The Case of Kamil Idris

The Case of Kamil Idris


12-07-2007, 06:49 PM


  » http://sudaneseonline.com/cgi-bin/sdb/2bb.cgi?seq=msg&board=120&msg=1197049754&rn=12


Post: #1
Title: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 06:49 PM
Parent: #0

The Case of Kamil Idris
When Idris joined The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) in 1982, he understood right away that his age and ‘experience’ would be an obstacle to acceding rapidly to a high post, or perhaps any post at all. Professional grade positions within the international organisations are classified according to levels from P1 through P6 (at P5 one enjoys already diplomatic privileges) and then from D1 through D3. The Sudanese Idris, who looked somewhat older than his 28 years, changed his birthday from 1954 to 1945, thereby becoming 37 and gaining 9 years of fictitious paper experience to put on his c.v. Since his fictitious experience was mainly in various government offices in Sudan, who in WIPO would possibly check it? His impressive c.v. with its creative credentials allowed him to slip into WIPO at the high professional grade of P4, which carries a tax-free salary of approximately $10,000 / month.

Post: #2
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 06:50 PM
Parent: #1

UN patent agency head to step down after misconduct row
Nov 14, 2007

GENEVA (AFP) — The embattled head of the United Nations patent organisation, embroiled in allegations of misconduct, will step down a year early, with his successor expected to start after September 2008, a spokeswoman said Wednesday.

Kamal Idris, head of the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO), has decided to bring forward by one year the process of nominating and appointing a new director general, spokeswoman Samar Shamoon told AFP.

Idris, a Sudanese national who has headed the UN's only revenue-earning agency for ten years, has been under intense pressure over claims he misrepresented his age when joining the organisation.

He has also faced criticism for alleged poor management.

The Swiss press revealed in February that Idris was born in 1954, not 1945 as he claimed when he first joined the organisation.

He then recognised the "error" in his date of birth in 2006 when he was due to retire and was able to extend his mandate until 2009.

WIPO said after the initial press reports that Idris would suffer a "considerable" cut in his pension as a result of the age change and denied he had been seeking to profit from the error, insisting that such allegations were unfounded.

Western states such as Switzerland and the United States called for his head at WIPO's annual assembly last month and refused to approve the organisation's 2008-2009 budget while Idris remained in charge.

Western countries now hope to quickly resolve the budget issue, diplomatic sources said on Wednesday.

US ambassador Warren Tichenor welcomed Idris's decision to step down early as a "positive development."

"We believe that this renewal of leadership will bring new confidence and vitality to the organisation," Tichenor said in a statement.

WIPO has also been criticised for its working culture under Idris's stewardship, with a report by accounting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers citing high levels of absenteeism, incompetence and inadequate disciplinary measures.

WIPO was set up in 1967 to promote and coordinate the protection of intellectual property throughout the world and to manage international patent application systems.

Post: #3
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 06:54 PM
Parent: #2

Director General Kamil Idris: Profile
Kamil Idris was appointed Director General of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and Secretary-General of the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV) in November 1997, having begun his WIPO career in 1982 in the Development Cooperation and External Relations Bureau for Africa.

Prior to joining WIPO, Mr. Idris was a member of the Sudanese Foreign Service, where he held the rank of Ambassador. While at the Permanent Mission of Sudan to the United Nations Office in Geneva, he was spokesman and coordinator of the Group of Developing Countries.

Mr. Idris holds a PhD in international law from the Graduate Institute of International Studies of the University of Geneva, Switzerland, and degrees in law, political science and international affairs from universities in Egypt, Sudan and the United States of America. He was also a professor of law.

Mr. Idris was a member of the United Nations International Law Commission (ILC) from 1992 to1996 and from 2000 to 2001.

Mr. Idris is author of Intellectual Property, A Power Tool for Economic Growth, and co-author of The Intellectual Property-Conscious Nation: Mapping the Path from Developing to Developed.

