51³Ō¹Ļ

ST/AI/2017/1

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  • Showing 1 - 10 of 86

    The Tribunal noted that, as stipulated in sec. 5.1 of ST/AI/2017/1, ā€œOIOS retains the ultimate authority to decide which cases it will consider and shall determine whether the information of unsatisfactory conduct received merits any actionā€.

    Accordingly, the Tribunal found that the contested decision was lawful.

    As the decision by OIOS not to open an investigation was found to be a lawful exercise of the Administrationā€™s discretion, there was no basis for the referral of this case to the Secretary-General for possible action to enforce accountability.

    The Applicantā€™s request for RC to prepare questions for the ACABQ members to ask the USG/OSAA about the issues that the Senior Managers had been contesting in the office was a breach of staff regulation 1.2(i) which provides that ā€œ[s]taff members shall exercise the utmost discretion with regard to all matters of official business. They shall not communicate to any Government, entity, person or any other source any information known to them by reason of their official position that they know or ought to have known has not been made public, except as appropriate in the normal course of their...

    Each of the three allegations were serious on their own. The compound nature of the allegations left no possibility for any other punishment than separation. The Organizationā€™s zero-tolerance policy also entails severe punishments for those who engage in harassment (see, for instance, the Appeals Tribunal in Conteh 2021-UNAT-1171, para. 41).

    The record indicated that the decision-maker weighed all factors, both mitigating and aggravating, before arriving at the contested decision. Since there was sufficient evidence that all factors were given due consideration, but that the aggravating...

    The Organization, and not the Applicant, is the aggrieved party in any alleged misconduct with respect to any staff memberā€™s possible noncompliance with 51³Ō¹Ļ financial rules and regulations.

    While the Applicant had an ongoing obligation as a staff member to report any suspected misconduct in this regard, he did not have a right to any information about an investigation or action taken in relation to it. Sec. 4.7 of ST/AI/2017/1 provides that ā€œ[u]nless expressly provided for in the present instruction or other administrative issuances, staff members and third parties are not entitled...

    It was undisputed and established by clear and convincing evidence that the Applicant engaged in several instances of outside activities. It was further undisputed that the Applicant was advised to seek authorization for her online activities. The Applicantā€™s challenge, therefore, is limited to the characterization of the established conduct as outside activities and, consequently, as misconduct.

    Whether the facts on which the disciplinary measure was based have been established by clear and convincing evidence

    Based on the evidence on record, the Tribunal found that the Applicant was aware that...

    The Trinunal found that the Applicantā€™s contest to the decision of 19 July 2021 to place him on ALWP was time-barred as the Applicant did not request management evaluation of that decision within the stipulated deadline. The Tribunal found that the subsquent decisions to extend the Applicantā€™s placement on ALWP were lawful.

    The Tribunal found that Applicantā€™s persistent refusal to complete the 2018/2019 e-PAS evaluations for staff members for whom the Applicant was the First Reporting Officer ("FRO") and engage with KJ constituted misconduct. The Tribunal further found that the Applicant...

    Applicantā€™s request for anonymization

    The Tribunal found that the instant case is not comparable to AAE 2023-UNAT-1332 as the Applicant only refers to theā€œharm this case has causedā€ him and the ā€œsensitive informationā€ referred to in the case without providing further reasons for the Tribunal to deviate from the principles of transparency and accountability. Therefore, the Applicantā€™s motion was denied.

    Receivability

    The Tribunal clarified that the Applicant's reassignment to a post reflecting his new P-5 level after demotion is a separate administrative decision for which the Applicant did not...

    The UNAT first considered the staff memberā€™s request for an oral hearing, and decided it was not necessary for the expeditious and fair disposal of his case.

    The UNAT observed that when the only persons present in a physical assault are the perpetrator and the victim, an oral hearing may be useful for reaching credibility findings. However, in this case, the UNAT noted that the staff member and his counsel agreed that they had no witnesses to present at an oral hearing and preferred to rely on the investigation report. In these circumstances, the UNDT did not err in not holding an oral hearing...

    The Tribunal found that in this case, the evidence adduced by the Respondent was neither clear nor convincing. Accordingly, the Tribunal held that the Respondent had failed to show that it was highly probable that the Applicant had committed the alleged misconduct and thus had failed to meet its burden of proof. Accordingly, the Tribunal decided to:

    a. Rescind the decision to separate the Applicant from service;

    b. Set the amount of compensation that the Respondent may elect to pay in lieu of implementing the rescission at two years net salary with interest at the US prime rate from...

    Regarding the first contested decision, the Tribunal held that the right to know the contents of the report, although summarised, is implicit in the right of a staff member to complain against third persons (right already acknowledged in Belkhabbaz, UNDT/2021/047 at para. 21) because this right includes the right to know the reasons for which the Administration did not punish the accused person.

    The Tribunal, therefore, concluded that the Applicant had a right to receive the report in full, with reasonable redactions, from the Administration. Therefore, the claim in question was granted.

    In...