Murky
UN Budget
Defended by
Gallach Press
Restrictions,
USUN, As
Burundi Tries
To Cut Mission
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 24 --
When amid
Press
questions
about UN
corruption Ban
Ki-moon and
his
Communications
chief Cristina
Gallach evicted
Inner City
Press from its
long time
shared office,
they not only
began
confining the
Press to
“minders” to
cover any
events on the
UN's second
floor,
including of
the UN
Security
Council.
Now the Ban
and Gallach
censorship
order has
prevented
Inner City
Press for the
first time in
years from
covering the
UN budget
process,
including on
human rights
and Burundi,
another of Ban
Ki-moon's
failures.
Still, while
outgoing US
Ambassador for
Management and
“Reform” Isobel
Coleman
who like
Samantha Power
did nothing
when Inner
City Press was
evicted from
the UN and
restricted
since offered
nothing but
praise for Ban
Ki-moon, Inner
City Press
though Banned
from the
General
Assembly was
able to obtain
and publish
Burundi's
ghoulish
proposal cut
what few
observers the
UN Security
Council
mandated. See
tweeted photo
here.
Coleman spoke
in a part of
the UN
building Inner
City Press can
still access
(it put up this Periscope video,
here); but
the Budget
approval took
place in the
General
Assembly hall
which Inner
City Press for
ten months and
counting can
only access
with UN
minders, of
which there
were none.
Coleman didn't
stay for the
final vote.
Who cares,
right?
For years
Inner City
Press has been
virtually
alone in
covering the
late night
Fifth (Budget)
Committee
session in
which billions
of dollars are
carved up. But
in 2016 for
the first
time,
following
Cristina
Gallach's
retaliatory
eviction order
and ghoulish
restriction
regime of
minders and
the putting
off of pass,
Inner City
Press could
not cover the
budget and
other UN news
like the
Palestine
settlements
draft.
By seizing
Inner City
Press' long
time office --
and awarding
it to an Egypt
state media
Akhbar al Yom
whose
correspondents
Sanaa Youssef
rare comes to
the UN and
never asks
questions --
Gallach and
Ban have made
so that Inner
City Press
cannot enter
the UN after 7
pm. But that,
of course, is
when the
budget process
happens.
This year, for
example,
Burundi is
trying to cut
the funds for
human rights
observers and
the UN mission
the Security
Council
mandated but
has yet to
deploy. Inner
City Press
covers these,
but was Banned
from covering
the process by
Ban and
Gallach. This
is a cover up.
Meanwhile
Gallach is
showing her
true colors
with article
such as that
“amateurs”
killed
journalism.
Really?
Energetic
online media
that actually
covers UN
corruption is
a threat to
deadbeat
stenography or
non-existent
journalism
like that of
Akhbar al
Yom's
correspondent?
Gallach is the
wrong person
to have
control of the
UN Department
of Public
Information.
She also did
no due
diligence on
Macau based
businessman Ng
Lap Seng in
the John Ashe
case, and is
responsible
for the UN's
Wonder Woman
fiasco. She
must go.
Note that on
December 16,
UN/CA thugs
smashed Inner
City Press'
camera as it
broadcast in
front of a
garish Wall
Street event,
here;
Gallach has
viewed that,
as she
prepared to
put another
state media in
UN In House
television, as
she did
Arirang to
ingratiate
herself to Ban
Ki-moon.
Gallach must
go; UN
censorship
must end.
Ban's and
Gallach's
stripping
Inner City
Press of
resident
correspondent
accreditation,
which Gallach
is quoted
by other Under
Secretaries
General as
saying would
last “only”
for four
months but
is now at nine
months and
counting,
means that
Inner City
Press cannot
enter the UN
at all on
Saturday, like
December 3
when the Syria
draft was
negotiated.
This is
targeted
censorship,
and it must
end.
Here for now
is the
"operative"
conclusion of
the draft GA
resolution:
1. Demands an
immediate and
complete end
to all
indiscriminate
and
disproportionate
attacks on
civilians;
2. Further
demands the
immediate
cessation of
hostilities,
as described
in Security
Council
resolution
2268 (2016),
as well as
safe and
unhindered
humanitarian
access
throughout
Syria by the
United Nations
and its
implementing
partners;
3. Demands
that all
parties to the
Syrian
conflict, in
particular the
Syrian
authorities,
immediately
comply with
their
obligations
under
international
humanitarian
law and
international
human rights
law, as
applicable;
4. Further
demands that
all parties to
the conflict
fully and
immediately
implement all
the provisions
of Security
Council
resolutions
2139 (2014),
2165 (2014),
2191 (2014),
2199 (2015),
2254 (2015),
2258 (2015),
and 2268
(2016);
5. Calls for
an inclusive
Syrian-led and
Syrian-owned
political
transition, in
accordance
with the
Geneva
Communique of
30 June 2012
and Security
Council
resolution
2254 (2015)
leading to a
genuine
political
transition
that meets the
legitimate
aspirations of
the Syrian
people and
enables them
independently
and
democratically
to determine
their own
future,
including
through the
establishment
of an
inclusive
transitional
governing body
with full
executive
powers, formed
on the basis
of mutual
consent while
ensuring
continuity of
governmental
institutions,
and urges the
representatives
of the Syrian
authorities to
engage in
these
negotiations
with the
Syrian
opposition in
good faith,
and in this
respect
expresses its
full support
for the
Special
Envoy’s
efforts
towards this
end;
6. Emphasizes
the need for
accountability
for crimes
involving
breaches of
international
law, in
particular of
international
humanitarian
law and human
rights law,
some of which
may constitute
war crimes or
crimes against
humanity,
committed in
the Syrian
Arab Republic
since March
2011, through
fair and
independent
investigations
and
prosecutions
at the
domestic or
international
level;
7. Requests
the
Secretary-General
to report on
the
implementation
of the present
resolution,
including on
the
implementation
of the
cessation of
hostilities,
as described
in Security
Council
resolution
2268 (2016),
the extent to
which all
parties to the
Syrian
conflict, in
particular the
Syrian
authorities,
are complying
with their
obligations
under
international
humanitarian
law and
international
human rights
law, the
implementation
of relevant
Security
Council
resolutions,
and progress
towards a
genuine
political
transition,
within 45 days
of its
adoption;
8. Calls upon
the Security
Council to
reassume
responsibility
for the
maintenance of
international
peace and
security by
taking
measures to
address the
conflict in
the Syrian
Arab Republic.
Ban and
Gallach also
denied Inner
City Press a
place to work,
and the
possibility to
cover many UN
meetings
including on
November 29 a
meeting of the
UN “Committee
on the
Inalienable
Rights of the
Palestinians”
addressed by
Deputy
Secretary
General Jan
Eliasson - and
later, a
related event
of Palestinian
embroidery
addressed by
USg Jeff
Feltman.
In order to
get to the
morning
meeting, Inner
City Press
unlike the
other
correspondents
present and
not present in
the UN Press
Briefing Room,
or even though
always absent
like Egyptian
state media
Akhbar al
Yom's Sanaa
Youssef, being
rewarded for
now with Inner
City Press'
office, was
required to
get a minder.
Even
then, while
other passed
freely through
the turnstile,
UN Security
demanded to
know why Inner
City Press
wanted to go
onto the
second floor.
This is
targeted
censorship.
Once in front,
Inner City
Press even
with a minder
was able to learn some
things -
until it was
time to have
to leave, with
the meeting
still ongoing.
(Here's
just one
example of
Inner City
Press' Middle
East coverage
from before
Gallach and
Ban decided to
restrict Inner
City Press'
access, this
is from
October 2015.)
Other favored
correspondents
continued to
move freely,
not even
covering the
meetings, just
drinking
coffee. This
is the
targeted
censorship
regime of Ban
and Gallach,
right in
midtown
Manhattan.
UNreal - and
hypocritical,
when compared
to Ban's and
Gallach's
unit's
statements
about West
Bank
journalists.
In the evening
embroidery
event, while
the speeches
didn't start
until after
6:40 pm, Inner
City Press had
to leave
before 7 pm
under the
censorship
order of
Cristina
Gallach -- who
was there
present,
nodding at
references to
embroidery but
not having
answered, in
four days, whether
the UN paid
for her to go
get a personal
award in
Catalonia.
