Ban
Ki-moon
Undercounted
Haitians'
Deaths,
Censored
Press, Time
For Arrest?
By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Sixteenth in a
Series
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 31 --
In the final
days of Ban
Ki-moon's
decade as UN
Secretary
General,
covering up
genocides in Sri
Lanka, Burundi
and Yemen
and evicting
the Press
which asked
about (t)his
corruption,
Inner City
Press is
reviewing
Ban's end,
year by year.
See also this
Twitter
Moment.
In
2009, Ban
misspoke about
his history in
Sri Lanka, the
mass killing
in which he
ignored to
attend his son
Woo-hyun's
wedding, and
where his
son in law
Siddharth
Chatterjee had
previously
played an
active,
killing role.
While
Ban would
later evict
and still
restrict Inner
City Press,
in 2009 his
strategy was
to get it
removed from
Google News -
and it
happened
(though it was
later
reversed).
Here's Inner
City Press' report from
June 3, 2009.
And
now Ban threatens
to sue, for
ambition.
But
it's Ban who
has been sued,
for his UN
killing 10,000
people in
Haiti with
cholera, and
who could or
should be
arrested now
that his
immunity
expires, as he
drops the ball
(again) in
Times Square.
On December
31, 2016 while
the UN
Security
Council met
about Syria -
Ban didn't
deign to
travel the
fifteen blocks
south from his
free housing
to attend - UN
official Ross
Mountain gave
a tour. But
what has been
done for the
Haitians who
lost loved
ones and
breadwinners
to the UN's
cholera?
Nothing.
Ban's
attitude to
Haitians
became right
after the 2010
earthquake.
From Inner
City Press'
January 14
& 15,
2010 reports:
"UNITED
NATIONS,
January 14 --
A day after
the UN's death
count of its
personnel in
Port au Prince
at first
included a
single Haitian
staff member,
and then
dropped the
reference,
on Thursday
morning
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon
dropped all
reference to
nationalities
in his count
of the dead.
Inner
City Press
asked if the
UN's national
Haitian staff
have been
included in
the figures
the UN has
been giving
out, not only
of casualties
but even of
how many
people work
for the UN.
While
Ban insisted
that national
staff are
treated
"equally," the
figure thrown
around - that
11,000 people
work for the
UN's MINUSTAH
mission --
does not
include the
UN's national
staff.
In
response to
the question,
Ban referred
to notes and
said that the
UN has 1200
national staff
in Haiti. This
compares to
490
international
civilian
staff.
After
Ban left the
stakeout,
Inner City
Press asked
his spokesman
Martin Nesirky
to explain the
UN's reporting
of casualties.
Nesirky said
that the focus
has been on
reporting to
those with
international
interest.
UN's Ban at
stakeout,
national
Haitian staff
not in figures
He also said
that national
staff who
worked in the
UN
headquarters
in Port of
Prince were
somehow more
likely to have
already have
left the
building for
the day when
the earthquake
struck. Video here."
"UNITED
NATIONS,
January 15,
updated Jan 16
-- UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon will
fly to Haiti for a one-day trip on Sunday.
To publicize
his trip, Ban
will be
accompanied by
journalists
from France's
wire service
and television
station, and
in a surprise
to some, South
Korean media.
Several
journalists
who had put
their names on
the list to go
demanded to
know why they
were not
included,
while not only
South Korea
media but also
the UN's own
in house self
documentarians
were selected.
One
reporter,
representing a
major South
Florida daily,
says he was
told by Ban's
spokesman
Martin
Nesirky, this
is not like
selecting a
soccer team, I
don't have to
say how I made
choices,
remember, I'm
not new at
this job, I
was with
Reuters for
years.
When
pressed,
Nesirky told
the reporter
the criteria
included
multi-media
platforms,
"coverage of
the UN,"
circulation,
history of
covering the
region and
inclusion in
the directory
of the UN
Correspondents'
Association. "
UNreal - this group would later
move to get
Inner City
Press evicted,
then smash its
camera. This
is / was Ban's
UN. Watch this
site - and the
Free UN
Coalition for
Access, FUNCA.info.
In
2006 after Ban
was given the
job since he
was NOT “God's
gift to
humanity,”
even then he
was criticized
for close
business links
with Myanmar,
by Djoko
Susilo
among others.
As it
turned out,
Ban Ki-moon's
brother Ban
Ki-ho would do
mining and
other business
in Myanmar,
after being on
a “UN
delegation.”
Ban Ki-moon's
nephew Dennis
Bahn is said
to have used
his uncle's
name and
position while
trying to sell
real estate in
Vietnam.
The Bans have
yet to answer
these
questions. Here's
the
December 26 round-up
story by Inner
City Press.
Now the South
Korean media
have picked up
on Ban
Ki-moon's
nepotism as
well,
reporting
that just
after Ban
Ki-moon
"visited Korea
at the
invitation of
the United
Nations Global
Compact Korea
Association...
his son Ban
Woo-hyun was
recruited by
SK Telecom's
New York
office."
Inner
City Press has
been asking
and reporting
since 2009
about SK's
Chey Tae-won
being in the
UN Global
Compact, for
example here.