A Sudanese national, Mr. Idris speaks fluent English, Arabic, French, and some Spanish.

Post: #4
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: Tragie Mustafa
Date: 12-07-2007, 06:58 PM
Parent: #3

شكرا جوك.
نتابع معك.

Post: #5
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:03 PM
Parent: #4

Dear Tragie
Thanks for your passing by here
i'm busy with my new born baby these days

Post: #6
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:06 PM
Parent: #5

Quote: The Sudanese Idris, who looked somewhat older than his 28 years, changed his birthday from 1954 to 1945, thereby becoming 37 and gaining 9 years of fictitious paper experience to put on his c.v. Since his fictitious experience was mainly


التزوير صارت جزء من عقل السوداني حتى عالم منهم يدمن التزوير
ففي الشهادة السوداني كان هناك مراقبة دقيقة جدا لطلاب الجالسين حتى لا تقع السرقة والتزوير وبعد كل هذا يقع التزوير.

Post: #7
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:12 PM
Parent: #6

Kamil Eltayed Idris (Arabic: كامل إدريس) (born on August 26, 1945,[1] August 26, 1953,[2] or August 26, 1954[3]) is a Sudanese international civil servant. He has been Director General of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) since November 1997. He is also the head of the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV).[4][5]

Post: #8
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:14 PM
Parent: #7

Kamil Idris will step down a year early from its post of head of WIPO, amidst "allegations of misconduct". [6] According to the International Herald Tribune, Kamil Idris "who used a false birth date for more than two decades accepted a package including an extra year's salary ... and full pension benefits before he offered to resign over questions about his integrity." [7

Post: #9
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:15 PM
Parent: #8

Age fabrication
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Age fabrication occurs when an individual deliberately misrepresents his or her true age. It is usually practised with the intent to garner privileges or status that would not otherwise be available to the individual. This can be accomplished by providing false data, verbally, in new documents or altering archives of vital records.

For example, up until the early 1950s in Hollywood, it was extremely common for actresses to subtract at least one year from their actual age. On some occasions, age is increased so as to make cutoffs for minimum legal or employable age in showbusiness or professional sports. There are many stories of men lying about their age to join the armed forces, for example to fight in World War I[4]. Sometimes it is not the people themselves that lower their public age, but others around them such as publicists, parents, and other handlers. Using original source material such as birth certificates, marriage licenses, the census, Social Security applications, identity documents and death certificates usually provides the correct date and year. Most cases involve taking or adding one or two years to their age. However, in more extreme case such with Al Lewis and Charo, a decade has been added or subtracted to their ages.

Post: #10
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:21 PM
Parent: #9

Quote: He has also faced criticism for alleged poor management.



تلفزيون الكيزان تملا الدنيا بالدعاية لعالم قام بتزوير الارادة الدولية..
كيف يتقدم السودان في ظل نفاق وكذب يملأ صدور الناس..
الصدق والامان مقياس التدين وايمان بالله أين هذا لمسلم الذي تدعى دولته الحكم بشرع الله؟

Post: #11
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:21 PM
Parent: #9

Quote: He has also faced criticism for alleged poor management.



تلفزيون الكيزان تملا الدنيا بالدعاية لعالم قام بتزوير الارادة الدولية..
كيف يتقدم السودان في ظل نفاق وكذب يملأ صدور الناس..
الصدق والامان مقياس التدين وايمان بالله أين هذا لمسلم الذي تدعى دولته الحكم بشرع الله؟

Post: #12
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:26 PM
Parent: #11

Vital records are records of life events kept under governmental authority, including birth certificates, marriage licenses, and death certificates. In some jurisdictions, vital records may also include records of civil unions or domestic partnerships.

In the United States, vital records are typically maintained under state law by a county clerk, county recorder, or similar municipal-level official.

In the United Kingdom, vital records are recorded in the civil registry.

Various European countries are members of an International Commission on Civil Status which provides a mutually recognized Convention on the coding of entries appearing in civil status documents, with common codes and translation tables between the language of the member states. They also provide an English unofficial translation.

