Title: DO Training
1United Nations
Department of Safety and Security (UNDSS)
2The Challenge
185 countries
5 Areas
98,431 UN employees
More than 300,000 dependants
Increasing number of High Risk countries
3Background
- The Department of Safety and Security was created
in response to three resolutions adopted by the
General Assembly over a three year period. - In resolution 56/255 of 24 December 2001, the
Assembly requested the Secretary-General to
conduct an evaluation of the United Nations
security system. - In its resolution 57/155 of 16 December 2002, the
Assembly requested the Secretary-General to take
the necessary measures to ensure that security
matters were an integral part of the planning for
existing and newly mandated United Nations
operations. - Lastly, General Assembly resolution 58/295 of 18
June 2004, requested the Secretary-General to
submit to the Assembly at its fifty-ninth session
a comprehensive report on the further
strengthening of the safety and security of
United Nations operations, staff and premises.
4Background
- Secretary-Generals Report to the General
Assembly Strengthened and Unified Security
Management System for the United
Nations-A/59/365 11 October 2004 - General Assembly Resolution A/RES/59/276
- Decision to unify
- UNSECOORD
- Safety and Security Service (SSS)
- DPKO Civilian Security
- Established the United Nations Department of
Safety and Security on 1 January 2005
5UNDSS Mission Statement
The Department of Safety and Security is
responsible for providing leadership, operational
support and oversight of the security management
system to enable the safest and most efficient
conduct of the programmes and activities of the
United Nations System
6A New Strategic Vision for DSS in 2009
- Provide worldwide security leadership for the
entire UN System. - Provide sound, well designed, and valuable
security programs and policies - Lean and capable security organization
- Coordination and collaboration critical to
success. - Risk analysis based policies and procedures not
risk avoidance. - Use of transparent and justifiable security
methodologies. - Common framework of accountability.
- Capacities to be developed in an evolutionary
approach. - Important to recognize that in spite of
best efforts to protect staff and premises it may
still not be enough to avoid or prevent tragic
events.
7Baghdad 2003
Algiers 2007
Hostage Incidents
8POLICY, PLANNING AND COORDINATION UNIT
Under Secretary General (USG)
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
COMPLIANCE AND MONITORING SECTION
DEPUTY USG
FIELD SUPPORT SERVICE
DIVISION OF HQ SECURITY AND SAFETY SERVICES
DIVISION OF REGIONAL OPERATIONS
DSS Structure
9Under Secretary General (USG)
POLICY, PLANNING AND COORDINATION UNIT
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
DEPUTY USG
COMPLIANCE AND MONITORING SECTION
DIVISION OF HQ SECURITY AND SAFETY SERVICES
PROTECTION COORDINATION UNIT
HQ UN SSS
Division of Headquarters Safety and Security
Services
UN OFFICES AWAY FROM HQ
REGIONAL COMMISSIONS
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIBUNALS
10Under Secretary General (USG)
POLICY, PLANNING AND COORDINATION UNIT
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
COMPLIANCE AND MONITORING SECTION
DEPUTY USG
DIVISION OF REGIONAL OPERATIONS
THREAT AND RISK UNIT
Division of Regional Operations
NGO LIAISON
CRISIS MANAGEMENT OPERATIONS UNIT
DEPUTY/SENIOR OPERATIONS OFFICER
COMMUNICATIONS CENTRE
MIDDLE EAST
PEACEKEEPNG OPERATIONS SPT. SECTION
EAST AFRICA
WEST AFRICA
ASIA - PACIFIC
EUROPE - AMERICAS
IRAQ
FIELD OPERATIONS (CSA / SA / CSO / COS / DSA/
FSCO )
11Under Secretary General (USG)
POLICY, PLANNING AND COORDINATION UNIT
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
DEPUTY USG
COMPLIANCE AND MONITORING SECTION
FIELD SUPPORT SERVICE
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT SECTION
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT SECTION
Field Support Service
CRITICAL INCIDENT STRESS MANAGEMENT UNIT
12POLICY, PLANNING AND COORDINATION UNIT
Under Secretary General (USG)
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
COMPLIANCE AND MONITORING SECTION
DEPUTY USG
DSS Structure
DIVISION OF REGIONAL OPERATIONS
FIELD SUPPORT SERVICE
DIVISION OF HQ SECURITY AND SAFETY SERVICES
NGO LIAISON
DEPUTY/SENIOR OPERATIONS OFFICER
INFORMATION MGMT SECTION
CRISIS MANAGEMENT OPERATIONS UNIT
PROTECTION COORD UNIT
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT SECTION
THREAT AND RISK UNIT
COMMUNICATIONS CENTRE
HQ UN SSS
MIDDLE EAST
PEACEKEEPNG OPERATIONS SPT. SECTION
CRITICAL INCIDENT STRESS MGMT UNIT
UN OFFICES AWAY FROM HQ
EAST AFRICA
WEST AFRICA
ASIA - PACIFIC
EUROPE - AMERICAS
REGIONAL COMMISSIONS
IRAQ
FIELD OPERATIONS (CSA / SA / CSO / COS /DSA/ FSCO
)
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIBUNALS
13Resources
- To provide security support in all countries
where UN has a presence -
- Headquarters 140
- Field Posts 305 international, national 398
- HQ Security Operations 1600
- Countries covered 185
- Countries where DSS has a presence 113
14DSS Global Deployment
15What do we buy
- Personal Protection Equipment
- Armoured Vehicles
- Armoured Office Accommodation Units
- Close Protection Equipment
- Perimeter Access Control
- Blast Mitigation
- Vehicle Tracking
- Medical First Response
- Communications
- Uniforms Accoutrements
- Ammunition
16All Goods and Services required by UNDSS are
procured through the United Nations Procurement
Division (UNPD) http//www.un.org/Depts/ptd/
17QUESTIONS?
18New Strategic Vision
- The Department of Safety and Security will
provide worldwide security leadership for UN
Secretariat entities and UN Agencies, Funds, and
Programs. Critical to and implicit in the
strategic vision is the recognition that this
unified security structure must implement sound,
well designed, and valuable security programs and
policies throughout a highly decentralized United
Nations system. DSS headquarters must be a lean
and capable security organization providing
guidance, policy, training, risk assessments, and
other security products that UN organizations and
security coordinators must be able to leverage
effectively in order to ensure the delivery of
security to their various constituents. This will
also avoid costly redundancies and conserve both
programme and security resources. Coordination
and collaboration on security programs and
policies at all relevant UN organizational levels
must be scrupulously observed. Risk analysis
based policies and procedures as opposed to risk
avoidance policies must be the security measure
for UN operations if critical programs are to
continue in security challenged environments. To
this end, a unified DSS security organization
must set the example. Security policies,
programs, and recommendations must be based on
transparent and justifiable security
methodologies, designed to find ways for UN
programmes to remain in countries and succeed in
their missions. A common and fully coordinated
framework of accountability will provide
realistic guidance on security roles and
responsibilities. These capacities will be
developed in an evolutionary approach, thereby
ensuring that additional resources are properly
absorbed and utilized and recalibrated against
actual requirements. Nevertheless, it must still
be recognized that organizational and individual
best efforts to protect staff and premises may
still not be sufficient to avoid or prevent
tragic events, when faced by determined and
resourceful opponents intent on disrupting or
damaging United Nations personnel and activities.