She turned,
not too
friendly - but
she is the one
who destroyed
DPI by turning
it into a
vehicle to
evict and
restrict the
Press, for
nine months
and counting,
for daring to
look into the
Ng Lap Seng
bribery case
and her role
in it - later
affirmed by
the
OIOS' own
audit. But
sure, she's
for
Palestinian
journalists,
and is a
journalist
herself - on
the UN dime?
We'll have
more on this.
On November 28
Inner City
Press was
similarly
hindered from
covering from
a UN Security
Council
meeting in the
Trusteeship
Council Chambe
sponsored by
Senegal and
Spain, set to
be President
of the
Security
Council in
December the
last of its 24
monts on the
Council, on
the topic of
cyber
security.
Inner City
Press was
required by
the order of
Spain's
highest UN
official
Cristina
Gallach to
have a minder
to cover
outside the
meeting, a
minder who
stayed six
feet away
throughout.
The meeting
was said by
Spain to be
“open” but was
not on the UN
Webcast run by
Gallach's DPI
- it was only
on “EZTV” for
insider
journalists
not evicted by
Gallach.
It turns out
that an
obvious issue,
the alleged
hacking of
elections, was
not even
mentioned in
the meeting.
Reviews
afterward,
with minder,
were far from
stellar, as
were
predictions
for December.
We'll have
more on this,
much more.
While with
Gallach's
minder, Inner
City Press was
able to learn
of a memorial
service for
November 29 in
the ECOSOC
chamber for
Joseph Verner
Reed; a UN
official came
by to chide
Inner City
Press was
asking when
the last time
was that Ban
Ki-moon spoke
with his
brother Ki-ho,
who had done
mining in
Myanmar after
being on a “UN
Delegation.”
This is UN
corruption,
and
censorship,
and it must
end.
On November 21
Inner City
Press was
similarly
hindered from
covering a UN
Security
Council
meeting in the
Trusteeship
Council
Chamber on
protecting
infrastructure
from terrorist
attacks (as
well as a UN
Peacekeeping
meeting,
including on
Contingent
Owned
Equipment, in
the ECOSOC
Chamber next
door).
Inner City
Press was
required to
have a minder,
who sat within
six feet of
where Inner
City Press did
its coverage.
Even so, Inner
City Press
spoke to a
number of
Permanent
Representatives,
about both
meeting - but
immediately
after speaking
with the
sponsor of the
meeting, Inner
City Press was
told to leave,
the meeting
was over.
(Coverage, of
course, often
happens after
the meeting -
this is no
longer
allowed).
Ironically, UN
Department of
Public
Information
officials went
up and down
the hall
giving tours
in connection
with DPI's
Cristina
Gallach
allowing the
UN to be used
to promote a
television
show for a
for-profit
cable
television
network. This
is what DPI
has become -
confining
independent
investigative
press to
minders,
parading
around this
D-list
celebrities,
selling the UN
as set forth
in the OIOS
audit of
l'affaire John
Ashe / Ng Lap
Seng, which
specifically
criticizes
Gallach for
her lack of
due diligence.
Ukraine, the
sponsor, told
Inner City
Press it
intends to
continue on
the topic of
infrastructure
and terrorism
in February,
their second
UN Security
Council
presidency.
Participants
in the
Peacekeeping /
equipment
meeting
complained
again about
African
contingents
being left
with less
equipment than
the Dutch and
other
Europeans in
Ladsous' Mali
mission. Inner
City Press,
even with
minder so
nearby,
learned more
about the
transition of
the new /
incoming
Secretary
General --
will these
absurd
restrictions
continue?
Passing
through and
greeting the
Press was one
of the more
serious
candidates for
Secretary
General, who
spoke about
the need for
the UN to live
up to media
freedom
principles and
would
certainly
remove the
restrictions.
But will they
be removed?
Inner City
Press was also
restricted on
November 16
from covering
a UN General
Assembly
plenary
meeting. Inner
City Press
arrived early
at the UN,
knowing of --
but not
consenting to
-- Ban's and
Gallach's
requirement of
a minder. But
even to get
into the UN
took twenty
extra minutes
through the
metal
detectors,
required since
Inner City
Press'
retaliatory
ouster in
February.
Once
in, Inner City
Press ran to
get a minder.
But first it
had to
accompany the
minder
elsewhere,
then down to
the stakeout
in front of
the General
Assembly,
where a double
blue rope
barrier was
erected for
Inner City
Press to stand
behind. Even
so, diplomats
approach Inner
City Press, to
complain about
Ban's distant
and wan
management and
question what
the double
transition,
including in
Washington,
will bring.
The UN
Webcast, for
which
Gallach's DPI
is
responsible,
had no sound
for the
General
Assembly
meeting, or
any of the
meeting in New
York (a
session from
Geneva, about
torture, had
sound.). This
is another
reason Gallach
must go -
totally
inattention,
the UN gone
mute.
Still Inner
City Press
followed the
meeting. A
minister from
Indonesia
spoke; Mexico
said if only
there'd been
more notice,
more member
states could
have spoken.
But Gallach's
DPI didn't
even make it
possible for
people to
hear, on the
UN Webcast
live, what was
said - and
hindered Press
coverage of
the meeting.
We've
previously
covered how
Ban's and
Gallach's
self-serving
access and
censorship
decisions
shouldn't be
allowed to
hinder
coverage of
the Security
Council. The
same is true,
perhaps even
more so, for
the General
Assembly.
We'll have
more on this.
On November 15
Inner City
Press was
confined to
one of Ban
Ki-moon's
minders to
cover a
Security
Council
meeting with
Troop
Contributing
Countries to
the UN Mission
in South
Sudan, where
Ban Ki-moon
recently fired
- scapegoated
- the Kenyan
commander
who'd only
been on the
job three
weeks.
It was
held from 3 pm
to 4:30 pm in
the
Trusteeship
Council
Chamber. Inner
City Press for
eight months
and counting
has been
required to
have a minder
to cover
events on the
second floor.
While a minder
was provided,
even so, UN
Security
approached and
quizzed Inner
City Press
even as other
correspondents,
who've never
asked the UN
other than a
softball
questions,
walked by
unquestioned
and without
minders. This
hinders
coverage, of
another of
Ban's
failures. This
censorship
must end.
With the UN's
Legal
Committee met
about the
International
Law Commission
on November 1,
many of the
candidates in
this week's
ILC election
were there.
Some had
invited Inner
City Press to
cover their
campaign
speeches but
Ban's and
Gallach's
censorship
order made it
impossible,
see below.
But on
November 1,
Inner City
Press coverage
even on this
meeting, in
the UN's
Trusteeship
Council
Chamber, was
curtailed by
the censorship
order. When
the minder had
to leave, so
did Inner City
Press, even as
ILC candidates
and incumbents
sought it out.
We'll have
more on this.
On October 25
a candidate in
this impending
UN election
invited Inner
City Press to
interview him
in the UN
Delegates
Lounge, and to
attend and
cover,
including with
Periscope, a
speech he
would give
near the UN in
the early
evening.
But
ever since Ban
and Gallach
evicted Inner
City Press, it
can no longer
simply go to
the Delegates
Lounge like it
used to, and
like other
correspondents
such as the
never present
Sanaa Youssef
of Egyptian
state media
Akhbar al Yom,
to whom Ban
and Gallach
are trying to
give Inner
City Press'
long time
shared office,
can (though
Youssef does
precisely
nothing at the
UN, just like
Ban likes it.)
Inner
City Press was
told that it
could do into
the Delegates
Lounge if the
candidate, a
former UN
Security
Council
diplomat, came
out. You must
have broken
some rule, the
candidate said
-- perhaps an
unwritten one.
But the on the
record speech
was made
impossible to
cover. The UN
Security
Council open
debate on
Women, Peace
and Security
only ended at
6:30 - still
enough time to
get to the
speech,
several blocks
south of the
UN.
But under
Ban's and
Gallach's
censorship
order, Inner
City Press had
to return by 7
pm, if it
wanted to get
video of the
Security
Council
meeting and
report on it.
So after
taking a
single still
photo of the
speech
rostrum, Inner
City Press
rushed back
in. This is
Ban and
Gallach's UN
and must end -
they both must
go. We'll have
more on this.