Post: #13
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:26 PM
Parent: #11

Vital records are records of life events kept under governmental authority, including birth certificates, marriage licenses, and death certificates. In some jurisdictions, vital records may also include records of civil unions or domestic partnerships.

In the United States, vital records are typically maintained under state law by a county clerk, county recorder, or similar municipal-level official.

In the United Kingdom, vital records are recorded in the civil registry.

Various European countries are members of an International Commission on Civil Status which provides a mutually recognized Convention on the coding of entries appearing in civil status documents, with common codes and translation tables between the language of the member states. They also provide an English unofficial translation.

Post: #14
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:32 PM
Parent: #13

Quote: Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2006 08:33:49 +0400
Reply-To: abubakr sidahmed <[log in to unmask]>
Sender: Discussion group for Sudan concerns <[log in to unmask]>
From: abubakr sidahmed <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Re: Kamil Idris' controversial management of the WIPO
Comments: To: [log in to unmask]
In-Reply-To: <[log in to unmask]>
Content-type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed

7/6/2005
WIPO Faces Persistent Complaints, Allegations Of Mismanagement

The World Intellectual Property Organisation is said to be different
from many U.N. bodies in that it has long been seen as more of a
technical body than the domain of career diplomats who are expert at
political wrangling. But in recent months, the organisation has been
called upon to address a series of questions about the organisation’s
financial and management practices that have come under scrutiny along
with the United Nations at large. In addition, complaints have arisen
about the way meetings of WIPO’s members are conducted and policies are
developed.

In addition to being asked to tighten its spending, the WIPO secretariat
is being asked, at least informally, to account for several possible
financial irregularities, one of which may be the least substantial but
which reaches the highest level – Director General Kamil Idris.

So far, the secretariat has held to the position that there is no proof
of wrongdoing at WIPO. A WIPO official noted to IP-Watch Tuesday that
“neither WIPO, nor any WIPO official, is under investigation.”

The Swiss newspaper Le Temps on Thursday reported on the involvement of
the WIPO building director in the construction of a personal swimming
pool for Idris. According to sources cited in the story, the swimming
pool was purchased in France in 2003 and paid for in cash by the
building director, who worked frequently on the project site in his
personal capacity sometimes during office hours.

This report rekindled speculation among the Geneva diplomatic community
as to why the director general has not called for an investigation into
the allegations that have arisen about the organisation, according to
diplomatic sources who were interviewed for this story. Some governments
support a deeper investigation and stronger response to reports from
WIPO. But a U.S. official in April denied that his government has used
the potential financial scandal as leverage to push WIPO for gains on
the policy front, such as moving a patent law harmonisation agenda.

In late April, the international press reported on an investigation by a
Geneva-based judge, Jean-Bernard Schmid, into possible bribery charges
involving a roughly $50 million contract for renovation at WIPO’s
headquarters.

According to the New York Times and Financial Times, the Swiss
investigation looked at whether Michael Wilson, a businessman from
Ghana, bribed Khamis Suedi, WIPO assistant director general and special
counsel to Idris, to get the WIPO renovation contract. The Swiss
investigation has determined that Wilson was paid $3 to 4 million by
BPS, a consortium of three Geneva companies, related to their winning of
the WIPO contract. Wilson transferred nearly $300,000 to Suedi, but WIPO
officials have denied that the transfer was related to the renovation
contract. The renovation costs grew from roughly $30 million to nearly
$50 million by the end, approved by the member states.

Suedi and four other WIPO officials were called to testify, and none
have been charged with wrongdoing, according to reports.

WIPO Legal Counsel Edward Kwakwa said this week that Idris has looked
into the issue. “The director general has taken the necessary steps to
ensure WIPO procurement procedures were strictly followed in awarding
the contract to BPS.”

According to one source, Idris conducted his own investigation, and also
had an internal committee do an evaluation of the whole procurement process.

