal
investigation launched in 2004 unearthed payments of $3 million to $4
million from WIPO contractors to a Ghanaian businessman, Michael
Wilson, who in turn had paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to a
Swiss account held by a WIPO assistant director, Khamis Suedi. Wilson,
whose case is still open, could not be reached for comment. Suedi, who
has denied any wrongdoing, left Switzerland in 2005.

Yet more questions were raised about Idris=92 purchase of a villa on the
edge of Geneva, where the director of the WIPO buildings division was
involved in the installation of a swimming pool, which Idris paid for
in cash. The swirl of allegations led to an external review of the
organization in 2005 by the consulting firm Ernst & Young. That review
-- which Ernst & Young stressed was not an audit -- did not find
evidence of fraud, but did find =93certain weaknesses in the management=94
that =93might lead to irregularities being committed.=94 The review raised
serious questions about unfair and murky practices in WIPO=92s hiring and
promotion of staff, and it observed signs of both =93frustration=94 and
=93fear=94 among WIPO personnel. Meanwhile, WIPO budgeting, which enjoyed a
healthy surplus when Idris took charge in 1997, had developed a
deficit. This also drew criticism and demands for outside inspection.
Through it all, Idris has denied any wrongdoing.

Idris is not denying, however, the manipulation of his birthdate on
official WIPO documents, though he continues to insist he was not in
any serious way at fault. But a WIPO internal audit report, completed
last November, and obtained by FOX News, shows otherwise. (Click here
to read the report.) (pdf) Among other things, it alleges that Idris
for more than two decades falsified his date of birth on a slew of
official U.N. documents, including a dozen =93laissez-passer=94
authorizations for international travel on U.N. business =96 which in
many countries allow the bearer to skip customs and immigration
inspection. In all of them, Idris gave his date of birth as Aug. 26,
1945 -- even though he now says he was actually born on Aug. 26, 1954.
Idris has also signed his name to the false birthdate of 1945 on Swiss
diplomatic permits and property records, and U.S. visa applications.

Idris has told U.N. investigators that the false birth-dating was due
merely to a typographical error made back in 1982, when he first
applied for a job a WIPO =96 where he has worked and risen through the
ranks since 1983. Idris also said that for years he had continued to
use the false birthdate on some official documents for =93consistency.=94
But according to the audit report, Idris was anything but consistent.
At the same times he was signing his name to U.N. =93laissez-passer=94
travel documents and U.S. visa applications showing his birth year as
1945, he held a Sudanese passport and Swiss driver=92s license with the
1954 date.

Idris did not reply to repeated queries from FOX News. But a WIPO
spokeswoman e-mailed a press communiqu=E9 saying that it was Idris
himself who initiated a correction in official records last year, and
that Idris would not benefit from the change. The statement said he
would in fact lose some of his pension benefits as a result of shedding
nine years from his official age. The statement added that all
allegations that Idris sought to profit from the error are =93groundless=94
and =93racist.=94

But the WIPO internal report, signed by WIPO=92s senior internal auditor,
Marco Pautasso, tells a different story. Based on interviews, internal
WIPO documents and other documentation from places in Idris=92 past,
ranging from Khartoum to Ohio, the report concludes that Idris=92 change
in birthdate =93cannot be considered as a mere administrative act.=94 The
35-page report alleges that Idris broke staff rules meant to safeguard
the integrity of WIPO, may have benefited career-wise from using the
false birthdate while rising to the top job of WIPO director-general,
and might now stand to benefit financially from having corrected the
date.

This report is the result of an investigation requested last year by
another U.N. oversight arm, the Joint Inspection Unit (JIU), after
stories appeared in the Swiss press when Idris began amending his
birthdate last spring in his U.N. personnel files, in Swiss property
records, and on his Swiss diplomatic card . There was speculation at
the time -- also dismissed by Idris=92 office -- that Idris might stand
to gain from the change, The JIU asked Pautasso to investigate in order
=93to put the issues to rest one way or the other.=94

The basic storyline of Idris=92 career, which can be distilled from the
audit report, is simple enough. Idris was born in Sudan, worked at the
foreign ministry there; got law degrees from Cairo University in 1976
and 1977; and a master=92s in international law from Ohio University in
1978. He went on to work at the Sudanese Mission to the U.N. in Geneva.
In 1982 he applied for a job with WIPO, and he joined the WIPO staff
the following year. He has been at the organization ever since,
reaching the top job of director general in 1997. He won a second
six-year term of office in 2003.