At the
October 24 UN
noon briefing,
Inner City
Press asked
Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric
questions
about Yemen,
Haiti,
Burundi,
Western Sahara
and Ban's own
South Korean
presidency
ambitions. But
after the
briefing -- at
which the
Egyptian state
media Akhbar
al Yom to
whose
correspondent
Sanaa Youssef
asked no
questions,
wasn't present
-- Inner City
Press had no
place to
produce even
short Vine
videos of the
UN's
responses.
The media
focus booth
was taken up
by UN staff.
After waiting,
when Inner
City Press
asked to use
the Department
of Public
Information
studio, the
key was out
though there
was no one in
it. By the
elevators,
Inner City
Press ran into
Gallach and
told her,
since she
purports to
not understand
and claims
even to Nobel
Prize winners
like Jose
Ramos Horta
she has not
impaired Inner
City Press'
work, that it
had nowhere to
work.
When Inner
City Press
went to cover
the UN
Security
Council's
meeting on
Israeli
settlements in
Palestine on
October 14, it
was told it
could only do
with with a
minder, a
requirement
imposed on
Inner City
Press by Ban
Ki-moon and
his Under
Secretary
General for
“Public
Information”
Cristina
Gallach.
Still,
even with
minder nearby,
Inner City
Press was
approached by
and spoke with
a number of
Ambassadors,
some of whom
asked where US
Ambassador
Samantha Power
was, and where
Deputy David
Pressman is
leaving to on
November 4.
Ban Ki-moon
and his
entourage was
returning from
a speech some
called
“crocodile
tears” for
Eritrea's
deceased
Ambassador
Girma Asmerom
Tesfay. Inner
City Press
stood up - and
was told by
guards to calm
down, not ask
anything.
Minutes later,
as Inner City
Press spoke
with another
Ambassador, it
was told to
leave the UN's
second floor.
This is
censorship.
We'll have
more on this.
On October 12
when Inner
City Press
went to cover
the Africa
Week meeting
on Africa and
the rule of
law on October
12, after
being one of
only three
journalists to
ask questions
at the Africa
Week press
conference in
the early
afternoon, it
was only
allowed to do
so with a
minder.
And
before the
meeting was
over, while
former Under
Secretary
General for
Political
Affairs
Ibrahim
Gambari was
still speaking
in the ECOSOC
chamber, Inner
City Press was
told that the
minder was
being
withdrawn and
that it would
have to leave,
without being
able to put
any questions
to Gambari.
Inner
City Press
knows Gambari,
not only from
the DPA post
that Jeffrey
Feltman is
about to have
to give up,
but also from
Gambari's time
at UNAMID in
Darfur. Inner
City Pres
questioned him
in El Fasher.
Why not in UN
headquarters,
where some had
told Inner
City Press
Gambari is
seeking to
speak with Ban
Ki-moon's
replacement
Antonio
Guterres?
It is
Ban Ki-moon's
censorship
that has
gotten in the
way, and must
end. On
October 12 Ban
Ki-moon rushed
by his own
minder on the
way to a
photo-op that
was not listed
in the UN
Media Alert,
nor broadcast
on UN webcast.
It was the
only thing on
Ban's public
schedule for
the day.
On October 10
when Inner
City Press
went to cover
the UN's
meeting on
“Financial
solutions for
the
Sustainable
Development
Goals (SDGs)”
on October 10
it could only
do so if
accompanied by
one of Ban
Ki-moon's
minders. Even
so, it was
ordered to
leave while
still covering
that meeting -
which was not
on Cristina
Gallach's
DPI's UN
Webcast -- and
a UN Legal
Committee
meeting about,
among other
things,
attacks on
diplomats and
diplomatic
premises.
There
is waste: Ban
walks around
inside the UN
with
bodyguards
Chang
Wook-Jin, and
required
disfavored
investigative
journalists to
have minders.
He has not
explained why
he keeps Saudi
Arabia off the
Children and
Armed Conflict
annex on
Yemen, nor his
omission of
reparations
from even his
prepared
remarks on
Haiti cholera.
The Legal
Committee
meeting
included
dueling
complaints
about attacks
on diplomatic
premises by
Russia and
Ukraine, and
Bangladesh
saying it
offers
diplomats
unmarked
license plates
so they will
not be
targets. Sri
Lanka
complained
that one of
its diplomats
was beaten up
in an unnamed
country in an
airport.
This echoed
when Sri Lanka
sent
“controversial”
military
figure
Shavendra
Silva to the
UN as its
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
- and Ban
Ki-moon
accepted Silva
as a
Peacekeeping
adviser. These
are the depth
to which Ban
Ki-moon has
brought the
UN.
When Inner
City Press
went to cover
the UN Legal
Committee
meeting on the
“Responsibility
of States for
Internationally
Wrongful Act”
on October 7,
it could only
do so with a
UN minder,
unlike
correspondents
at the UN who
have not
questioned or
criticized
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon and
his Under
Secretaries
General Herve
Ladsous and
Cristina
Gallach.
In the middle
of speaking
with diplomats
and reporting
on Twitter the
disagreements
between for
example the
United States,
which does NOT
want a
convention of
the
responsibility
of states for
internationally
wrongful act
and Mexico
which does,
Inner City
Press was
abruptly told
that it had to
leave.
The
stated reason
was that Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesperson's
office had
called the end
of day “lid,”
even though
the UN General
Assembly Sixth
(Legal)
Committee
meeting
continued and
the
Spokesperson's
Office had not
answered Inner
City Press
questions
about Ladsous'
DPKO's use of
tear gas and
refusal to
confirm
receipt of a
Frente
Polisario
letter about
Western
Sahara.
Why is
the UN saying
Inner City
Press requires
a minder?
Because
Gallach and
Ban threw
Inner City
Press out of
its long time
shared
workspace for
daring to
cover an event
in the UN
Press Briefing
Room, in
pursuit of the
ongoing UN Ng
Lap Seng
bribery
scandal, and
are giving the
space to
Egyptian state
media Akhbar
al Yom whose
correspondent
rarely comes
to the UN -
not there on
October 7 -
and never asks
questions. The
only
qualification
seems to be
the
correspondent
is a past
president of
the
Ban-friendly
UN
Correspondents
Association,
UNCA.
As Inner City
Press was
required to
leave, still
getting
information
including
about the next
day's second
Syria draft,
which it put
online at
5:54, here,
other
correspondents
whom Ban
favors were
still free to
roam the UN's
second floor,
including one
who hugged a
diplomat who
pulled back
and asked,
“Who ARE you?”
Meanwhile for
having dared
ask Ladsous a
question -
whether the
often targeted
Chadian
peacekeepers
in Mali have
been denied
access to the
equipment of
NATO members
like the
Netherlands
also in
Ladsous'
MINUSMA
mission - some
in the UN are
implying Inner
City Press did
wrong by doing
its job. This
is censorship.
We'll have
more on this.
This has
been going on
too long. For
example, when
Inner City
Press went to
cover an event
in the UN's
Trusteeship
Council
Chamber on
September 1,
it was
required to
have a UN
“minder.”
The minder,
whose fault
none of this
is, came close
as diplomats
spoke to Inner
City Press in
some cases
critically of
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon --
including his
promoting his
own son in law
to a top post,
without even
recusing
himself.
While some
diplomats
approached
Inner City
Press and
discussed wars
and politics
in their
country, and
the Next
Secretary
General
selection
process,
another
diplomat Inner
City Press
observed was
Burundi's
Albert
Shingiro,
engaged in UN
Security
Council
lobbying.
Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric has
refused to
confirm, or
even inquire
into,
Burundi's
notes verbale
that they will
NOT accept the
UN Police
mandated by
the Security
Council's July
resolution.
So Ban's
requirement
that Inner
City Press be
confined to a
minder has the
effect to
making it more
difficult to
cover this new
failure of
Ban's tenure
(following Sri
Lanka, Haiti,
Yemen and
others).
Other
diplomats came
in and out of
the UN General
Assembly
meeting on the
“Culture of
Peace,”
telling Inner
City Press in
some cases
about the
background of
their
speeches, and
in other cases
entirely
different
matters.
Suddenly Ban
Ki-moon's
minder told
Inner City
Press, You
have to leave,
I have another
assignment.
