World Bank: Anatomy of a criminal tribunal
Taye Abayre
2013-02-14, Issue 616

The World Bank and its Tribunal need to be held accountable for the systemic
and prolonged violation of human rights of its employees of African descent
- a crime condemned by a multitude of international human rights
instruments. The Bank's immunity towards these employees should be waived
and they should be given another avenue to access justice.

As an international organization, the World Bank enjoys sovereign immunity.
This means staff members with claims against the Bank cannot take their case
to court. The purpose in granting this immunity in the first place was to
protect the international organization from being unduly influenced by a
member nation when it conducts its activities. Also, staff wanting to settle
disputes were to benefit from receiving uniform and predictable outcomes
from one judicial body rather than different staff resorting to their
different national courts for different outcomes. Still, legal scholars say
that the grant of immunity to international organizations like the World
Bank is subject to `conditionalities.' If the Bank infringes employees'
right of access to justice or if the Bank's Tribunal does not effectively
protect their right to fair and impartial justice, immunity is waived.

World Bank employees are confined to an internal justice system the pinnacle
of which is an Administrative Tribunal. Over the years, several studies have
found the Bank's justice system lacks credibility, including studies by the
US government (1999), the World Bank (1999 and 2003), the World Bank Staff
Association (2005), and Government Accountability Project (2009).

More recently, this forum has carried several articles alleging systemic
racial discrimination against the World Bank and the denial of due process
by the Bank's Administrative Tribunal. Racial discrimination and the denial
of due process to victims of discrimination constitute human rights
violations. The articles that appeared in this forum have been reproduced or
tagged in over 100 print and online outlets in Africa, Asia, Europe, and
North America. This interest testifies to the seriousness of human rights
violation against Blacks in an institution that is purportedly leading the
global effort to end poverty in Africa. Through it all, the Bank has
retreated deep into its shell with deafening silence.

The most interesting explanation I have heard is that the Bank is not
responding because it has outsourced the responsibility of justifying the
unjustifiable to the Administrative Tribunal. It has an `unimpeachable'
alibi of convenience in a Tribunal that the Bank itself `hires' and entrusts
with an unimpeachable final say on staff charges against it. `It is
Kafkaesque in its construct and Mugabean in its delivery,' as one former
senior World Bank staff put it.

The majority of the World Bank's Tribunal judges are practicing lawyers and
law professors. Traditionally, lawyers take an oath of office to perform
their duties professionally in conformity with high standards of
impartiality and independence. On the face of it the way the Tribunal is
administered raises serious concerns about a potential conflict of interest.
First, the judges are selected, hired and paid for by the Bank. Second, the
judges serve a five-year term that is renewable for another term at the
discretion of the Bank. Third, Justice for Blacks, a group consisting of
current and former World Bankers, notes that `several of the Tribunal
judges, including the immediate past and the current President of the
Tribunal are also appointed by the World Bank President to serve as highly
remunerated reviewers of the Bank's International Centre for the Settlement
of Investment Disputes arbitral awards.'

ARE TRIBUNAL JUDGES NEGLIGENT OR CULPABLE OF HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATION?

This articles draws heavily on recent articles published on this forum and
extensive evidence compiled by Justice for Blacks amounting to hundreds of
pages. After extensively reviewing the evidence, it is hard to avoid drawing
the conclusion that the Tribunal's transgressions go profoundly beyond
simple negligence and constitute human rights violations, namely denying
victims of discrimination the security of justice.

IN VIOLATION OF ITS CARDINAL OATH: STRIKE ONE

One of the cardinal oaths lawyers and judges take is `to never seek to
mislead by any artifice or false statement of fact or law.' This is an oath
the Tribunal and the Bank's high-powered lawyers systematically and
routinely violate with intent to deny due process to victims of racial
discrimination.

In 2007, an African filed a complaint with the Bank's Appeals Committee, a
lower court of sorts, presided over by peers of the accuser and the accused.
According to Justice for Blacks, the Appeal Committee that was chaired by
the current vice president for the Middle East and North Africa (MENA)
region reached two verdicts: official and informal. The official verdict was
to reject the case, but in the meantime it `strongly' recommended that the
Bank `immediately resolve the totality of the complaint through mediation.'

