Proposed budget of the Office of Internal Oversight Services under the support account for peacekeeping operations for the period from 1 July 2019 to 30 June 2020: Report of the Independent Audit Advisory Committee

A/73/768
English
date: 
2019

 

Seventy-third session

Agenda item 150

Administrative and budgetary aspects of the financing
of the United Nations peacekeeping operations

 

 

 Proposed budget of the Office of Internal Oversight Services under the support account for peacekeeping operations for the period from 1 July 2019 to 30 June 2020

 

 

Report of the Independent Audit Advisory Committee

 

 

 

    Summary

           The present report contains the comments, advice and recommendations of the Independent Audit Advisory Committee on the proposed budget of the Office of Internal Oversight Services under the support account for peacekeeping operations for the period from 1 July 2019 to 30 June 2020. The Committee is mindful that, in his reform initiative, the Secretary General called for, inter alia, strengthened accountability. The Committee is also aware that an effective oversight regime can foster a strengthened accountability mechanism. To achieve this, the Committee is of the view that it will require the Office to, inter alia, review its current business model with a view to making it more responsive to the changing environment, thus becoming more effective in the discharge of it function.

 

 

 

 

I.   Introduction

 

 

1.       The Independent Audit Advisory Committee presents herein its comments, advice and recommendations to the General Assembly, through the Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions, on the budget of the Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) under the support account for peacekeeping operations for the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019. The report is submitted in accordance with paragraphs 2 (c) and (d) of the Committee’s terms of reference (General Assembly resolution 61/275, annex).

2.       The Committee has a responsibility to examine the workplan of OIOS, taking into account the workplans of the other oversight bodies, and to advise the General Assembly thereon, to review the budget proposal of the Office, taking into account its workplan, and to make recommendations to the Assembly through the Advisory Committee. The Committee undertook its review of the OIOS work-planning process and the proposed budget for OIOS under the support account for peacekeeping operations for the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019 during its fortieth and forty-first sessions, held from 12 to 15 December 2017 and 21 to 23 February 2018, respectively.

3.       The Committee appreciates the efforts of the Office of Programme Planning, Budget and Accounts and OIOS in providing the Committee with the relevant documents for consideration. OIOS also provided supplementary information in response to various questions from the Committee.

 

 II.   Background

 

4.       The proposed financial resources for OIOS for 2019/20, as compared with 2018/19, are provided in table 1.

 

                            Table 1

                            Financial resources

(Thousands of United States dollars)

 

Approved 2017/18

Proposed
2018/19

Variance

Percentage of total budget

 

2017/18 budget vs. proposed 2018/19

(Percentage)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Internal Audit Division

16 164.7

16 976.7

812.0

5.0

55

Inspection and Evaluation Division

1 665.4

1 993.1

 327.7

19.7

6

Investigations Division

10  571.4

11 268.1

 696.7

6.6

37

Executive Office

 632.3

 620.5

(11.8)

(1.9)

2

      Total

29 033.8

30 858.4

1 824.6

6.3

100

 

Note: Budget figures provided by the Office of Programme Planning, Budget and Accounts, Peacekeeping Financing Division.

 

 

5.       As shown in table 1, the proposed OIOS budget under the support account for peacekeeping operations for the period from 1 July 2019 to 30 June 2020 is estimated at $30,858,400 (gross), which represents an increase of $1,824,600 (gross), or 6.3 per cent, above the prior year’s approved budget of $29,033,800 (gross). Upon enquiry, the Committee was informed that the increase was due mainly to a non-discretionary increase in relation to adjustments in standard salary, common staff costs and vacancy rates.

6.       The Committee recognizes that the consideration of the OIOS budget proposals with regard to the specific grade level of OIOS posts and requests for non-post resources falls more appropriately within the remit of the Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions. The review, comments and advice of the Independent Audit Advisory Committee will therefore focus on the scope of its own terms of reference with respect to the work-planning and budgeting process of OIOS. In accordance with its terms of reference, the Independent Audit Advisory Committee will submit the present report to the General Assembly through the Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions. The content of the report will be discussed with the Advisory Committee.

 

 

 

        III.   Comments of the Independent Audit Advisory Committee

 

 

             A.    Internal Audit Division

 

 

7.       In its previous reports, the Committee made a number of recommendations relating to the work of OIOS in general and the work-planning and budgeting process of the Internal Audit Division in particular. The Committee notes that OIOS continues to make an effort to implement most of those recommendations. The Committee also notes that the Division continues to employ residual risk as the basis for its workplan. In spite of a continued decrease in its share of the overall budget  of OIOS, from 57 per cent, as reported last year, to 55 per cent, the Division remains the largest of the three divisions of the OIOS budget under the support account.