Not only does
Ban and his
Under
Secretary
General for
“Public
Information”
Cristina
Gallach
absurdly and
vindictively
require Inner
City Press to
have a minder
-- they don't
even have
enough
minders,
despite
Gallach's DPI
being in the
process of
recruiting
yet-more
unpaid
interns,
ignoring
protests of
Ban's UN on
this issue and
even outlawing
filming of the
protests. This
is the UN of
Ban and
Gallach.
This ouster
took place
right during
the speech by
the US Mission
- which ironically
included press
freedom issues
-- and just
before the
speech by
South Korea,
where Ban
Ki-moon hopes
to
run for
president in
2017. On
what platform?
Questions are
pending.
Back on August
12 when Inner
City Press
went to cover
a meeting in
the UN
Economic and
Social Council
chamber
featuring a
canned speech
by Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon and at
least two of
his Assistant
Secretaries
General on
August 12, it
went as now
required to
get a minder
from the UN
Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit.
But
Inner City
Press was told
Ban doesn't
have enough
minders --
under Ban's
regime of
censorship,
his demand for
minders is
outstripping
supply -- and
that it could
only cover the
event when
MALU and UN
Security
arbitrarily
decided to
allow it.
This is
targeting -
other
correspondents
who do not ask
about Ban's
and his head
of
Communications
Cristina
Gallach's
links to the
UN bribery
scandal of Ng
Lap Seng and
John Ashe
(RIP) could
cover the
entire
meeting, and
even other
“non-resident
correspondents,”
the status to
which Ban and
Gallach
reduced Inner
City Press in
retaliation
travel freely
around, to the
Delegates
Lounge and
elsewhere.
This is
targeted
censorship.
After throwing
Inner City
Press' laptop
then filed
onto the
sidewalk, Ban
and Gallach
moved to give
its longtime
shared office
to Egypian
state media
Akhbar Al
Youm, whose
correspondent
Sanaa
Youssef, a
former
president of
the UN
Correspondents
Association,
rarely comes
into the UN
and never asks
any questions.
TwoGallach
staffers cruised
through the
press floor on
August 11;
they are on
notice but the
censorship
continues.
Before Ban's
minders
ordered Inner
City Press to
leave, a
number of
diplomats
approached it,
providing tips
including on
corruption,
one saying,
I'm glad
you're here.
Ban and
Gallach are
not.
Tellingly, the
event on
Gallach's
Department of
Public
Information's
UNTV did not
have any
audio,
including for
Ban Ki-moon's
canned speech.
A topic was
youth -
earlier this
week at the UN
“Youth
Assembly” in
the UN General
Assembly Hall,
Larry Summers
was presented
as a champion
of girls'
education.
This is
today's UN -
we will have
more on the
corruption
they are
trying to
cover up and
hinder Press
coverage of.
On August 11,
Ban's deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq
tried to evade
questions
about
conflicts of
interest by
Ban's mentor
Han Seung-soo
by claiming he
was being
“bullied;” he
has previously
tried to cut
off any
questions
about the
censoring
restrictions
imposed on the
Press. But
today there is
more than
enough Ban
Ki-moon
corruption
news, which
Haq will find
hard(er) to
cut off. Watch
this site.
For the the
Haiti and
South Sudan
meetings of UN
ESOCOC on July
26, it was
required to
have a UN
minder, who
oversaw as
diplomats
approached
Inner City
Press to talk.
Then it got
worse - the
minder said
Inner City
Press would
have to leave
in 15 minutes,
before the
Haiti and
South Sudan
segments even
began. Inner
City Press has
asked the UN
about these
restrictions,
video
here.
Inner City
Press
objected,
noting that
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric told
the New York
Times that
Inner City
Press would be
“escorted” to
cover such
meetings. In
Haiti, Ban's
UN killed
10,000 with
cholera and
didn't pay the
victims'
families a
penny. In
South Sudan,
Ban's and
Herve Ladsous'
DPKO is
covering up
even the
detention of
UN staff, as
well as
negligence as
the government
killed IDPs in
Malakal and
elsewhere.
Inner City
Press took up
its stakeout
position, to
the side of
the hallway;
several
Ambassadors
approached,
with one even
under Ban's
minder's
watchful eye
telling Inner
City Press
that Ban's
Secretariat is
not accessible
or
transparent,
it's not even
clear how to
reach them.
But after
hindering
Inner City
Press'
reporting with
two levels of
UN Security,
the middle one
of which
despite
requets has
refused to
give his name,
a third one
arrived and
said “Matty
you have to
go.” It was
the same
supervisor,
Mathew
Sullivan, who
told Inner
City Press on
February 22
that it was
banned from UN
premises
worldwide and
had to leave
the UN pass
office, and
who earlier
was beaten up
by Turkey's
Erdogan's
security
-- Inner City
Press wrote in
favor of
Sullivan but
Ban Ki-moon
apologized...
to Erdogan.
Now Sullivan
is listed
promoting
for-profit
companies' UN
events, here.
This is Ban's
UN.
Back in the
Media
Accreditation
office the
supervisor
said there
were not
enough
minders, they
were upstairs
with Ban
Ki-moon and
Laura
Boldrini,
president of
the Chamber of
Deputies,
Republic of
Italy: a photo
op. Inner City
Press filmed
Boldrini's
scripted
read-out
instead, and
asked Ban's
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq
about the
Banning: can't
cover Haiti,
where the UN
killed 10,000.
Video
here. UN Transcript
here:
Inner City
Press:
I'll keep this
brief.
But today
there was a
meeting at
ECOSOC in the
ECOSOC
chambers.
One of the
meetings
involved
Haiti.
The other one
involved South
Sudan.
MALU (Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit) escorted
me there, but
then said they
had to leave,
and then
security told
me to
leave.
So I'm
wondering,
what is the
procedure for
green Ps, the
vast majority
of journalists
that you have,
to be able to
cover meetings
and stake out
meetings, such
as ones on
Haiti and
South Sudan?
Deputy
Spokesman:
You have the
ability to
stake out
these when you
have
escorts.
We try to
provide
escorts as
much as
possible.
In fact…
ICP
Question:
Why were there
only two
people in
MALU…?
Deputy
Spokesman:
There's… we
accommodate
you to the
best of our
abilities and
to the extent
that our
staffing
allows.
Like I said, I
spoke with the
Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit this
morning, and,
again, they're
trying their
very best to
accommodate.
We can't have
so many staff
devoted simply
to…
ICP
Question:
Why is a
journalist
standing in
front…
Deputy
Spokesman:
Please.
ICP
Question:
Please.
Go
ahead.
I'd like to
hear your
answer.
Deputy
Spokesman:
…simply to the
convenience of
one
individual.
But they… to
the extent
that their
staffing
allows it,
they do it.
ICP
Question:
Given that
other
journalists
here can stand
freely in
front of it,
what's the
difference
between these
two classes of
journalists?
Do whatever
you want.
Deputy
Spokesman:
You're making
pleading for
your special
case.
ICP
Question:
No, I'm
not. I'm
saying there
are 2,000
green
Ps. Why
can't they
cover the
meeting?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Yes, you
are. And
if there were
2,000 green Ps
who were
making an
issue of it,
that would be
one
thing.
There's one
individual
journalist,
yourself,
making an
issue of
it. I've
told you what
the response
is from my
Media
Accreditation
colleagues,
and they are
trying to help
you.
ICP
Question:
What's the
response from
security?
What is the
security
problem?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Security…
Matthew…
ICP
Question:
I talked to an
ambassador
there who said
Ban Ki-moon is
inaccessible
and
unaccountable.
Deputy
Spokesman:
Matthew…
Matthew, quit
trying to
drown me
out.
It's
unprofessional.
It is
blatantly
unprofessional.
ICP
Question:
Go on.
Deputy
Spokesman:
Security
abides by
their own
rules.
They do not
make
exceptions
simply for an
individual.
They do that
to keep the
building
secure.
Within those
parameters,
we're trying
to accommodate
your request.
ICP
Question:
What's the
security
problem of a
journalist
just standing
in front…
Deputy
Spokesman:
That's all
I've got to
say to
you.
Beyond this,
it's just
arguing.
Thank
you.
Have a good
afternoon,
everyone.
To this has
Ban Ki-moon's
UN descended.
