By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 31,
updated -- As
2013 ends at
the UN, the
question has
arisen why
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
statement on
tensions
between Japan
and Ban's
native South
Korea (and
China) was
given to
regional media
before the
Press which
had formally
asked a
question, and
why Ban's
spokesperson
has been
deflecting
questions
since.
The
answer,
proposed
exclusively to
Inner City
Press by
well-placed
sources in
South Korea,
involves Ban
Ki-moon being
in a poll for
the country's
2017
presidential
election, as a
candidate of
incumbent
Park's faction
of the ruling
Saenuri party.
Click here
for story on
that polling,
in Korean.
Last
week, Inner
City Press
asked Ban's
two top
spokespeople:
"on
South
Sudan, in
light of the
SG's response
at his last
stakeout,
please provide
his / the UN's
response to
the subsequent
report that
'The
Korean
side is now
accusing the
Japanese of
politically
using the
emergency
faced by
Korean troops
in South
Sudan, with
one unnamed
official
saying that
the Abe
government’s
linking of the
ammo supply to
its 'active
pacifism'
initiative was
a 'clear
political
provocation.'
Another
unnamed
official said
Korea had told
the Japanese
to handle this
quietly out of
fear that the
locals would
turn hostile
and attack
Korean troops
if word got
out that
they’d
received ammo,
but the
Japanese were
instead
turning this
into a big
story. Korean
government
officials are
also saying
that they
intend to
return all the
ammo to Japan
once Korean
ammo arrives
from Korea,
despite the
fact that the
Japanese said
they could
keep it.'"
But
the
spokesperson,
Martin Nesirky
and Farhan
Haq, never
answered this
question, or
even
acknowledged
receiving it.
While later a
"Note to
Correspondent"
about Ban's
position was
sent out, and
Inner City
Press reported
on it, it
turned out
that the very
same Ban
position had
been given out
to regional
media 13 hours
before.
This practice
is being
opposed in
2014 by the Free UN Coalition for Access, whatever
the motives of
the practice.
But
here, as also
illuminated by
Ban
spokesperson
Nesirky's
push-back at
questions from
Chinese media
on December
30, and
December 31
responding to
Inner City
Press' factual
question about
whether UNMISS
had been
contacted by
the South
Koreans before
the South
Koreans
contacted
Japan (and
also about
UNMISS'
relationship
with the
American
military or
bullet-holders),
there may be
more.
December
31 Q&A
video here,
and embedded
below.
The
theory, made
composite from
Inner City
Press' South
Korean
sources, goes
like this:
"South
Korean
peace keepers
receive
artillery fire
from hostile
forces ->
SK field
commanders
immediately
request
ammunition
shipment from
Japanese peace
keepers in the
vicinity ->
Japanese
cabinet
convenes an
emergency
meeting to
approve the
shipment ->
shipment goes
to SK ->
upon media
scrutiny (as
this could
mark a
landmark shift
in Japan's
overseas
defense
activity), SK
denies making
a direct
request to
Japan and
claims that it
was made
through UN
(UNMISS) ->
Japan refutes
and even
releases a
clip from
video conf
between SK and
JP units to
prove its
point -> UN
supports SK's
claim -> SK
explains that
the decision
was made by
field
commanders...
To put it
succinctly
[according to
this theory]:
Ban is
potentially
giving
political
cover for the
Park
administration
by insisting
on UN's role
in the
process."
So why
didn't Ban's
spokesperson
answer Inner
City Press'
initial
written
question last
week, or Inner
City Press'
in-person
December 31
question? Such
stonewalling
only gives
rise to more
questions, or
as here,
theories. Or,
when will it
and the other
so far ignored
questions be
answered?
Watch this
site.
Footnote:
as context for
most other
than Chinese
media on
December 30
not pursuing
this, consider
that the insider
United Nations
Correspondents
Association
has accepted a
large Samsung
television,
being
installed on
December 31.
UNCA's
2013 and 2014
president
Pamela Falk
claimed that
the TV does
not involve
any mission.
But even the
UN, when asked
by Inner City
Press and the
Free
UN Coalition
for Access,
admitted
that the TV
equipment went
from Samsung
to South
Korea's
Mission to the
UN to the UN
and then to
UNCA: it
involved the
South Korean
mission and
government.
We'll have
more on
this. [January 2
update, and
e-mail from
"UNCA Office,
here.]