Ethiopia
Airlines Flight 302 to Nairobi
Crashed With UN Staff and
Nationality Breakdown Here RIP
By Matthew
Russell Lee, CJR Letter
PFT Q&A
UNITED NATIONS
GATE, March 10 – Ethiopia
Airlines Flight 302 from Addis
Ababa to Nairobi has crashed,
with eight crew members and
149 passengers on board,
reportedly among them UN staff
and diplomats on their way to
the the UN Environment
Assembly in Kenya. Now with
the number of four UN
passports being cited, there
is this breakdown by
nationality: 32 Kenyan, 18
Canadians, 9 Ethiopians, 8
Americans, 8 Chinese, 8
Italians, 7 French, 7 UK, 6
Egyptians, 5 Dutch, 5 German,
4 India, 4 Slovakians, 3
Austrians, 3 Swedes, 3
Russians, 2 Moroccans, 2
Spain, 2 Israel and 2 Poland.
There is talk of pilots having
complained about the plane
ever since it was delivered by
Boeing; some questioned that
it was the Prime Minister of
Ethiopia and not the airline
who first announced the crash.
But from UN Secretary General
Antonio Guterres, and wider
Secretariat, still nothing.
Nothing at all, for hours....
When Helen Clark who ran an
open campaign for Secretary
General won by the
significantly less open
Antonio Guterres spoke about
drugs near the UN back on 19
November 2019, Inner City
Press went to ask and cover
it. On the panel also were two
UN officials, Craig Mokhiber
of the office of Michelle
Bachelet and Simone
Monasebian, the New York
Director of the UN Office on
Drugs and Crime. Ms Monasebian
recounted how some member
states were prepared to break
consensus on a paragraph on
harm reduction in the annual
resolution in the UN's Third
Committee so that paragraph
was removed. Inner City Press
when called on asked the panel
about the Security Council's
heavy handed and military
approach to drugs, for example
in Afghanistan, and asked for
more detail on the Third
Committee which it for 138
days has been banned from
accessing by UNSG Guterres.
Ms. Monasebian noted that
beyond Afghanistan the
Security Council addressed
drugs from 2009 under the
Presidency of then Council
member Burkina Faso through
2014. Mr. Mokhiber said that
military approaches are
counter productive. And Helen
Clark when she spoke
chided the shrinking of civil
society space and attacks on
journlists including exclusion
from the UN across the road.
Video here.
It was appreciated, as were
the event's hosts. Also on
panel was Ann Fordham of IDPC
and Moderator Jimena Leiva
Roesc. The US sponsored and
strong-armed statement of
September was panned, and Ms.
Fordham noted the US is not
even pressing it in Vienna.
There are relatively better
parts of the UN - from which
for now Inner City Press
remains entirely banned by
Guterres, without any due
process. What other candidate
would have done this? When
youth leaders from South Sudan
and DR Congo took questions on
October 26, it was across the
street from the UN and Inner
City Press went to ask and
live-stream. Video here.
It asked about the performance
of the UN Missions UNMISS and
MONUSCO. Emilie Katondolo of
the DRC's Young Women for
Peace and Leadership said
MONUSCO must do more to
protect civilians, giving the
killings in Beni as an
example. Inner City Press
before the October 26 noon
briefing it was banned from
for the 114th day in a row -
and which featured not a
single question on anything in
Africa - asked Spokesman
Stephane Dujarric and Farhan
Haq, as well as USG Alison
Smale who's banned it, "on
deadline, what IS the UN
doing? Also, from South Sudan
Susan Kyunon Sebit
William told Inner City
Press that UNMISS does not
sufficiently protect
civilians, particularly women,
citing Terrain Hotel etc. What
IS the UN doing? What did it
learn?" Apparently nothing -
these has been no answer. But
it was an interesting GNWP
event, with Lynrose Jane
Dumandan Genon from the
Philippines and Katrina
Leclerk from Canada, where she
says students in Manitoba have
partnered with the Eastern
Congo. Meanwhile today's UN
bans press. When "the Role of
Conventional Arms in
Preventing Conflicts" was
debated across First Avenue
frm the UN on October 25,
Inner City Press went, to ask
a question. Video here.
It asked UN Peacekeeping
official Thomas Kontogeorgos
what the UN has done about its
negligent loss of weapons and
ammunition - which Inner City
Press asked about IN the UN
before being banned as cover
up by SG Antonio Guterres and
his USG Alison Smale. Kontogeorgos
to his credit
answered, only
somewhat
evasively,
that DPKO
"provided
inputs" to the
Small
Arms Survey,
and now UNPOL
passes
information to
INTERPOL (the
disappearance
of whose head
Guterres has
said nothing
about, despite
written
questions from
Inner City
Press.). At
the end of the
IPI program,
Youssef
Mahmoud spoke
about the
elephant(s) in
the room,
selling arms.
Afterward Dr.
Mihaela
Racovita
of SAS told
Inner City
Press they are
trying to make
further
inroads with
DPKO, for
example with
the mission in
Mali. We hope
to have more
on this - the
lawless ban by
Guterres and
Smale, for
reporting on
UN corruption,
is not
helpful. But
we will not
stop. Back
on September 5, hours after in
the UN Security Council
chamber UK Ambassador Karen
Pierce said
she supported the morning's
meeting about Nicaragua due to
refugee flows, across the
street from the UN Inner City
Press asked her why this logic
didn't apply to the confict in
the former British Southern
Cameroons and the flight of
Anglophones from state
violence into Nigeria.
Periscope video here.
Pierce replied that a country
is less likely to end up on
the Security Council's agenda
if it is taking some positive
steps. But given 36 year
Cameroonian head of state Paul
Biya's torching of villages,
what are his positive steps? A
sceptic might point to the
natural gas deal he signed
with UK-based New Age, which
UK Minister Liam Fox
bragged around as showing UK
companies can still get deals
after Brexit.
Also
on the panel on the "Culture
of Peace," moderated by Kevin
Rudd, was Secretary
General Antonio Guterres' head
of policy planning Fabrizio
Hochschild. When Inner City
Press began a question to
Hochschild, who had spoken
with gruesome examples from
Colombia of the need for
opposing sides to humanize
each other though
“dignification,” Rudd cut it
off.
Stepping off the
crowded elevator at ground
level Inner City Press
endeavored to ask Hochschild
the questions, both Cameroon
and whether Guterres and his opaque
Global Communicator Alison Smale,
purporting to ban Inner City
Press from the UN for life
without once speaking with it,
should engaged in some
dignification. He declined to
answer -- declined to dignify
the question, so to speak --
then said “Ask Steph.”
It was a
reference to Guterres'
spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
who Smale has twice written
would answer Inner City Press'
question but who has refused
to for a full week.
This as
Inner City Press, already
banned from the UN for 64 days
amid its questions on
Guterres' inaction on Cameroon
with the country's ambassador
Tommo Monthe heading the UN
Budget Committee, has an
application pending to cover
the UN General Assembly as it
has for the past 11 years.
Dignification, indeed. We'll
have more on this.
***
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