The
reason given
to Inner City
Press that it
cannot
stakeout
ECOSOC, as it
has for ten
years, is that
Ban and his
head of
Communications
Cristina
Gallach ousted
and evicted
Inner City
Press for
trying to
cover an event
in the UN
Press Briefing
Room by a
group which
took money
from Ng Lap
Seng, the
Macau based
businessman
now under
house arrest
for UN
bribery.
To keep Inner
City Press in
this censored
status, Ban
and Gallacah
are giving its
long time
shared office
to Egyptian
state media
Akhbar Al
Youm's Sanaa
Youssef, a
former UN
Correspondents
Association
president who
asks no
question and
rarely if even
comes to the
UN. We
note that
current UNCA
boss Giampaolo
Pioli, who
lifts prosecco
toasts with
and to Ban but
never
criticizes him
while being
invoked by
Gallach in
support of
eviction, is
nowhere to be
seen.
And Ban
Ki-moon
himself will
soon again be
on the road,
without impact
other than
negative on
climate
change.
On July
20 at the
conclusion of
the UN High
Level
Political
Forum, Inner
City Press was
told by a UN
Security
official it
could only do
so with an
escort, or
minder, from
UN Media
Accreditation.
There was no
one in that
office - but
when the
supervisor of
it asked the
UN Security
official to
let Inner City
Press through
the turnstile,
he said only
if someone
stayed with
Inner City
Press the
whole time --
that is, a
minder. The
supervisor
could not. And
that was it:
censorship.
On July 22,
Inner City
Press asked
Ban Ki-moon's
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq why
the Press was
Banned, Video
here, UN Transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: I
wanted to ask
a media access
question and
it doesn’t
only… it would
presumably
impact the
majority of
journalists
being
accredited
here.
There was a
meeting of the
High-Level
Political
Forum on the
SDGs
(Sustainable
Development
Goals) on
Wednesday and
it was listed
in the journal
as concluding
at 6:30 to
7:00, so I
went to cover
it but was
unable to
stake it out
and speak to
anyone,
because there
was no one in
MALU (Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit) and the
guards refused
to let me
through the
turnstile,
which I want
to clarify to
you… which
doesn't work
for green ‘P’
passes, which
is the
majority of
what the
journalists
have
here. So
I wanted to
know, it's not
a question of
beating up on
MALU for not
being present
at 6:30,
although the
meeting was
listed, but
what can be
done?
What is the
policy?
Does this mean
the majority
of journalists
can't stake
out such
meetings, or
should there
be a policy,
when there is
an official
meeting at
that level at
6:30 that the
journalists
can go through
and speak to
diplomats
about it?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well, we
certainly try
to make sure
that access is
there for all
meeting and
MALU tries…
you know, the
Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit tries to
be present as
much as it
can.
Obviously, for
later
scheduled
meetings, it's
hard to have
escorts for
all of these,
but we have
been in touch
with the media
accreditation
people and
they have
assured us of
their constant
efforts to try
and be there
as escorts for
you. And
with that…
ICP
Question:
Why don’t you
tell security
to let people
through?
If there is no
escort you
can't cover
it.
Deputy
Spokesman:
No. That
is not how
security
works.
That's
not how BAN's
security and
minder work...
Inside
the July 20
meeting, South
Korean
ambassador Oh
Joon, who has
previously
been asked
about Ban
Ki-moon's
censorship of
and
restrictions
on the Press,
was urging
states not to
call for a
vote.
Nigaragua's
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
pushed back.
It was
something to
cover - but
Ban Ki-moon,
through his
head of
Communications
Cristina
Gallach,
Banned
coverage of
it. Oh Joon
declined to
disclose two
countries he
referred to.
Nicaragua got
its vote, but
Gallach's DPI
did not
distribute the
voting list.
While being
banned from
the turnstile
precluded
Inner City
Press from
being able to
speak with
several of the
protagonists,
it did ask Oh
Joon who the
two countries
are. He said,
I didn't know
you were
interested in
this. But he'd
previously
been told that
Ban's eviction
hinders the
Press from
covering
ECOSOC.
On July 12
when Inner
City Press
went to cover
UN Security
General Ban
Ki-moon's
speech on
human right,
it was
required to be
escorted by
one of Ban's
minders, due
to its
eviction
earlier this
year by Ban
and his Under
Secretary
General for
Public
Information,
Cristina
Gallach.
But
even after
escort by a
minder, just
before Ban
Ki-moon's
speech Inner
City Press was
surrounded by
six UN
Security
officers who
demanded that
it leave.
When Inner
City Press
pointed out
that the Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit does not
have enough
staff, the
officer in
charge said
Inner City
Press would be
confined to
“covering” the
meeting from
the third
floor - that
is, unable to
speak with any
diplomats
(several of
whom, even on
July 12,
approached to
speak with
Inner City
Press, at
least until
Ban's guards
targeted Inner
City Press for
censorship.)
The UN
officers
claimed Inner
City Press
misspoke, so
since Inner
City Press
was, as it
told MALU and
as other
correspondent
can do but
didn't on July
12, stakeout
out the
meeting, here
is the audio.
While
precluded from
even hearing
all of Ban's
speech, his
hearkening to
“Rights Up
Front” without
mentioning his
UN's systemic
failure in Sri
Lanka which
triggered it
rang hollow.
He said he
would deliver
for member
states - after
delivering for
Saudi Arabia
by dropping it
from the Yemen
Children and
Armed Conflict
list. This is
Ban's UN --
six guards
harassing the
Press to not
cover the
hypocrisy of a
human right
speech.
Team Ban have
tried to refer
everything
about the
Press eviction
back to
Cristina
Gallach - a
form of
buck-passing
they urge
others noot to
do. Gallach
was asked
about ousting
Inner City
Press by
the Special
Rapporteurs on
Freedom of
Expression and
Human Rights
Defenders
and two months
later claimed
there was an
altercation
(video
disproves
this). She
told Nobel
laureate Jose
Ramos Horta
she has an
"internal
report"
supporting her
ouster of
Inner City
Press, then
the UN
told the US
Senate Foreign
Relations
Committee the
UN has "no
records."
Inner City
Press has
asked Ban
Ki-moon's
spokespeople
for a copy of
the "internal
report," but
none has been
produced. The
SFRC "Aide
Memoire" says
nowhere was it
in writing
that the UN
Press Briefing
Room event was
closed.
Among the
results of
Gallach's
ouster and
eviction
orders is that
Inner City
Press cannot
cover events
on the second
floor of the
Conference
Building
without a
minder; on
July 10, Inner
City Press
covering South
Sudan was
ordered to
leave the
Security
Council
stakeout when
other
correspondents
could stay.
As the
UN bribery
scandal
gathered force
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon called
for an audit
by the UN
Office of
Internal
Oversight
Services of
the Global
Sustainability
Foundation
(GSF), David
Ng Lap Seng's
Sun Kian Ip
Group and its
affiliates
including the
"World Harmony
Foundation"
and South
South News,
among others.
The
audit,
completed
early this
year but first
put online
by Inner City
Press,
directly
criticizes
Cristina
Gallach, the
Under
Secretary
General for
Communications
and Public
Information.
On June 29,
Inner City
Press asked UN
spokesman
Farhan Haq
about it , video here,
UN transcript
here and
below.
Now the
"Curcio"
issues
involving
South South
News are set
for an initial
hearing in a
week's time,
as the UN has
avoided acting
on bribery
since October
2015 while
evicting Inner
City Press
without
speaking to it
once. From the
July 11 order
in the Ng Lap
Seng case:
"Defendant Ng
and his
counsel, with
CJA counsel
Mr. Wikstrom,
and counsel
for the
Government,
are instructed
to appear for
the conclusion
of the Curcio
hearing on
Monday, July
18, 2016 at
10:00 a.m...
Trial is set
to commence on
January 23,
2017."
In Federal
Court, there
more links
between South
South News,
still with a
UN official
from Ban
Ki-moon as
Inner City
Press while
investigating
it was
evicted, and
bribery in the
United
Nations. On
July 8, Inner
City Press
asked Ban's
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq,
video here, UN Transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: There's
been new
filings in the
Ng Lap Seng
case in the
Southern
District, and
since you'd
said
previously
that the UN is
monitoring
this, these
filings have
to do directly
with
South-South
News.