A WIPO official added that Idris suspended a regulation allowing staff
to do business outside WIPO under three conditions: that it did not
involve intellectual property, was not WIPO-related, and had
authorization of the DG. Idris also has overseen the introduction of an
internal audit charter and implementation of recommendations by the U.N.
Joint Inspection Unit, the official said.

U.N. Inspectors Find Fault With WIPO Budget

WIPO’s management and administration is under review by the Joint
Inspection Unit (JIU). The JIU is the only external U.N. system-wide
oversight body, with 11 inspectors. The first part of the JIU review was
presented at the WIPO Program and Budget Committee meeting this spring,
with a second part to follow at “a later date.”

The inspectors stated in the first report that they did not review
issues related to the remodeling of an old building nor the construction
of the new one, but rather reviewed a paper prepared by the WIPO
secretariat and submitted to member states on 13 January 2005. The JIU
did, however, recommend that WIPO proceed “without delay” with a
construction project for a new building at a cost of 139 million Swiss
francs using a bank loan of 113.6 million Swiss francs. The cost of the
loan is lower than the current cost of renting space, they said. Plus
WIPO owns the land, which is adjacent to the current headquarters, and
all staff could be relocated to one site.

In its preliminary comments on the JIU report, first released in
February, the WIPO secretariat noted that the JIU may have derogated
from its formal process and that WIPO was given less than the normal
length of time to comply with the review. The secretariat also said it
is difficult to grasp the complexity of an organisation like WIPO in
such a short time. It also noted that a number of WIPO’s areas of
competency were not included in the review.

The first JIU report focused on the budget and financial issues,
personnel practices and oversight activities. The inspectors recommended
the director general hire independent external expertise using existing
funding to perform a comprehensive “desk-to-desk” needs assessment of
the human and financial resources of the organisation, which is a way of
determining if all of the employees are necessary.

In its preliminary comments, WIPO responded that a desk-to-desk
assessment may have very high cost implications.

The second recommendation was that the WIPO General Assembly, which
meets in the fall, should approve an initial 2006-2007 budget at the
revised 2004-2005 budget level, depending on the outcome of the needs
assessment. The recommendation was made “in light of current financial
concerns of the organisation.” Unbudgeted, new activities should await
the study outcome, it said.

The WIPO secretariat agreed to this recommendation as long as recognized
flexibilities are taken into account, though it disagreed with the
inspectors’ financial analysis. The Program and Budget Committee agreed
to recommend the proposed budget to the General Assembly without changes
for the first time in two biennia, according to an official. The budget
would increase slightly from about US$420 million to about $526 million.

Third, the director general was urged to complete, “on an urgent basis,”
consultations with other relevant organisations, such as the European
Patent Office, and submit to the General Assembly a proposed methodology
to determine the cost of processing Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)
applications. The treaty helps reduce paperwork for patent-holders
seeking recognition for their patent in other countries.

The secretariat replied that it had already begun work on establishing a
methodology for determining the cost of processing PCT applications and
that it should be conducted in consultation with all stakeholders. But
it added that the current financial situation is the result of three
things: the rapid reduction of fees between 1997 and 2003, the
simultaneous progressive depletion of the reserves (decided by the
member states), and a slowdown in the growth of demand for PCT services.

For years, WIPO had a healthy financial situation with significant
growth in income due to the high numbers of applications received under
the PCT. Unused resources placed in the reserve account reached a peak
of 353 million Swiss francs in 1998. The lowering of PCT fees in 1998
led to a gap between the projected and actual income until the director
general requested approval to raise the PCT fees as of January 2005 to
address the problem.

The JIU suggested that WIPO, which has obtains much of its funding from
patent fees, should set fees weighing desired expenditures with the cost
of requirements. The organisation attempt to raise fees last year met
with strong resistance from developed countries that pay most of the
fees, according to government and non-governmental sources.