A report by Justice for Blacks alleges, the informal verdict, which was sent
to the Human Resources Vice President (HRSVP) confidentially, suggested that
the Committee decided not to rule in favor of the aggrieved staff to avoid
creating a precedent in a racial discrimination case. The Committee urged
the HRSVP to take administrative actions to give the aggrieved staff
appropriate relief. The HRSVP rejected both the official and informal
recommendations in a signed memo and told the aggrieved staff he could take
his case to the Tribunal should he wish to challenge the Bank's summary
dismissal of his case.

The actions of these two vice presidents provide a glimpse of what has
sustained racial discrimination for decades. The MENA VP's first priority
was to protect the image and reputation of the Bank whilst only as a
secondary matter trying to secure justice for the aggrieved staff through
the `back door.' The HRSVP has it within his power to confer `de minimus'
justice. He chose to deny him even watered-down justice. When the staff took
his case to the Tribunal the Bank terminated him on trumped up charges.

During the Tribunal's proceedings, the Bank's high-powered lawyers falsely
claimed that the HRSVP tried to implement the Appeals Committee's
recommendations by giving the staff an option for reassignment, but the
aggrieved staff rejected it. The lawyers went a step further and accused the
aggrieved staff of rejecting the VP's gesture of wanting to offer relief.

The false claim was rebutted by the VP's own signed memo to the staff
member. More importantly, the Bank's Ombudsman (on record) rejected the
claim as being false, as did one of the Bank's HR managers (under oath
before the Tribunal). It was they who it was alleged had conveyed the VP's
gesture of reassignment to the aggrieved staff member. Ignoring the
Ombudsman's written statement and the HR Manager's sworn testimony the
Tribunal accepted the Bank's false assertion as a valid statement. In
breathtaking disregard of the weight of the evidence and for due process the
Tribunal stated in its judgment the staff `scorned the attempt to reassign
him when it was broached to him.'

IN VIOLATION OF ITS CARDINAL OATH: STRIKE TWO

The Bank's lawyers' brazen disregard for the truth shown above is not an
exception but epitomizes what has become routine and systematic perversion
of justice. In protecting the Bank against allegations the Bank's lawyers go
as far as submitting falsified personnel records. One example on record in
the public domain is the case of a former senior World Bank lawyer, Karen
Hudes. Ms. Hudes, an American citizen and a graduate of Yale law school,
withdrew her complaints after the Tribunal accepted a forged HR document
submitted by the Bank's lawyers as admissible. She states the forgery was
badly done, `with whiteout marks clearly visible to the naked eyes.'

In another case, the Bank allegedly falsified a staff member's HR record to
justify its decision to get rid of him through redundancy. In this case the
Bank admitted discrepancies in the HR record of the staff but claimed it was
an honest error. The staff contended the Bank conveniently made `a large
number of `errors' everywhere in [his] HR files.' In Decision No. 227
(2000), the Tribunal found the Bank's decision an abuse of discretion and
ordered the Bank to reinstate him. In the event the Bank did not like the
reinstatement decision, the Tribunal gave the Bank an option to pay the
aggrieved staff 18 month salary in lieu of reinstatement. The Bank that was
found guilty of abusing its discretion was given an option. The Bank chose
to get rid of him.

The third case involves AI v. World Bank (2010). The Bank told Dr. AI that
he could not be appointed global manager of an international program because
`Europeans are not used to seeing a black man in a position of power.' After
Dr. AI filed discrimination claims before the Tribunal, the Bank erased his
managerial track record from his employment history and claimed he was an
excellent technical staff, but had no managerial experience to be appointed
global manager. What makes this brazen act outrageous is that during the
Appeal Committee's hearing the Bank is on record acknowledging that he was
an outstanding deputy global manager of a major international program. The
Tribunal had the transcript of the Appeals Committee hearing before it. In
addition, over a dozen officials, including heads and chief economists of
international organizations, wrote testimonials and references rejecting and
correcting the Bank's false assertions, but the Bank stood firm armed with
forged documents. The Tribunal ignored the evidence and allowed the Bank's
perjury to stand.

