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<classification authority="sudocs">GA 1.13:NSIAD-98-9</classification>
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 <title>United Nations: Status of Internal Oversight Services</title>
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<abstract>Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the operations of the
United Nations (U.N.) Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS),
focusing on whether OIOS: (1) is operationally independent; (2) has the
necessary resources to carry out its mission; and (3) has written
policies and procedures in place for conducting its work, following up
on its recommendations, and providing confidentiality to informants and
protecting whistleblowers from possible reprisal. GAO noted that its
lack of direct audit authority resulted in certain limitations and
restricted its ability to fully address the review objectives.&lt;p/&gt;GAO noted that: (1) OIOS is the internal oversight mechanism for the
U.N. Secretary General; (2) although OIOS had some start-up and early
operational problems, many of these seem to have been resolved; (3) this
was difficult to do in an organizational environment that operated
without effective internal oversight mechanisms for almost half a
century; (4) in less than 3 years, OIOS has assimilated four
preexisting, internal oversight units from the Office for Inspections
and Investigations and, for the first time, hired professional
investigators and provided other resources for an investigations unit in
the United Nations; (5) OIOS&apos; mandate, the Secretary General&apos;s Bulletin
establishing OIOS, and OIOS&apos; implementing procedures provide the
framework for an operationally independent, internal oversight mechanism
for the U.N. Secretariat; (6) however, without access to all its audit,
inspection, and investigation reports, working papers, and other records
and files related to OIOS work, GAO could not test whether OIOS
exercised its authority and implemented its procedures in an independent
manner; (7) one issue that may affect the appearance of OIOS&apos;
independence involves how it has implemented its reporting mechanism;
(8) OIOS has provided only 39 of its 162 various reports to the
Secretary General and the General Assembly or its committees; (9)
initial concerns about inadequate budget and staff levels have been
addressed; (10) since its establishment, OIOS&apos; regular U.N. budget has
increased from $12 million to $18.6 million (proposed for 1998-99), and
its authorized positions have increased by 18, to a total of 123; (11)
OIOS&apos; audit division and the Investigations Section have developed
written auditing and investigative policies and procedures; (12)
however, the Central Monitoring and Inspection Unit and the Central
Evaluation Unit do not have comparable manuals; (13) each OIOS unit
tracks its recommendations and is responsible for determining when they
should be closed out; (14) in its 1995 and 1996 annual reports, the
Under Secretary General (USG) for Internal Oversight Services estimated
OIOS had identified $35.5 million in potential recoveries and realized
$19.8 million in savings and recoveries; (15) OIOS&apos; Investigations
Section has established procedures and developed guidance, which it has
publicized throughout the United Nations, for ensuring informants&apos;
confidentiality and protecting whistleblowers from reprisal; and (16) in
discussions with the USG for Internal Oversight Services, GAO suggested
several ways to enhance OIOS&apos; future operations.</abstract>
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<identifier type="preferred citation">GAO/NSIAD-98-9</identifier>
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<note>Letter Report</note>
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<subject>
 <topic>International organizations</topic>
 <topic>Internal audits</topic>
 <topic>Auditing procedures</topic>
 <topic>Whistleblowers</topic>
 <topic>Internal controls</topic>
 <topic>Audit reports</topic>
</subject>
<relatedItem type="isReferencedBy">
 <titleInfo>
  <title>United States Public Law 236 (103rd Congress)</title>
</titleInfo>
 <identifier type="public law citation">Public Law 103-236</identifier>
</relatedItem>
<relatedItem type="isReferencedBy">
 <titleInfo>
  <title>United States Public Law 208 (104th Congress)</title>
</titleInfo>
 <identifier type="public law citation">Public Law 104-208</identifier>
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