WIPO’s deficit in 2004-2005 is estimated at US$23 million, with a total
budget of $528.8 million, according to the JIU report. But the
inspectors counseled against using the emergency reserves to address the
gap when “further economies” could reduce the deficit instead. Not
drawing upon the reserves before September is in contradiction to
decisions taken the member states of the PCT last year, WIPO said. In
addition, WIPO cited a regulation stating that financial reserves are
established precisely to cover cash flow and budget deficit.

PCT fees represent about three-quarters of WIPO’s income, so projections
of PCT applications are essential for accurate planning. The inspectors
said there is no study on the relation between workload increases and
costs of services, no methodology to determine the cost of processing
PCT applications, and that clients are charged approximately 1400 Swiss
francs (roughly US$1100) “without either the client or the secretariat
knowing what the amount represents.”

At several points, WIPO contended with the JIU’s analysis, and commented
that it is “impossible” to understand the level of resources needed by
the organisation based on the limited number of interviews the JIU
carried out in two months.

Also recommended was to limit transfers between programs to five percent
of the smaller of their two biennial appropriations rather than five
percent of the total budget, which can distort program objectives and
“render meaningless” the program priorities and budgeting. The JIU said
it is not aware of any other organisations with that authority.

WIPO said this could “reduce the flexibility which has been built into
the budget system for more than two decades.”

Recommendations for tightening up the PCT process included that users of
WIPO services pay in Swiss francs, that PCT fees be paid to WIPO upon
filing, and that clients be able to pay online. WIPO agreed with this
recommendation, acknowledging that exchange rate fluctuations may have
an impact on the level of income in the PCT.

Another recommendation was that the General Assembly institutionalize
the decision of the current director general not to accept extra
remuneration for his duties relating to International Union for the
Protection of New Varieties of Plants, a Geneva-based body providing a
system of protecting plant varieties in order to encourage the
development of new varieties. The JIU said this will ensure the WIPO
director general’s salary remains in line with his peers in the U.N. system.

WIPO said the current director general is “personally sympathetic” with
the recommendation, but said the issue cannot be dealt with the WIPO
General Assembly as UPOV is not part of the United Nations system.

Personnel Practices Criticized

On personnel issues, the inspectors found a number of problems in the
absence of a comprehensive human resources strategy. Between 1997 and
2002, approved posts increased by 50 percent, and another 24 percent of
the workforce were hired as consultants or on short-term contracts, they
said.

In its reply, WIPO basically agreed with all of the JIU recommendations
on personnel issues, and noted that some were already being implemented
or conveyed to the competent governing bodies. But it said the increase
in workforce reflects the increase in demand for WIPO’s services, and
that approved posts are not the same as the actual number of staff.

The inspectors criticized a practice of direct recruitment at WIPO,
originally set up in 1976 for hiring of professional urgently needed for
limited periods has grown into a pathway for confirmation into regular
WIPO posts. In the last three years, 99 percent of direct recruits
became permanent, despite a rule that they cannot serve more than three
years and may not be converted into permanent appointments. The
inspectors were told by WIPO that the recruits competed for vacancies.
During 2002-2003, 43 percent, or 38 out of 88, of all professional staff
recruited were direct hires.

WIPO countered that direct recruitment “has served the organisation
well, and has been very positively evaluated by independent external
experts” and others.

The inspectors also raised concerns about a practice of transferring
staff from program to program within WIPO, leaving no vacancy behind,
and called for the practice to be discontinued.

WIPO argued back that this practice was applied only in certain
instances and that the majority of cases involved transfers to vacant
posts or swapping of posts between programs.

Furthermore, the system of personal promotions at WIPO “has been
significantly eroded” to where it almost exclusively relies on seniority
and not on criteria set up in 1984 that was based on merit. The JIU
called for an end to the personal promotion scheme at WIPO because it is
not based on merit, deviates from common practices, has significant
financial implications and may have a negative effect on staff morale.
About 45 percent of a high-level category of staff are on personal
grades, and the promotions are granted just prior to retirement, they said.