The Government Accountability Project reviewed the Tribunal's judgment and
concluded:

`The Tribunal violated Appellant's due process rights and failed to hold the
Bank accountable for systematic and significant misrepresentations of fact.
The Tribunal not only allowed instances of false testimony and written
submissions to stand, but rendered them material by basing its judgment on
them as if they constituted valid evidence. `

Having reviewed the case, the Staff Association stated `several aspects of
the Bank's internal justice system are broken.' The egregious nature of the
Tribunal's judgment compelled the US Treasury and the US Executive Director
to the World Bank to take unprecedented steps and got involved, but to no
avail.

IN VIOLATION OF ITS CARDINAL OATH: STRIKE THREE

As noted above, the Bank deleted Dr. AI's management experience from the
record and presented him as a technical staff without management experience.
Dr. AI presented a copy of his official HR record showing his stellar global
management experience. Conspicuously, in its judgment the Tribunal
surgically removed all references to his management experience from the
evidence that he submitted. Its judgment read `The Tribunal observes that in
the Applicant's 2005 OPE [Overall Performance Evaluation], the Director,
DECDG, praised the Applicant's performance in the following manner:'

`[The Applicant] continues to be a very strong performer .... I have no
doubt that he will continue to be a high performer and use his excellent
technical and inter-personal and client skills.'

Here is the full text from the original record:

`[The Applicant] continues to be a very strong performer managing one of the
most critical statistical programs that the Bank has ever managed. I have no
doubt he will continue to be a high performer. and use his excellent
technical and inter-personal and client skills.'

The Tribunal continued:

`In the Applicant's 2006 OPE, the Director commented that: `[The Applicant]
brings much value to our work and I have the highest regards for his
expertise and for his dedication and hard work.'

Here is the full text from the original record:

`The Applicant has multiple roles in terms of the Bank's global management
of the ICP and handles critical and important functions dealing with
difficult project coordination, management, and technical issues. He is
praised for his many skills in handling difficult regional ICP
implementation cases. He brings much value to our work and I have the
highest regard for his expertise and for his dedication and hard work."'

It should be noted that the central point of contention that the Tribunal
was reviewing was whether the staff member had experience to be global
manager or if his experience was limited to technical tasks as the Bank
contended after falsifying his employment history. The Tribunal deducted
material statements from the evidence to bring it in line with the Bank's
perjured submissions.

IN VIOLATION OF ITS CARDINAL OATH: STRIKE FOUR

During a departmental reorganization led by the same director that the above
mentioned staff accused of racial discrimination, 60 percent of blacks were
terminated in 1995. In contrast, none of their white counterparts were
affected by the reorganization. None of the seven black staff members who
worked under the same director between 1996 and 2009 were ever promoted. The
aggrieved staff was assigned progressively increasing management
responsibilities without promotion in grade. In contrast, 50 percent of the
white staff was promoted by at least one grade, several by two grades. Table
1 shown below was submitted to the Tribunal and the World Bank did not
refute the data.

Table 1: Redundancy and promotion by race and
Place of origin in DECDG department

The evidence also showed that a 2003 World Bank study found that being black
is associated with a 36.3 percent reduction in the odds of being a manager
compared to that of their white counterparts. In comparison, other groups
such as South Asians face 13.1 percent reduction. The same study shows that
the salary scale for blacks is lower than that of South Asians, who are in
turn making less than their white colleagues. The darker the skin color of
the staff, the further he/she is down the Bank's professional ladder.
According to GAP's report, "Having reviewed the above, as well as evidence
specific to the aggrieved staff's case, the Tribunal concluded: `Considering
the record, the Tribunal does not see any pattern of prejudice.'