 

                            Workplan implementation

 

8.       With respect to workplan implementation, the Committee was informed that, during the 2017/18 fiscal year, of the 86 assignments that the Division had planned to conduct, 73 were completed by the target date. This represents an 84 per cent completion rate, which was the same rate reported during the 2016/17 fiscal year. The Committee noted that, according to OIOS programme impact pathways, the Division’s workplan implementation target rate is 100 per cent of all assignments. The Committee was further informed that the shortfall in performance was attributed to: (a) the nature and complexity of some audits at United Nations Headquarters, which took longer to complete than initially planned; (b) comprehensive and complex audits in some missions, which required extensive consultations with missions and Headquarters officials; (c) vacancies in some missions, including the D-1 Peacekeeping Audit Service post in Entebbe, Uganda, which was vacant for most of the fiscal year 2017/18; (d) the thematic audit of education grants, which involved audit work in the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti (MINUJUSTH), the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) and the Kuwait Joint Support Office, which was consolidated into one report; and (e) the considerable information and communications technology (ICT) audit resources used in the audits of Umoja implementation in the Department of Management Strategy, Policy and Compliance, the Kuwait Joint Support Office, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan and the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq.

9.       The Committee continued to follow up with OIOS on the low rate of implementation relative to the key performance indicator. The Committee was informed that OIOS was in the process of reviewing that indicator because it considered the 100 per cent target to be unrealistic.

10.       With respect to the plan of OIOS to change its key performance indicator, the Committee acknowledges the constraints that can prevent OIOS from meeting its target. The Committee is also aware that, although targets are aspirational, they could give a false sense of accomplishment if set too conservatively. Therefore, in revising the indicator, OIOS should ensure that the right balance is struck. The Committee will continue to follow up on this issue at future sessions.

 

 

                                  Risk-based workplan

 

10.       In paragraph 26 of its report on the budget of the Office of Internal Oversight Services under the support account for peacekeeping operations for the period from 1 July to 30 June 2011 (A/64/652), the Committee recommended that the Division adopt more robust audit workplans, that are based on residual risk. The Committee was informed that the workplan for 2019/20 continued to be part of a three-year rolling plan and had been developed using a revised risk-based approach, which involved: the validation and update of audit universe/organization hierarchy; the identification of strategic and business objectives of all organizational units; the identification and assessment of key risks to the achievement of the objectives of all organizational units that could have an impact on their programmes, functions, structures, processes and initiatives; and clearer link or logical flow between organizational objectives, risks and selection of audit topics. OIOS indicated that the risk-ranked audit universe of auditable activities continues to be developed taking into account: the impact and likelihood of risks, and controls that exist to manage risk; previous oversight activities; and the results of ongoing interactions and consultations with various divisions, management, the Board of Auditors and the Joint Inspection Unit.

12.       Thus, with regard to the current resource requirement, the Committee was informed that the Division continued to enhance the risk-based work-planning process and concentrated its efforts on addressing cross-cutting issues (thematic audits). In that respect, the Committee was informed of the increased focus on and attention to: procurement, the enterprise risk management process, delegation of authority, data classification and privacy, troop and police personnel and equipment contribution.

13.       Accordingly, as shown in table 2, OIOS indicated that the Division planned to undertake 75 audit assignments related to peacekeeping operations for the 2019/20 fiscal year, as compared with 82 assignments during the 2018/19 fiscal year. This represents an overall decrease of seven assignments from the previous period. As shown in table 2, the biggest decrease (11 assignments) is in property and facilities management. According to OIOS, governance and strategy, followed by information technology, programme and project management and logistics, accounted for the largest number of audits.

 

Table 2
Trends in the number and distribution of Internal Audit Division assignments

 

 

 

Fiscal year

 

Variance between 2018 and 2019

Focus area

2011

2012

    2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

No. of assignments

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Logistics

13

16

        19

28

16

29

8

15

12

(3)

Programme and project management

12

17

        13

16

19

26

22

22

17

(5)

Property and facilities management

7

5

        15

9

20

17

10

14

3

(11)

Safety and security

14

4

          7

6

3

5

9

2

1

(1)

Human resources management

10

4

          8

17

18

9

11

12

7

(5)

Financial management

5

6

        10

12

4

4

8

2

2

0

Governance and strategy

8

10

          1

0

0

0

10

5

18

13

Information technology

3

3

          3

10

4

3

3

6

13

7

Procurement

1

6

          9

2

10

4

5

4

2

(2)

      Total assignments

73

71

        85

100

94

97

86

82

75

(7)

 

14.       The number of assignments has been decreasing since 2016. The Committee enquired about the reason for the continued downward trend.