Some officials in the Geneva diplomatic community consistently assert
that WIPO has undemocratically selected or promoted officials who
advance the WIPO agenda in meetings and represent the geographic region
of the director general. As the Idris is from Africa but WIPO is seen as
generally favoring developed country industry views, this leads to
developing country representatives in meetings who act as
“ventriloquists” for the secretariat, they charged.

The WIPO official denied this, stating, “Any delegation that takes the
floor to speak at a WIPO meeting does so in its capacity as official
representative of its government.” In the formal reply, WIPO said the
report does not capture the increase in geographical and gender
diversity from 1997 to 2004.

The JIU found that the director general does not have the ability he
should have to appoint high-level staff without seeking WIPO
coordination committee advice. The JIU recommended dropping the
requirement for advice as it “ties the director general’s hands
unnecessarily and is inefficient for the effective running and
management of the organisation.”

The JIU suggested the adoption of a comprehensive human resources
strategy that includes policies on career development, gender balance,
geographical distribution and administration of justice.

As to auditing of WIPO, the JIU said the Federal Audit Office of the
Swiss Confederation, which has always been WIPO’s external auditor,
performs “excellent financial audits that are well-received by member
states,” but cited a need for management audits.

The inspectors also found fault with WIPO’s Internal Audit and Oversight
Division, which has never done an audit or made audit plans. None of the
division’s staff has an audit background, amounting to staffing that is
“very inadequate and needs strengthening.” The division itself has
raised this concern to the director general, they noted.

The internal audit function was created in 2000; the evaluation function
in 1998. But few program evaluations have been undertaken – four in six
years, plus two done by external consultants, the inspectors found.
Likewise, only seven internal audits have been conducted, all done by an
external consultant, a former member of WIPO’s finance staff. There is
no annual reporting mechanism to member states and no procedure to
follow up on the recommendations of the Audit and Oversight Division,
they added.

Along these lines, the Program and Budget Committee set up a working
group on an audit committee that in late May recommended the committee
consider the creation of an audit committee. That recommendation will be
addressed later this year.

Member Complaints About Inclusion, Meeting Procedure

Among the complaints from some member countries is that the budget was
formed without inclusion, with only one regional meeting for developing
countries and copies of the proposed budget for them only shortly prior
to the Program and Budget Committee meeting, while developed countries
get to be consulted in the process all along.

But the WIPO official countered, “The budgetary process was inclusive.
According to established practice, any regional group that requests a
special briefing is given one.”

The official said that prior to any program and budget meeting, member
states are given an “equal opportunity” to request through their group
coordinators a briefing on program and budget proposals. In addition, an
informal session of the Program and Budget Committee was held in
February and was open to all member states, the official said. “The WIPO
secretariat is at the disposal of all member states to provide detailed
briefings on draft proposals at any time upon request,” she said.

Another complaint is that some meetings are not being handled precisely
to WIPO procedures, with decisions favorable to WIPO or WIPO’s biggest
contributing constituents being pushed through. In at least two key
meetings, one last November and one in April, the chairmen attempted to
impose a decision of the meeting without the agreement of all members
present, according to officials. This was said to be the case the
Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights (SCCR) meeting last
November and the Program and Budget Committee meeting in April.

WIPO rules require that a decision may only be reached if all committee
members agree. The traditional practice in WIPO has been to conduct
meetings based on the principle of consensus. According to one
government official, where a consensus is not possible in arriving at
final outcomes, WIPO’s General Rules of Procedure provide for the
possibility of formal voting and spell out the procedure for doing so.
Under WIPO rules, without consensus, no decision can be taken unless
there is a vote, but WIPO’s meetings rarely resort to formal voting, the
official said. Instead, the consensus-based approach to negotiations has
generally been followed.

A WIPO official argued, “While the rules do not explicitly require
consensus, it has been a long-standing policy of WIPO to build consensus
on international intellectual property issues.”

