
Faced with financial irregularities at its Information Center in Tokyo, the head of the UN's Department of Public Information, Kiyotaka Akasaka, called an impromptu press briefing on less than three hours notice. The reporters who were informed of and invited to Mr. Akasaka's briefing by the UN Media Accreditation and Liaison Unit were only from Japanese media outlets, which share a communal office on the 4th floor of UN headquarters. Upstairs in his 10th floor office overlooking the East River, Mr. Akasaka emphasized that the Information Center, called a UNIC, had paid contractors in advance based on falsified invoices. One of the contractors went bankrupt, and its successor is now reportedly demanding a second payment. Akasaka spoke to the reporters he had invited, buttressed by two auditors from the UN's Office of Internal Oversight Services. The goal, according to several interviews conducted in the UN on May 21 by Inner City Press, appeared to be to rebutting as well as containing the scandal, limiting it to media in Japanese. But the UNIC in Tokyo represents the entire UN and its worldwide contributors, as does the Office of Internal Oversight Services...When Mr. Akasaka convened only Japanese media to speak about advance payments on falsified invoices at the UN Information Center in Tokyo, was he speaking in his personal capacity?...Regarding the Tokyo UNIC, a subtext to Mr. Akasaka's briefing was growing unrest reported against the director, Charmine Koda.
The story above is a few weeks old but I was looking for some background on this other story:
[floatr]

Journalist Charmine Koda has stepped down as director of the U.N. Information Center in Tokyo amid confusion over her contract renewal and what she called "harassment." Her resignation June 2 has embarrassed U.N. Department of Public Information officials in New York ahead of U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon's visit to Tokyo later this month. Admitting its reappointment notice was late, the department said it had asked Koda, 52, to stay on. Koda, a former TV newscaster, took the job in 2006. She said she faced "harassment" and was forced to quit after looking into inappropriate accounting practices at the Tokyo center.
The Yomiuri also carried this story but both accounts appear to leave out the real cause of the conflict. Either Koda was hounded out for uncovering money scandals or she was responsible herself for a failure of oversight and the UNIC was hoping to quietly dump her after Ban Ki Moon's visit.