In addition to the above table, the same Appellant submitted in a second
discrimination/retaliation case two signed testimonies from his former
non-black colleagues supporting his claim of discrimination by the same
director. One wrote: `African colleagues represent a group that is treated
unfairly or openly discriminated against. Africans were virtually excluded
from promotion. This cannot be explained by any objective factor.' Another
wrote, had it not been for his intervention the Director's plan in 1995 was
to fire 80 percent of the Black staff. He, too, confirmed, the decision
could not be justified by any objective criteria. The Tribunal summarily
rejected the racial discrimination charges falsely asserting in its judgment
that `No new facts regarding racial discrimination, beyond his bare
assertions, have been provided by the Applicant.'

IN VIOLATION OF ITS CARDINAL OATH: STRIKE FIVE

In another case, a staff member was subjected to sustained and vicious
retaliation after he charged racial discrimination. He sought to
substantiate his emotional, psychological and physical sufferings before the
Tribunal with hard evidence including: (i) an extensive report from one of
the world's premier workplace psychological abuse experts warning the Bank
that the staff member was at a serious risk of suffering a heart attack or
even suicide, (ii) evidence of two emergency room visits, (iii) a report
from a prominent psychiatrist confirming that the staff was suffering from
clinical depression, (iv) evidence of prescriptions for depression
medications, and (v) a 2007 World Bank study stating that `Systematic and
prolonged bullying at work is highly injurious to the victim's health
resulting in stress, blood pressure, depression and heart attack. Many of
the harassment behaviors in the Bank fall squarely into the category of
office bullying that is more devastating than all other work-related stress
added together.' Nonetheless, the Tribunal's judgment claimed:

`The Applicant's heated rhetoric about the injury he perceives simply cannot
substitute for material evidence of his serious charges. . Naturally the
Tribunal cannot accept the Applicant's allegations of bullying and intense
psychological abuse, unsupported as they are by any evidence save his own
assertions.'

The apparent lack of willingness to consider evidence of physical and mental
suffering of a defenseless staff is perhaps more disturbing than the
Tribunal's denial of having such evidence before it. As a recent article by
Justice for Blacks noted, victims of discrimination spend upwards of
$100,000 in legal fees hoping for justice, but end up seeing their evidence
ignored and their pursuit of justice robbed by the very people who are under
moral and legal obligation `to never reject the cause of the defenseless or
oppressed.'

IN CONCLUSION

In 2009, after extensively examining the Tribunal's judgment on racial
discrimination cases, the Government Accountability Project documented that
the Tribunal failed to find discrimination in any of the racial
discrimination cases that it reviewed over 12 years. The report went on to
note, `Given that a series of studies have found systemic discrimination
within the institution, and that the Bank's data show racial differentials,
this record at the Tribunal is disturbing.' According to Justice for Blacks,
since 2009 the Tribunal has rejected all seven racial discrimination claims
it has reviewed, maintaining its 100 percent rejection rate.

The evidence Justice for Blacks has compiled against the Tribunal is
overwhelming. The evidence is both qualitatively and quantitatively beyond
anecdotes and simple patterns. As they say, one is an incident, two is a
coincidence and three establishes a pattern. When there are dozens of such
verdicts the `pattern' becomes a certain signature `modus operandi' that
simply cannot be ignored. The question is: what happens when Tribunal judges
systematically violate the human rights of people with no other access to
justice?

In its petition on change.org, Justice for Blacks asks two rhetorical
questions: `Are people of African origin protected against racial
discrimination by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR),
international human rights conventions, and by the US Constitution? Are
people of African origin entitled without any discrimination to equal
protection of the law, as stated in the UDHR?' If the answers to both
questions are `Yes' the World Bank and its Tribunal need to be held
accountable for the systemic and prolonged violation of human rights - a
crime condemned by a multitude of international human rights instruments.
Meanwhile, the Bank's immunity towards these employees should be waived and
they should be given another avenue to access justice.

* Taye Abayre is a former Ethiopian Diplomat, resides in the US. He may be
reached at [email protected] <mailto:tabayre%40yahoo.com> 

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