But in the notion of consensus appears to be blurring, and in the two
meetings cited, the chairman acted in a manner that constituted “a stark
deviation from standard practice, as well as a violation of WIPO’s Rules
of Procedure,” the official said. In both cases, the chairmen announced
actionable decisions without consensus or a formal vote, but rather on
the basis of a “near-consensus.”

In the SCCR, the chairman called for an informal “show of hands,” and
determined that a near-consensus was reached, which is not consistent
with procedure. WIPO clarified afterward that the outcome of the meeting
was the “chair’s conclusions” and not a formal decision by the
committee. But the complaint is that the chair’s conclusions should
therefore not be “actionable” and yet they are being taken forward by
the secretariat. The same is the case for the PBC, the official said.

“In both cases mentioned above, the chairmen used non-procedural, and
therefore illegal, means in order to openly confront and isolate some
important developing countries in discussions and to impose decisions on
which there was no consensus,” the official said. “These developments,
therefore, point to a trend towards the abandonment in WIPO of the norms
of neutrality and impartiality that all chairmen, everywhere, are
expected to follow.”

Yet another concern was that the WIPO secretariat was lobbying prior to
the 1-2 June Standing Committee on Patents meeting to get support for
the outcome of an informal consultation held by Director General Idris
in Casablanca, Morocco in February, despite that outcome having been
generated outside the formal and inclusive SCP meeting process.

The WIPO official said the General Assembly had given the director
general a mandate to conduct informal consultations, which is what he
did in Casablanca. The results of these informal consultations was a
recommendation on the future work of WIPO adopted by the participants
and submitted to the director general who presented it for discussion at
the SCP, she said.

“If you follow WIPO closely, you will know that the secretariat is
committed to inclusive dialogue and consensus building,” the official
said. “WIPO will continue to ensure that the international patent system
evolves in a balanced, user-friendly, and efficient way that serves the
interests of all member states and users.”

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. All of the news
articles and features on Intellectual Property Watch are also subject to
a Creative Commons License which makes them available for widescale,
free, non-commercial reproduction and translation.
William New, the author of this post, may be reached at [log in to unmask]

You can subscribe for automatic notifications of these stories, via the
RSS feed or via the e-mail alerts. Subscribers can choose the frequency
of notifications as well as particular topics of greatest interest to them.


Hisham A. Mageed wrote:
> THE INDIAN OCEAN NEWSLETTER
>
> June 17, 2006
> **
> *SUDAN*
> *Kamil Idris' controversial management of the WIPO*
>
>
> The Geneva judge Jean-Bernard Schmid, has been investigating for the
> last two years into the World Intellectual Property Organisation
> (WIPO). He found, among other things, that some companies had paid 2.3
> million euros in kickbacks to obtain a construction contract from this
> international organisation. The WIPO, a UN organisation based in
> Geneva and specialised in protecting intellectual property, has been
> run since 1997 by the Sudanese Kamil el-Tayeb Idris, whose mandate was
> renewed in 2003. This is not the only issue that has attracted the
> attention of the Swiss judiciary. Apparently, Kamil Idris has had a
> swimming pool built in his villa in Bellevue, near Geneva. Curiously,
> it was WIPO’s director of buildings who had handled this work, which
> was paid in cash directly to a French company. For its part, the UN
> has also effected internal investigations. One of them revealed that
> two computer projects launched since Kamil Idris had became head of
> WIPO, called Wiponet and Impact, have never functioned but have
> already cost over 65 million euros. The Joint Inspection Unit, an
> independent oversight body of the United Nations system, called for “a
> detailed office by office evaluation of the human and financial
> resources of the organisation”. For, while the number of WIPO
> employees has grown sharply since the Sudanese diplomat took the helm.
> Kofi Annan, the Secretary General of the UN, questions whether all of
> the WIPO’s 1300 staff in Geneva are truly employed. However, it would
> be a delicate matter to rock the boat. Michael Wilson, the
> intermediary who received the kickbacks from the companies wanting the
> WIPO contract is the son of a former Ambassador of Ghana to
> Switzerland. He is also a childhood friend of Kojo Annan, son of the
> Secretary General. They have both worked for the firm Cotecna,
> implicated in shady dealing during the “oil for food” programme
>
>
>
>
> ________________________________________________________________ To
> unsubscribe from the list send an email without a subject to:
> [log in to unmask] with "SIGNOFF SUDANESE" in the body of the email
> Archives of [log in to unmask]:
> http://list.msu.edu/archives/sudanese.html