It was
in 2009 that
mass killing
by the Sri
Lankan army
against Tamils
in the North
was occurring.
Inner City
Press exposed
how Ban's
Secretariat
was hiding the
death figures;
then amid
pressure for
him to visit
Sri Lanka, Ban
declined in
order to
attend the
wedding of his
son Ban
Woo-hyun. See,
Inner
City Press of
May 11, 2009.
On the
morning of
December 28,
2016, Inner
City Press
asked Ban
Ki-moon's top
three
spokespeople
questions
including
"Please
state the date
and separately
content of the
Secretary
General's last
three
communications
with Chey
Tae-won or any
other official
or employee of
SK Telecom, SK
or any of
their
affiliates.
Please confirm
or deny that
the Secretary
General's son
Ban Woo-hyun
was hired at
SK Telecom."
Five hours
later, the
fully paid
spokespeople
closed their
office without
answering a
single
question, and
while trying
to keep
"closed press"
Ban's meeting
with New York
and US
officials.
This
is entirely
consistent
with what
Inner City
Press has
witnessed and
reported on,
leading to and
after Ban
Ki-moon's
ouster and
eviction of
Inner City
Press and
restrictions
since:
nepotism. Like
getting his
son in law
Siddharth
Chatterjee
hired in
Copenhagen
then giving
him the top UN
job in Kenya.
Add to it -
not (yet)
noticed by the
South Korean
media, that SK
Telecom's Chey
Tae-won, who
invited Ban,
was previously
convicted of
fraud, NY
Times here.
Another
NY Times, on
Ban's UN
censorship.
Here's
Chey Tae-won,
whose SKT
hired Ban
Ki-moon's son,
on UN TV,
here.
Ban
Ki-moon's son
Ban Woo-hyun
has worked for
"a Middle East
branch of a
New York-based
financial
company."
We'll have
more on this.
On
December 26 it
was reported
in South Korea
that even
while Ban
Ki-moon was UN
Secretary
General, he
received
$30,000 from a
businessman,
in a
restaurant. See here,
including Park
Yeon-cha (as
well as
Vietnamese
minister
Nguyen Dy
Nien) with
this quote:
""It
would have
been early
2007, shortly
after Ban took
office as
Secretary
General of the
United
Nations. New
York has a
restaurant
owner who
knows him
well. Park
called the
owner of the
restaurant and
said, "If Ban
comes to eat,
give me $
30,000 as a
gift to
celebrate the
inauguration
of the
secretary
general." In
fact, we know
that money was
handed to Ban.
""
Did
the UN's
Office of
Internal
Oversight
Services ever
look into
this? We're
still waiting
to hear from
them. As to
Ban Ki-moon's
spokespeople,
they have
refused to
answer Inner
City Press'
written
questions back
to November 25
about Ban
Ki-ho, etc.
Ban
Ki-moon has
largely been
immune from
accountability
for ten years,
due to a
mixture of
sycophantry
and, when seen
as necessary
in 2016,
censorship,
eviction and
restriction of
the
investigative
Press.
But in
2017...
It is
reported that
Ban Ki-moon
will push the
button to drop
the Times
Square ball on
New Years Eve,
seemingly
arranged by
NYC Mayor Bill
de Blasio's
relentlessly
pro UN Office
of
International
Affairs (which
never
answered
Inner City
Press about
any de Blasio
position on
Ban Ki-moon
having shirked
accountability
for his UN
bringing
deadly cholera
to Haiti.)
But the moment
that ball
drops, Ban
Ki-moon's
legal immunity
is over. We'll
have more on
this.
In
his first
year, 2007,
Ban Ki-moon bought in
numerous South
Korean
staffers.
Inner City
Press asked
and was told
there was only
one, then that
there were
five,
including
Kweon Ki-hwan.
Then
Ban's
spokespeople
including Choi
Soung-ha
chastised
Inner City
Press for
asking, and
demanded that
the names of
51 South Korea
staffers of
the
Secretariat be
removed from
Inner City
Press'
reporting.
Ban's
early
censorship,
which
culminated in
2016 with Ban
evicting Inner
City Press
through
Cristina
Gallach, audio
here, and
Inner
City Press'
camera being
smashed.
Inner City
Press even
before Ban's
Day 1 asked
about
financial
transparency.
It would end,
a decade
later, with
Ban refusing
to say who
paid for his
travel, even
what “carbon
offsets” he
supposed
bought.
On Ban's first
day at work,
after walking
in with Vijay
Nambiar who
would go on to
cover up
genocide in
Myanmar after
participating
in it in Sri
Lanka in the
White Flag
Killings, Ban
was asked
about the
death penalty
(for Saddam
Hussein) and
replied that
it is “up to
member
states.” His
first
spokesperson
Michele Montas
tried to
repair the
damage.
In
late 2016
Inner City
Press saw
Montas in the
UN, from the
“focus booth”
where it does
what work it
can after Ban
and his Under
Secretary
General for
Public
Information
Cristina
Gallach evicted
it from its
long time UN
office.
Meanwhile
Kofi Annan's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, who
played
a role in the
eviction,
is bragging
that he will
remain.
We'll have
more on this.