15.       In response, OIOS indicated that the number of planned audits had been declining in line with the reduction in the number of approved posts resulting from liquidated or downsizing missions. The Committee was further informed that, during the 2016/17 fiscal year, the Division had expected to complete 97 assignments based on 86 approved posts. However, with the closure of the United Nations Operations in Côte d’Ivoire, and the downsizing of the United Nations Mission in Liberia and the transition of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti to MINUJUSTH, the number of assignments planned for 2017/18 was reduced to 86. This was also the case for the 2018/19 fiscal year, where assignments were further reduced from 86 to 82.

16.        With respect to the 2019/20 budget, in addition to taking into account the closure of MINUJUSTH and the downsizing of the African Union-United Nations Hybrid Operation in Darfur, the Committee was informed that OIOS had further reduced the target output to 75 assignments to also allow for more complex and comprehensive audits, which required additional time to complete. According to OIOS, most audits were now incorporating fraud risks, performance audit elements (e.g., economy, efficiency and effectiveness) and gender-related issues, which had increased the average number of days spent on each assignment.

17.       In response to its prior recommendations regarding the link between the Organization’s enterprise risks and its workplan, OIOS indicated that it continued to show how the Division’s workplans were guided by the Organization’s enterprise risk strategy. According to OIOS, 56 of the 75 assignments addressed one or more of the six critical risks of the Organization, with emphasis on ICT strategy, infrastructure and security, and strategic planning and budget allocation. Those two areas, together with human resources management and accountability, made up 50 per cent of the assignments. OIOS indicated that it would continue to consult with management, the Board of Auditors and the Joint Inspection Unit during the period, monitor the risks identified in peace operations, and, if required, revise the workplan on the basis of emerging risks and priorities.

18.       The Committee is cognizant of the significant reforms the Organization that is undertaking and is of the view that the way in which oversight bodies respond to those changes will be critical. The Committee therefore followed up with OIOS on their preparations for handling the various risks posed by these reforms, in areas such as delegation of authority, the shift in the focus of the Organization from ex ante control to post facto compliance and the introduction of the three lines of defence. OIOS indicated that it was mainstreaming the organizational transformational risks into its programme of work. A list of the Division’s proposed topics for the fiscal year 2019/20 is provided in annex I.

19.       The Committee continues to commend OIOS for the effort made to show how the Division’s workplans are guided by the Organization’s critical enterprise risk strategy and for conducting thematic audits. The Committee emphasizes that OIOS should continue to ensure that the choice of topics reflects a more strategic outlook on the Organization’s risks, including the risks associated with the ongoing management reform. The Committee plans on following up on this matter in future sessions.

 

Internal Audit Division budget proposal for 2019/20

 

20.       With respect to the 2019/20 budget proposal, as noted in paragraph 11, the Committee was informed that the development of the current risk-based universe of auditable activities took into account: the impact and likelihood of risks; the assessment of the effectiveness of controls to mitigate risks; risk scores and relevance to key organizational objectives or cross-cutting issues; the previous oversight activities; the results of interactions during the year with the Inspection and Evaluation Division and the Investigations Division; and the results of ongoing consultations with management, the Board of Auditors and the Joint Inspection Unit.

21.       According to the Division, the current risk-based planning paid special attention to: effectiveness and efficiency issues; emerging risks related to the Sustainable Development Goals; fraud management; ICT; and the Secretary-General’s ongoing reform initiatives and the recently developed top risks of the Organization.

22.       In that regard, the Division indicated that it had developed a list of audits that would address higher- and medium-level residual risks over the next three years. It had also identified audits to address high-risk, cross-cutting issues (thematic audits) for 2019/20, including topical and recurring themes. Some of the topical thematic audits that had been identified for auditing included the implementation of an environmental action plan; a gender affairs programme and gender mainstreaming; and time and attendance. Included in the recurring themes were areas such as fuel, procurement and contract management, assets management and movement control operations.

23.       The Committee was informed that, given the changes in mission mandates, the Division was proposing several configurations to its resource requirements, including: the redeployment of one P-5 post from MINUJUSTH to the Regional Service Centre in Entebbe, Uganda; the conversion of 10 general temporary assistance positions to regular posts; and a reduction of one post from MINUJUSTH, which is transitioning to a non-peacekeeping mission. According to OIOS, the impact of the above adjustments would be a net reduction of one post in the Division, from 84 to 83.