________________________________________________________________
To unsubscribe from the list send an email without a subject to:
[log in to unmask]
with "SIGNOFF SUDANESE" in the body of the email
Archives of [log in to unmask]:
http://list.msu.edu/archives/sudanese.html



Post: #15
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 07:40 PM
Parent: #14

U.N. intellectual property chief, Kamil Idris of Sudan to step down early




Kamil Idris, head of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)


GENEVA (Reuters) - The head of the United Nations' intellectual property watchdog will step down next year, a year early, after documents bearing a false birth date brought pressure on him to resign, diplomats said on Thursday.

Kamil Idris, head of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) for a decade, was found by internal auditors to have signed documents with a false birth date -- making him seem nine years older -- when he joined the agency 25 years ago.

The United States, European Union and other wealthy nations last month refused to approve WIPO's new two-year budget in protest over a lack of a full and open debate on the Sudanese lawyer's reported misconduct.

The United States welcomed Idris's early departure as "a positive development."

Idris, in an e-mail circulated to WIPO staff and obtained by Reuters, said: "I have decided to advance the process for nominating and appointing a director-general."

Countries would be asked to nominate his replacement for a selection committee to review in May 2008, "for appointment by the (WIPO) General Assembly at its next session in September 2008," he said.

Idris, who denies any wrongdoing, was re-appointed in 2003 for a six-year mandate that would have ended in November 2009.

LATEST BUDGET

His message to WIPO staff included an appeal for the agency's member states to endorse its latest budget, which seeks a 12 percent increase in spending over the next two years.

"I personally urge all concerned in the best interest of the Organization to proceed soon with the formal approval of the 2008-2009 program budget," he said.

"The member states and the employees of WIPO deserve to have an Organization that is led with the highest professional and ethical standards, and we believe that this renewal of leadership will bring new confidence and vitality to the Organization," U.S. ambassador Warren Tichenor said in a statement.

Idris was first elected to WIPO's top post in 1997. Diplomats said last year's audit questioned whether he could have had the 10 years of senior experience required for the post he applied for in 1982, given his real age at the time.

WIPO is mandated to protect adherence to intellectual property rules, trademarks and patents. Unlike other U.N. agencies, the 184-state body is largely self-financing through its patents' fees.

Former World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz was forced to resign last June amid an ethics scandal involving a high-paying promotion for his companion.

Post: #16
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: AnwarKing
Date: 12-07-2007, 08:36 PM
Parent: #1

Quote: i'm busy with my new born baby these days


على سبيل التحية ومبروك المولود... ولد ولا بنت؟ وسميتوه/ها منو؟

ونحن ننتظر مولودنا... نقرأ ما بين السطور يا جوك...

أنور

Post: #17
Title: Re: The Case of Kamil Idris
Author: JOK BIONG
Date: 12-07-2007, 09:56 PM
Parent: #16

Quote: على سبيل التحية ومبروك المولود... ولد ولا بنت؟ وسميتوه/ها منو؟

ونحن ننتظر مولودنا... نقرأ ما بين السطور يا جوك...

أنور


اخي انور
تحية لك
ابنتي المولودة هى( أشاي )اسم القديم المتجدد في تاريخ دينكا نقوك وسلسلة انسابهم الموجودة
في ابيي منذ قرون اي قبل دخول العرب السودان وظهور الاسلام.
لك تحية
جوك