The bottom line on the dual birthdates appears to be that for WIPO and
related business, such as travel to the U.S., Idris until last spring
used the birthdate of 1945. For matters related to Sudan, such as his
Sudanese passport, he was usually listed as born in 1954. But even
within that odd framework, there were inconsistencies. For instance, in
a letter dated 1994, in support of what was then Idris=92 candidacy for
the post of WIPO deputy-secretary-general, the then Sudanese ambassador
to the U.N. in Geneva referred to the earlier, false birthdate,
stating: =93Mr. Idris was born in 1945 in Sudan.=94

Pautasso=92s report sums up, demurely, that the information in Idris=92
records of education and employment is =93sometimes contradictory.=94 And
sometimes stranger than that. The audit report notes that Idris=92 1982
WIPO job application claimed that from 1967-1970 he had held full- and
part-time posts =93at the national level=94 in Sudan. The report notes
dryly that =93if born in 1954, Mr. Idris was aged 13 to 16 when he filled
these posts.=94

It also appears that while attending Ohio University, from 1977-78,
Idris was recorded as having yet another date of birth. The report says
he was listed in the student files there as born neither in 1945 nor
1954, but in 1953. There are also strange overlaps of timing. In the
resume Idris submitted as part of his WIPO job application in 1982, for
the period in which he was studying at Ohio University he also
described himself as working in the Sudanese foreign ministry in
Khartoum, as both deputy director of the legal department and assistant
director of the research program -- an overlap that he told the WIPO
auditor was the result of =93short assignments=94 in Sudan while studying
in Ohio.

The report also takes issue with any claim that Idris did not benefit
from the change in his age. Based on WIPO internal records, it alleges
that Idris in his initial application to work at WIPO may have edged
out better qualified competitors by presenting himself as born in 1945,
and therefore being 37 years old. This implied a degree of experience
he could not then have had, if he was actually born in 1954, and aged
28. Similarly, the report questions whether Idris could have climbed
the WIPO ladder as quickly as he did had he not adopted a phony age.

The report further alleges that Idris=92 recent change of birthdate in
U.N. records could under some scenarios allow him to benefit
=93considerably=94 in financial terms. Idris=92 contract as director genera=
l
expires in 2009. In the context of his 1945 birthdate, that expiration
would have come well after he had reached the usual WIPO retirement age
of 60. But now that Idris is officially nine years younger, he has more
room to maneuver. Pautasso outlines, for example, how the suddenly
younger Idris, if he leaves the UN in 2009 or possibly before, might
under some circumstances qualify for a =93termination indemnity=94 of up to
18 months=92 salary, which he would not receive if born in 1945.

There are further oddities, but the allegations in the report from
WIPO=92s own internal auditor point to problems at WIPO that appear to go
much deeper than simply a director-general who for decades has been
using two -- or maybe three -- different birthdates, and might have
turned the confusion to personal gain.

The big question is how Idris=92s shifting identity went uncorrected --
and uninvestigated -- for so long. That question of too-little
inspection, carried out too late, has dogged all U.N. scandals in
recent years, from Oil For Food to the recent issues of United Nations
Development Program funding in North Korea. So has the possibility that
the discovery of conscious wrongdoing may never lead to any other
corrective action.

Claudia Rosett is a journalist-in-residence at the Foundation for
Defense of Democracies.


---------------------------------
Thiru Balasubramaniam
Geneva Representative
Knowledge Ecology International (KEI)
voice +41.22.791.6727
fax +41.22.723.2988
mobile +41 76 508 0997
thiru@keionline.org