Letter from CAFICS (AFICS Canada) to its members
In this scenario, in the "opinion" of the CAFICS and AFICS/NY presidents, the UN Secretary-General took action to replace his Representative for Investments and, in effect, place the CEO in charge of the Fund on probation, based merely on "exaggerated....rumours and allegations concerning the management of operations and investments ."
A UN retiree raised today on FCUNS Facebook the issue of the need to reach out to UN retiree organizations worldwide (Associations of Former International Civil Servants) to keep them apprised of issues concerning the UN Pension Fund. This is important the recent letter from AFICS Australia indicating that they've not been kept informed by the FAFICS leadership (Federation of Associations of Former International Civll Servants). A more recent letter from CAFICS (AFICS Canada) also highlights the importance of these organizations receiving accurate and updated information. The pension blog has made efforts to contact those organizations for whom there's correct contact information.
On misinformation concerning the backlog in pension payments alone, as mentioned in my notes of the pension information briefing conducted at UN HQ on 21 March 2018 by the UN Participant Representatives to the Pension Board, there's finally consensus, including from the Fund management that the total number of persons affected by the backlog in pension payments is 15,000, retirees and their survivors. But one would have no idea based on information coming from FAFICS and AFICS/NY.
Thursday, March 29, 2018
Sunday, March 25, 2018
Pension information session - finally, consensus on the backlog, 26 March 2018
Informal notes
Pension information
session by UN Participant Representatives/members of the UN Staff Pension
Committee
Wednesday, 21 March 2018, 1.15 to 2.30 pm, conference room
F, UN Secretariat
Present: Ms. Mary Abu-Rakabeh, Participant
Representative UNSPC
· Mr. Ibrahima Faye, Participant Representative UNSPC
· Ms. Michelle Rockcliffe, Participant Representative UNSPC
. Ms. Bernadette Nyiratunga, Participant Representative UNSPC
· Mr. Ian Richards, President CCISUA and Participant Representative UNSPC
. Ms. Ndeye Aissatou Dieng-Ndiaye Participant Representative UNSPC
· Mr. Ibrahima Faye, Participant Representative UNSPC
· Ms. Michelle Rockcliffe, Participant Representative UNSPC
. Ms. Bernadette Nyiratunga, Participant Representative UNSPC
· Mr. Ian Richards, President CCISUA and Participant Representative UNSPC
. Ms. Ndeye Aissatou Dieng-Ndiaye Participant Representative UNSPC
At the start of the information session, the UN Participant Representatives asked the audience to describe their particular concerns and
questions.
Tuesday, March 20, 2018
UN Pension Fund: Past time for a professionalized Pension Board, 21 March 2018
There’s an information briefing scheduled
for today, Wednesday, 21 March 2018, in conference room F, by the UN
participant representatives/members of the UN Staff Pension Committee.
A major question for the briefing is what
remedial measures have been taken as called for by General Assembly resolution
72/262 to address serious problems in the Fund.
The UN internal governance
audit of the Pension Board, called for by the Assembly, is currently being
conducted by the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS).
Prospects for
meaningful improvements in Fund management are slim without Pension Board
reform and radical changes in its membership with a focus on professionalism,
transparency, and accountability to optimize its oversight function.
In the meantime, there’s a management vacuum
in the Fund Secretariat, and the leadership of the UN retiree organization (FAFICS) continues its
state of denial, as confirmed by a letter from the outgoing president of AFICS
Australia dated 20 February 2018 addressed to members (link below).
Thursday, March 15, 2018
AFICS Australia: Reminder to FAFICS: your task is to defend UN retirees, 15 March 2018
LETTER TO AFICS AUSTRALIA MEMBERS (ASSOCIATION OF FORMER INTERNATIONAL CIVIL SERVANTS) FROM THE OUTGOING PRESIDENT
Reminder to FAFICS: your task is to defend UN retirees
Reminder to FAFICS: your task is to defend UN retirees
". . . the leadership of FAFICS [the Federation of Associations of Former International Civil Servants) in the last few years has not met the high benchmark of the past. . . FAFICS neither asked its membership for data on these problems, nor took them up in any significant way. . .The FAFICS leadership should be strongly reminded by its members that its task is to protect, defend and advance the rights of all UN retirees, not those of the CEO, no matter how nice a fellow he is personally. "
Monday, March 5, 2018
Open letter to Heidi Mendoza: UN retiree representation at the Pension Board, 5 March 2018
Open letter to Ms.
Heidi Mendoza, Under-Secretary-General, United Nations Office of Internal
Oversight Services, from UN Beneficiaries/Retirees of the United Nations Joint
Staff Pension Fund
5 March 2018
Ms. Heidi Mendoza
Under-Secretary-General
Office of Internal
Oversight Services
United Nations
Subject: Audit of the governance of the Pension Board: Representation
of retirees/beneficiaries on the Pension Board
Dear Ms. Mendoza,
We are writing with respect to paragraph 8 of General
Assembly resolution GA/RES/72/262 adopted on 24 December 2017 as follows:
“Requests the
Secretary-General to entrust the Office of Internal Oversight Services with the
conduct of a comprehensive audit of the governance structure of the Pension
Board, including a review of the checks and balances between the Board and the
leadership of the Fund, and requests the Office to submit a report with key
findings to the General Assembly at its seventy-third session, to be considered
in the context of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund.”
Legitimacy of representation
As UN retirees (also known as beneficiaries) of the United
Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund, our interests are purportedly represented on
the Pension Board by four representatives and two alternates (for a total of
six non-voting positions) from the Federation of Associations of Former
International Civil Servants (FAFICS).
Many UN retirees are not members of FAFICS, whose governance
is controlled by members selected by independent and local Associations of
former International Civil Servants (AFICS). Many retirees have no desire to
become members of their local AFICS, nor should they be required to be a member
of a particular federation in order to have their interests represented on the
pension board of their pension fund, to which they have contributed their whole
careers.
By definition, one cannot be represented by an organization
of which one is not a member, raising questions about the legitimacy of FAFICS
as the representative of UN retirees on the Pension Board.
Sunday, March 4, 2018
The FAFICS president's misinformation campaign: No laughing matter, 4 March 2018
Open letter to the members and associate members of the Federation of Associations of Former International Civil Servants (FAFICS)
4 March 2018
Dear FAFICS members and associate members.
Subject: The FAFICS president’s misinformation campaign: no laughing matter
The FAFICS president, Ms. Linda Saputelli, in her latest “update” dated 19 February 2018, posted on the FAFICS website (pdf attached) has doubled down on her misinformation campaign. You will recall that her update to FAFICS member associations dated 8 January 2018, contained a number of instances of distorted information, which I refuted in detail in my response of 14 January 2018 addressed to you.
This new “update” begins with a renewed attempt to denigrate and discredit the UN participant representatives, mixed in with brief updates on other issues. While it stretches credulity that by now, anyone could take Ms. Saputelli’s rantings seriously, it is a fact that FAFICS has had some success in wielding power by its manipulation and control of the flow of information.
Most important, there are a number of issues facing our Fund that require the good faith efforts of our retiree organization, of which Ms. Saputelli, however questionable her conduct, holds the office of president.
A deeply disturbing issue contained in Ms. Saputelli’s 19 February update pertains to the membership of the Selection Committee for the Deputy Chief Executive Officer of the Fund Secretariat.
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