And they
quote… they
have put into
the record a
letter in
which
South-South
News is
described as
wanting to
have part of
this Macau
Centre that
was the… the
thing that Ng
Lap Seng was
trying to
procure these
documents
for.
It's described
as a global
media platform
authorized by
the UN.
And they put
these in as…
as essentially
saying that
this is a
conduit for
bribery.
So, I wanted
to know:
Since you've
said that the
UN is
monitoring
this, given
that the
prosecutor
[inaudible]
has put this…
this letter, I
guess they got
it in
discovery or
in some other
fashion in,
what is the
UN's response
to it?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well, like I
said, we have
been
monitoring it
and are
looking at all
of the
information
that's coming
up. And
in that
regard, as you
know, there's
an ongoing
review of the
status of
South-South
News.
There's no
conclusion to
that review at
this point.
Inner City
Press:
And I'd asked
on
Tuesday.
I'd asked
Stéphane in
writing… there
was a meeting
held down in
1D Basement,
DPI
[Department of
Public
Information]
and something
called the
Malko
Investment
Group.
And since I
googled Malko
Investment
Group and
nothing came
up, I sent him
an e-mail and
asked what is
this entity
and why is
this meeting
being held in
the UN?
And I wanted
to reiterate
to you, why
would DPI be
having a
meeting in a
UN
meeting room
with an
investment
group and
particularly
one that
doesn't…
that's either
misnamed on
the sign or
doesn't exist
at all?
Deputy
Spokesman:
I'm not aware
of the
circumstances
of the
meeting.
I will check
with DPI, what
they have to
say about
that.
But, at this
stage, I'm
not… I'm not
aware whether
they're the
sponsor of
that… of that
particular
meeting or
not.
Deputy
Spokesman:
I'm not aware
of the details
of whether
they're the
actual
sponsors.
Sometimes
meetings are
set up by
Member States’
organizations.
We'd have to
check.
Haq did
not return
with any
answer from
DPI. From
the
prosecutor's
new letter:
"in an email
dated on or
about March
12, 2010, an
individual
affiliated
with the State
Council
Information
Office, an
entity of the
PRC
government,
sent an email
to a business
associate of
Ng, containing
a draft letter
(in Chinese)
for Ng to sign
or approve.
According to a
draft
translation
prepared by
the Federal
Bureau of
Investigation
(“FBI”), the
letter, which
began with Ng
introducing
himself as a
member of
Chinese
People’s
Political
Consultative
Conference
(“CPPCC”), a
political
advisory body,
and as the
“Chairman of
the Board of
the United
Nations South
South News,”
stated in
pertinent
part:
[quote] my
greatest wish
is to fairly
and
objectively
report the
social
development,
religion,
culture, and
ideology of
China through
the South
South News, a
global media
platform
authorized by
the UN, to
display
China’s soft
power, counter
malicious,
distorted news
by anti-China
forces, and
let the whole
world hear a
true voice
that comes
from China to
understand the
real China. .
. .
. . . I will
select
suitable
regions in
China to
establish a
South South
Cooperation
Organization
International
Conference
Center and a
South South
News Network
Media
Production
Center as a
base of
operations for
South South
News.
Hope that the
plan to
establish two
centers and
the
development of
South South
News in China
can obtain
strong support
from the
government of
China.
[unquote]
As the Court
is aware,
South South
News, the
entity
described in
the above
email, is the
conduit
through which
the Government
alleges that
defendants Ng
and Jeff C.
Yin funneled
some of their
bribe and
money
laundering
payments.”
So it says
South South
News was
“authorized”
by the UN; the
prosecution
says Ng and
Yin used South
South News as
a conduit for
bribery in the
UN. And as of
July 8, South
South News
still has its
UN official
from Ban
Ki-moon as
Inner City
Press while
investigating
it was evicted
and is now
restricted to
only cover
events on the
UN Conference
Building's
second floor
-- ECOSOC and
the
Trusteeship
Council
Chambers, the
General
Assembly and
General
Assembly
President's
office -- with
one of Ban
Ki-moon's
minders. This
is Ban's UN.
Inner City
Press: Monday
down in… in
Federal Court,
there was a
hearing for
Mr. Ng Lap
Seng in the
ongoing case,
and Assistant
District
Attorney
[Daniel]
Richenthal
basically
widened the
case and said
they're going
to be… there's
more things
they're
looking at as
to Ng Lap
Seng, and he
also described
in more detail
a, quote,
conduit of
bribery taking
place within
the UN.
And I wanted
to know, since
you've said
you're
monitoring it,
what is the
UN's response
to the new
information
that was
presented on
Monday?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Yeah, we are
aware of the
latest
information,
and, as I've
pointed out,
the situation
of South-South
News is under
review.
It continues
to be under
review, but
certainly, any
new
information is
useful in
light of that.
On April 16,
at Ban's and
his USG
Cristina
Gallach's
direction,
Inner City
Press' long
time UN office
in S-303 was
evicted and
five boxes of
files were
dumped onto
First Avenue.
Video
here and here.
On April 20,
the Free UN
Coalition for
Access sign on
S-303 was
removed (photo
here)
without the
consent of
Inner City
Press' office
mate, also a
FUNCA member,
who was told
that the lock
was being
changed,
presumably to
sell the
office to
someone else.
Inner City
Press
immediately
objected to
MALU, the DSG,
Chef de
Cabinet and
Spokesman,
putting them
on notice.
And lo and
behold it was
given to a
former UNCA
president who
rarely comes
to the UN,
never asks
questions,
from Egyptian
state media
Akhbar Elyom.
South
South News'
founding is
described in
the John Ashe
and Ng Lap
Seng
indictment; it
is portrayed
through gauze
in the OIOS
audit. The
name South
South News has
appeared in
the Panama
Papers.
For
now, another
UN example. To
deliver
"personal"
invitations to
the South
South Awards,
which USG
Gallach
attended in
September
2015, South
South News
needed access
to the UN
during the
September High
Level week.
So, Inner City
Press is
informed,
South South
News personnel
got D or
Diplomat
passes through
Lorenzo's
Dominican
Republic
mission to the
UN. Back,
indeed.
Here
are an initial
two of many
photographs of
that event,
these by Luiz
Rampelotto of
Europa
Newswire via
Facebook,
including one
of now
indicted
Vivian Wang of
South South
News with Mrs.
Ban
Here's from
South South
News' press
release:
"It is
disgraceful
that a few
independent
journalists
are exhibiting
a lack of
professionalism
and
irresponsibility
by attacking
everything and
anyone they
believe is
linked to this
case. This is
often done by
insinuation,
guilt by
association
and baseless
assumptions
that disparage
many innocent
people and
organizations.
Irresponsible
assumptions,
fact-twisting
and
misinformation
serve to
distort the
perception of
the situation,
while
affecting our
hard work and
the work of
many innocent
people who
have
absolutely
nothing to do
with this
case.
These types of
attacks are
counterproductive
and
unprofessional.
We believe
these attacks
reflect poorly
on the
integrity of
the profession
of journalism
as a whole.
Not to justify
any illegal
activities,
but all sorts
of
organizations
worldwide have
been victims
of
unscrupulous
people, as
have other
organizations
facing similar
circumstances.
We as
employees will
defend our
hard and
honest work
and we will
defend the
commitment to
our goals and
objectives of
producing
quality
journalism to
inform about
these
important
issues. This
hard-earned
reputation has
been tainted
by some
unscrupulous
acts. Many
media and
administrative
professionals
have proudly
worked for
South-South
News and can
attest to the
integrity of
our media
operation.
This is a
complex case
in which many
players from
different
organizations
and events
have been
implicated, as
detailed in
the
Government’s
complaint. It
is working its
way through
the United
States
judiciary
system, as it
well should.
If you have
questions
regarding the
people
mentioned in
the US
Government
complaint, you
should contact
their legal
representatives
directly.
Again,
South-South
News is
continuing its
professional
day-to-day
functions by
providing some
of the most
comprehensive,
high-quality
coverage of
the UN and
disseminating
information on
global
development
issues."
The same
indicted
Vivian Wang of
South South
News with
David Ng Lap
Seng at the
same UNCA
event
On
this, Inner
City Press on
January 29
sought to
cover an UNCA
event held in
the UN Press
Briefing Room,
which was
nowhere listed
as
closed.