24.       In the light of the above, the Committee endorses the resource requirement for the Division as proposed by OIOS.

 

 

             B.    Inspection and Evaluation Division

 

                                                   IED Workplan implementation

 

25.       In paragraph 24 of its report on the proposed budget of OIOS under the support account for peacekeeping operations for the period from 1 July 2013 to 30 June 2014 (A/67/772), the Committee has recommended that, in order for the Inspection and Evaluation Division to ensure that its work is relevant to decision makers, it should, inter alia, finalize its reports in a timely manner. During the deliberations, the Committee was informed that two assignments were completed in 2017 and one in 2018 for the 2017/18 fiscal year. The Division also informed the Committee that for the 2018–2019 period, three assignments will be completed during the current period, and that two were planned for completion by June 2019. The Committee trusts that the Division will continue to sustain the effort to complete workplans on time.

 

                                                    Risk-based planning

 

26.       As was the case with previous budgets, the Inspection and Evaluation Division informed the Committee that its workplan continued to be risk-based and was centred on four major assumptions, namely: (a) the updating of the latest (2017) risk assessment; (b) the review of key documents, initiatives and significant developments in peacekeeping; (c) the consideration of the six critical risks identified in the Secretariat-wide enterprise risk management framework; and, (d) the high-level priorities of the peacekeeping operations for 2019/20.

27.       In paragraph 19 of its report on the proposed budget of OIOS under the support account for peacekeeping operations for the period from 1 July 2016 to 30 June 2017 (A/70/759), the Committee had expressed its concern that there was no demonstrated link between the six critical risks of the Organization and the risk assessment conducted by the Inspection and Evaluation Division. During the period under consideration, the Committee was informed that, of the six critical risks of the Organization, the Division considered four to be relevant to the Division’s evaluation work. Those were: organizational structure and synchronization; organizational transformation; strategic planning and budget allocation; and human resources strategy and management. The Committee was also informed that the delegation of authority in peacekeeping operations, which is part of the management reform, was included in the Division’s indicative plans for 2020/21. A list of those assignments is attached as annexes II and III.

28.       The Committee commends the Inspection and Evaluation Division for its effort to show how its workplans are guided by the Organization’s critical enterprise risk strategy, especially by providing the link between the workplan and the risks associated with the paradigm shift ushered in by the management reform.

 

Capacity gap analysis and budget proposal

 

29.       The Committee was informed that the Inspection and Evaluation Division needed to conduct six evaluations during the 2019/20 fiscal year, comprising four large evaluations, one inspection and one triennial review. In order to evaluate the six programmes, the Division would require 12 staff members at various levels; however, the Division has only 7 staff working on peacekeeping operations, leading to a capacity gap of 5 posts. To address the resource gap, the Division had called in the proposed 2019/20 budget for the reassignment of three posts from MINUSJUTH (one P-5 post from the Investigations Division and one P-3 post and one Field Service post from the Internal Audit Division) and the reclassification of the P-5 post from the Investigations Division to P-4 and the reclassification of the Field Service post to national General Service from the Internal Audit Division. This would help in addressing the shortage in evaluation capacity of missions but would leave a shortage of two staff members at the Headquarters in New York. According to OIOS, the implication of this gap was that Headquarters peacekeeping evaluations would be conducted by a single evaluator, without evaluation staff support.

30.       The Committee has expressed its concern regarding the disproportionately low staffing levels in the peacekeeping section of the Inspection and Evaluation Division as compared with the regular budget section. The Committee is also aware that the Secretary-General’s reform initiative is placing a lot of emphasis on results, making the role of the Division all the more critical. The Committee has noted the Division’s request for the reassignment of resources to augment its capacity to evaluate peacekeeping activities. The Committee also notes the decision of OIOS to maintain a zero-growth budget and commends the Office for taking practical steps to address the staffing situation of the Office as an entity, rather than in silos. Given the size of peacekeeping activities and the current staffing level of one P-5 post, four P-4 posts and two P-3 posts, the Committee endorses the reassignment of the resources from other Divisions of OIOS to the Inspection and Evaluation Division, as requested. 

 

 

             C.    Investigations Division

 

 

31.       In reviewing the support account budget of the Investigations Division, the Committee recalled the challenges that have faced the Division especially with regard to its operations and effectiveness. The Committee was also mindful of the Secretary-General’s reform initiative, in which, inter alia, he has called for strengthened accountability. The Committee believes that the services of the Investigations Division are all the more important in supporting the organizational reform initiatives.