On February
19
Gallach,
without
recusing
herself,
unilaterally
deactivated
Inner City
Press UN
residential
correspondents
pass, and had
Inner City
Press'
reporter
physically
thrown out on
First Avenue
without coat
or passport. Audio
here.
This is
called
retaliation.
On the
afternoon of
April 12,
Inner City
Press while
with another
colleague
asked Ban
about
Gallach's
orders.
"That
is not my
decision," Ban
said quickly.
He was and is
aware; the
ouster and
censorship
serve him, but
he says it is
not his
decision.
On the
evening of
April 12
Gallach ordered
the final
eviction
of all of
Inner City
Press'
investigative
files on
Saturday,
April 16 at 10
am.
Here is some
of what the OIOS
audit says,
about USG
Gallach:
"37. On 30
June 2015,
Global
Sustainability
Foundation
sponsored an
exhibition
titled “The
Transformative
Power of Art”
in the
visitors’
lobby at
United Nations
Headquarters.
This
exhibition was
curated by an
Italian
artist, whose
works were
displayed
along with the
works of other
artists
participating
in one of his
workshops.
38.
Exhibitions in
publicly
accessible
areas at
Headquarters
are governed
by the
Secretary
General’s
Bulletin
ST/SGB/2008/6,
which
stipulates,
inter alia, as
follows:
(a) The United
Nations
Exhibits
Committee,
which is an
interdepartmental
body of the
Secretariat
chaired by the
Under
Secretary
General for
Communications
and Public
Information
[Cristina
Gallach] is
the standing
body that
reviews and
authorizes
such
exhibitions;
(b) Any
proposal
originating
from an NGO or
foundation
must be
accompanied by
a written
communication
of support
from a
Secretariat
department or
office, a
separately
administered
organ or
programme of
the United
Nations, an
organization
of the United
Nations system
or a permanent
or observer
mission to the
United
Nations;
(c) Exhibit
proposals
focusing on a
specific
individual, or
originating
from a single
artist, shall
not be
permitted;
(d) The
Exhibits
Committee may,
at its
discretion,
reject a
proposal for
an exhibit in
part or in its
entirety, or
require the
elimination or
alteration of
any part
thereof; and
(e) The
secretariat of
the Exhibits
Committee
shall inform
the Assistant
Secretary
General,
Office of
Central
Support
Services, of
the
authorization
granted for a
proposed
exhibit.39.
OIOS noted
that the
exhibition
held of 30
June 2015 was
not in
compliance
with these
provisions.
The Exhibits
Committee did
not authorize
the exhibition
because it did
not receive a
proposal in
accordance
with (b)
above. The
Chef de
Cabinet of the
Office of the
President of
the
sixty-ninth
session of the
General
Assembly
informed the
Exhibits
Committee of
the
President’s
decision to
host a series
of major
cultural
events, which
included an
exhibition,
reception, and
concert. The
Committee
informed the
Office of the
President that
the exhibition
was not in
accordance
with the
regulations
for exhibits
in publicly
accessible
areas at
Headquarters,
but the Office
of the
President
decided to
proceed with
the exhibition
anyway.
Therefore, the
Exhibits
Committee did
not accept,
reject or
alter the
“proposal”.
40. OIOS notes
that the
Exhibits
Committee only
had an
advisory role
in the matter,
and in the
circumstances
described, it
could not have
possibly
prevented the
staging of the
event.
However,
considering
that the
exhibition was
attended by
the
Secretary-General
and other
senior
Secretariat
staff despite
its
non-compliance
with the
Secretary-General’s
bulletin on
exhibits, the
perception
that the NGO
was given
preferential
treatment or
favour (that
too without
performing any
due diligence
checks) could
have an
adverse impact
on the
Organization’s
reputation.
This risk is
aggravated by
the
allegations in
the criminal
complaint
against Sun
Kian Ip group,
with whom this
NGO is
affiliated."
While Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric has
said this
audit will not
be made public
until April
22, on April 6
as a
full text
exclusive
Inner City
Press
published the
audit while
noting
affiliates the
UN audit
omitted, and
portions of
the audit that
some involved
seem to be
trying to
cover up,
including not
only as to the
Department of
Public
Information,
but also the
Global Compact
and other
back-doors
into the UN,
including but
not limited to
"Friends of
the UN."
Beyond
the Under
Secretary
General of the
Department of
Public
Information's
responsibility
for exhibits
in the
Visitor's
Lobby such as
the one
indicted Sheri
Yan's Global
Sustainability
Foundation
held on June
30, 2015, she
was also in
charge when
GSF was
allowed,
without any
due diligence,
to on March
25, 2015
sponsor an
event entitled
"Unveiling of
the 'Ark of
Return'
Permanent
Memorial."
Audit at
Paragraph 20
(b).
Inner
City Press asked
the UN about
DPI's
engagement
with the
Global
Sustainability
Foundation
around the Ark
of Return in October
2015. To
be diplomatic,
this should
have led to /
required a
recusal.
Inner City
Press: this
OIOS [Office
of Internal
Oversight
Services]
audit, I
obtained it,
published it
and I want to
ask just for
today, two
specific
questions
about
it. One
is, it talks
about funds
going to this
thing called
UNPAN, which
I've heard of,
but it seems
to be pretty
obscure.
And in looking
at its
website, it
claims to be
publishing
articles they
say were
published in
December 2016,
which hasn't
actually
occurred
yet. So,
there's
something a
little… What's
been done on
the
recommendations
as to… to
UNPAN and the
use of its
name by the
entities that
were
audited....
Spokesman:
The recommend…
the audit, I
think, as all
of you have
seen now,
includes
recommendations
and includes
the status of
those
recommendations,
and we're
following
through with
them.
Inner City
Press: I'd
asked Farhan
[Haq]
yesterday
about the 30
June 2015
event in the
Visitor's
Lobby, which
has a section
of the whole
audit about
DPI
[Department of
Public
Information]
being in
charge of it,
not doing
it. I
want to ask
you about
another event,
which was 25
March, this
unveiling of
the Ark of
Return permit
memorial,
which they
said was no
due diligence
done of the
Global
Sustainability
Foundation.
It seems like,
in this audit,
they make
these two
findings about
DPI, these two
events, but
it's only
looking at it,
I guess,
institutionally.
As I've asked
you, when
Global
Sustainability
Foundation was
founded in
this building,
a senior
adviser of the
Secretary-General
and his spouse
were present…
Spokesman:
I mean, I
think…
Inner City
Press:
Does this
audit look at
individuals or
only
entities…?
Spokesman:
The audit
looks at…
looked at the
systems.
When there are
issues related
to
individuals,
further
investigations
are being
done.
Inner City
Press:
Right.
But, it seems
like they only
mention the
individuals
that were in
the criminal
complaint.
There was
nothing…
Spokesman:
You know, the
audit… I think
the audit
speaks for
itself and
outlines how
we're
following up
with it.
There is
a need for
follow up.
The
audit cites
Ng's
Interntional
Organization
for South
South
Cooperation's
engagements
with, or
capture of,
the UN agency
UNPAN, the UN
Public
Administration
Network. A
visit on April
8, 2016 to UNPAN's
website
finds them
featuring
articles they
say were
publishd in
December 2016
- that is, in
the future.
Ironically,
the article(s)
address the
topic of
corruption.
That is
today's UN.
The audit for
example does
purport to
cover South
South News,
but not the
big money
South South
Awards held in
September 2015
at the Waldorf
Astoria
including the
Under
Secretary
General of the
Department of
Public
Information
(DPI) Cristina
Gallach.
(Inner City
Press in
October 2015
questioned Ms.
Gallach about
her
participation
in the South
South Awards,
video
here. On
February 19,
2016 Gallach
ordered Inner
City Press to
leave its long
time office
and stripped
its Resident
Correspondent
accreditation,
without once
speaking to
it. This is
the subject of
an April
5 letter to
Ban Ki-moon
from the
Government
Accountability
Project,
demanding that
this “crude
and heavy
handed”
retaliation be
reversed,
watch this
site.)
On April
7, Inner City
Press asked UN
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq a
first round of
questions
about some of
the
limitations of
the audio, video here,
Inner City
Press: I've
now obtained
and published
this OIOS
audit of
selected NGOs
and related
entity that
you said will
come out on 22
April.