32.       During the assessment of the budget of the Investigations Division, the Committee was informed that the Division’s workplan had been designed to continue to address two strategic objectives of the Division, namely:

(a) To build a harmonious workplace in which individual staff members could thrive in an atmosphere conducive to individual development and personal success as part of a diverse and high-performing team;

(b) to improve continuously both the capacity and capability of the Division to investigate and improve the quality and timeliness of its investigations.

 

                                                  Workplan implementation

 

33.       The Investigations Division reported that, to address the aforementioned objectives, the 2019/20 workplan focused on: people; investigations capacity-building; and the future. With respect to people, the Committee was informed that the Division was committed to attaining gender parity in the recruitment process and noted that female representation among Division staff overall had improved, from 39 per cent in May 2017 to 43 per cent in November 2018.

34.       With respect to investigations capacity-building, the Committee was informed that the Investigations Division had embarked on both internal and external training programmes. Internal training programmes addressed topics such as open-source intelligence, forensic interviewing of children, induction training and administration workshops. External training programmes included three courses delivered in New York, Geneva and Nairobi and four courses delivered in Entebbe, Montevideo and Kathmandu.

35.       With respect to the future, the Committee was informed that the Division’s workplan objectives for 2019/20 included addressing timeliness and quality, with a focus on sexual harassment, retaliation, sexual exploitation and abuse, fraud and corruption and digital forensics. The Investigations Division indicated that it planned to address aspects of the internal structure, such as its size, silos in the Division, the Secretary-General’s management reforms and strengthening and professionalizing the investigation process, including the case management system (also known as the central intake mechanism).

 

                                                    Workplan and resource requirement

 

36.       To achieve those objectives, the Committee was informed that the Investigations Division was proposing a redeployment of two posts, one P-3 and one national General Service, from MINUSJUTH to the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic, and the reassignment of one P-5 post from MINUSJUTH to the Inspection and Evaluation Division in Entebbe as a P-4 Evaluation Officer.

37.       Having reviewed the workplan of the Investigations Division and following subsequent clarifications from OIOS, the Committee endorses the resource levels as presented by OIOS.

 

 

         IV.   Conclusion

 

 

38.       The members of the Independent Audit Advisory Committee respectfully submit the present report, containing its comments and recommendations for consideration by the Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions and the General Assembly.

 

 

(Signed) Maria Gracia M. Pulido Tan

Chair, Independent Audit Advisory Committee

(Signed) Patricia X. Arriagada Villouta

Vice-Chair, Independent Audit Advisory Committee

(Signed) Natalia A. Bocharova

Member, Independent Audit Advisory Committee

(Signed) Richard Quartei Quartey

Member, Independent Audit Advisory Committee

(Signed) Janet St. Laurent

Member, Independent Audit Advisory Committee

 

Annex

 

Inspection and Evaluation Division proposed workplan for 2019/20 and indicative plans for 2020/21 and 2021/22.

 

 

Enterprise risk management critical risks

2019/20

2020/21 (indicative)

2021/22 (indicative)

 

 

 

 

Organizational structure and synchronization

United Nations support to Member States for the training of peacekeeping troops

Expected completion: December 2020

Disarmament, demobilization and reintegration programmes

Performance framework in peacekeeping

Organizational structure and synchronization, strategic planning and budget allocation and human resources strategy and management

United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic

Expected completion: December 2020

United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali

United Nations Interim Security Force for Abyei

Organizational structure and synchronization

Political affairs (including support for peace process and good offices function)

Expected completion: December 2020

Management reform (delegation of authority and peacekeeping operations mandate implementation)

Environmental management in peacekeeping missions

Organizational structure and synchronization, strategic planning and budget allocation and human resources strategy and management

United Support Office in Somalia

Expected Completion: June 2020

United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO)

United Nations Mission in South Sudan

Strategic planning and budget allocation and Human Resources strategy and management

Inspection of the efforts to increase female representation in military and police staff in peacekeeping personnel

Expected completion: June 2020

Inspection of the situational awareness system in peacekeeping operations

Inspection of internal communication in peacekeeping operations (both in the field and at Headquarters)

Organizational transformation

Triennial review of the implementation of recommendations in the 2016 OIOS report on the evaluation of the results of national capacity-building by United Nations police in the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti, the United Nations Operation in Cote d'Ivoire and MONUSCO

Expected completion: June 2020

Triennial review of implementation of recommendations in previous OIOS evaluation report Triennial review of implementation of recommendations in previous OIOS evaluation report
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