And there's
different
things I want
to ask you
about it, but
main thing I
want to ask
about is,
there's an
entire section
that runs from
paragraph 37
through
paragraph 40
that it's
about an
exhibit they
say was
improperly
held in the
Visitor's
Lobby on 30
June
2015.
And it goes
through a lot
of detail, and
it says that
the
Under-Secretary-General
of the
Department of
Public
Information is
in charge of
the exhibits
committee and,
I guess, in
charge of the
space.
And somehow,
this exhibit
was held in
violation of a
number of the
rules that
apply to
it. What
I'm wondering
is, what is
the
response?
Obviously, it
seems like you
guys have had
access to this
audit even
before it was
sent to Member
States.
What is the
thinking… the
way they walk
through it is
they say… it
seems strange.
If she's in
charge of the
space and the
exhibit took
place without
complying with
the rules,
what is the
response to
her
responsibility
for
that?
And what steps
have been
taken?
The audit
doesn't say
that any steps
have yet been
taken to
address that.
Deputy
Spokesman
Haq:
Well, with
regard to the
specific cases
referred to in
the audit,
actions being
taken to
determine
responsibility
and any
follow-up and
any measures
that may be
deemed
appropriate.
And so, we'll
continue to
study that.
Inner City
Press:
And who
decides? In
getting the
audit, there
obviously is a
long section
about
South-South
News, but I
noticed that a
related entity
of which
there's been a
lot of
coverage is
South-South
Awards.
And it's
unclear, it's
not mentioned
once in
here.
And this is
something
that… I mean,
the
Secretary-General
received the
South-South
Award.
This is an
entity that's
absolutely
connected to
Ng Lap Seng
and Frank
Lorenzo et
al. So,
the question
is, who… maybe
that's OIOS,
but who
decided on the
scope of this
audit, the
date that it
would start, 1
January 2012,
and the
exclusion of…
of… one of the
things that
people
covering this
scandal have
focused on are
these glitzy
events in the
Waldorf.
The
Under-Secretary-General
of DPI did
attend in
September, but
prior to that,
Ms. [Susana]
Malcorra took
an award for
Ban
[Ki-moon].
Why is this
not in the
audit?
And will there
be an audit of
South-South
Awards going
forward?
Deputy
Spokesman
Haq: I
think the
audit is what
it is.
It's prepared
by the
professional
people in the
Office of
Internal
Oversight who
deal with
audits.
And you can
evaluate the
results for
yourself.
Inner City
Press:
And just one
other thing I
wanted to ask
about, because
I know I'd
asked Stéphane
[Dujarric] and
you, going
back to
October, about
the inclusion
of South-South
News content
in UN
Television
archives.
And,
eventually,
you came back
with this
answer that it
was due to
Habitat.
And I just…
I've pointed
out to you
that there's a
number of
things that
have nothing
to do with
Habitat, a
number of
inclusions
that you just
search UNTV
for
"South-South
News".
But, I do
notice in this
audit that
there is a
reference to
South-South
News and
Habitat.
So, I wanted
to know, was
this finding
that you said
of people
looking into
how it got in
there, was it
basically just
taken from
reading the
audit, or was
there a… a… a…
an analysis,
either by your
office or DPI,
of how the
many other
inclusions of
South-South
News and UNTV
archives took
place?
Deputy
Spokesman:
No, our office
had checked
with
DPI.
That was prior
to us knowing
about the
results of the
audit.
Similarly,
using timing
as a basis of
omission, by
stopping the
audit at
January 1,
2012, OIOS did
not address
the issue of
Ng's South
South News
getting a
photo op
directly with
Ban Ki-moon in
December 2011
at the UN
Correspondents
Association
ball at
Cipriani's
42nd Street
after giving
money to UNCA
including for
a two page ad
spread in
UNCA's “ball
book.”
While
Dujarric's
deputy Farhan
Haq allowed
four UNCA
board members
from Reuters,
France 24 and
Agence France
Presse to seek
to rebut this
including by
directly
addressing
Inner City
Press in the
noon briefing
on April 6,
the cut-off at
January 1,
2012 is
problematic,
especially as
related to Ban
Ki-moon
himself.
The
audit goes out
of its way to
say that Ban's
Executive
Office of the
Secretary
General did
not know when
a letter to it
was modified
to add the
name of Ng's
firm and of
South South
News. How is
that possible?
And again, why
was Ban's
direct dealing
with Ng cut
out from the
audit by a
matter of
days?
Many of the
irregularities
in the audit
are things
first reported
by Inner City
Press, such
as Yan's
Global
Sustainability
Foundation
funding the
UN's slavery
memorial,
including an
engagement
with Gallach's
DPI which even
the audit
criticizes
while DPI
tries to deny.
Undeniable is
that Gallach
chaired the UN
Exhibits
Committee
which allowed
the
“Transformative
Power of Art”
exhibit on
June 30, 2015.
How does
Gallach's no
due process
ouster of
Inner City
Press on
February 19,
2016, when
Inner City
Press was
thrown into
the street and
its laptop on
the sidewalk
by eight UN
guards, look
now that the
audit is out?
Even with the
audit
inexplicably
omitting the
South South
Awards -- Ban
Ki-moon got
one of the
awards -- the
audit chides
DPI for lack
of due
diligence for
its slavery
event, and
Gallach as
chair of the
Exhibit
Committee
which allowed
the Jun 30,
2015
“Transformative
Power of Art”
exhibit.
"The
Government
Accountability
Project
complained
about Lee's
fallout in a
Feb. 26 letter
to the U.S.
Permanent
Mission of the
United
Nations.
'The action
targeted
Matthew Lee
alone, and
appears to be
retaliatory in
response to
independent,
critical
journalism,'
wrote Beatrice
Edwards, the
project's
international
program
director.
UNCA, the
group whose
meeting Lee
got in trouble
for recording,
has denied the
appearance of
unfairness.
'UNCA stands
for press
freedom and
vehemently
defends rights
of journalists
at the UN and
around the
world,' the
statement
says."
Really?
Where? It was
the Free UN
Coalition for
Access asking
this month
about the UN
requiring
minders, not
only in UN
Headquarters
but also in
South Sudan.
The Courthouse
News
continues:
"Lee blasted
what he
described as
'post-hoc'
justifications
for his
ouster, which
he compared to
a Franz Kafka
novel.
'Initially,
they tried to
say that I
secretly
filmed a
closed
meeting,' he
said.
'That's fallen
apart because
the meeting
wasn't
recorded as
closed.' Lee
laughed off
allegations
that he
entered a
restricted
area to
secretly film
the meeting,
which he
broadcast via
a popular
web-casting
platform.
'It's hard to
say that a
Periscope
live-streaming
with my arms
up is secret,'
he said.
By downgrading
his
residential
correspondent
credentials to
a second-tier
status, the
U.N. has
restricted
Lee's freedom
of movement,
forced him to
be chaperoned
by a minder."
That's
right, a UN
minder
courtesy of UN
Communications
chief Cristina
Gallach and
ultimately,
Ban Ki-moon.
In terms of
violations,
and cover up,
see Paragraphs
37 through 40
of the OIOS
audit.
Inner City
Press on April
5 asked if
Ng's World
Harmony
Foundation is
still part of
the UN Global
Compact;
deputy
spokesperson
Haq said he
would check
but never came
back with an
answer. On
April 6 Inner
City Press
asked again
and Haq said
yes - now we
see it is
confirmed and
criticized in
the audit.
Worse while
Inner City
Press from
October 2015
on asked
Dujarric and
Haq how South
South News got
its content in
the UNTV
archives run
by Gallach's
DPI, Haq
belatedly
mentioned only
one use,
connected to
HABITAT. Now
we see the
HABITAT -
South South
News
interaction is
listed in the
audit, which
it seems Haq
consulted
before
answering (and
whatever else
he did with
the audit).
But why
didn't OIOS
look into
South South
News' OTHER
inclusions in
DPI's archives
of UNTV?
And, a
July 11
question: why
will DPI's
UNTV stop
distributing
the July 12
Next SG debate
ten days after
it is over,
ceding the
right entirely
to a private
corporation?
We'll have
more on this.