Ban
Ki-moon's Corruption Triggers Him Quitting South Korea Race,
His Enablers &
Censors Remain
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
February 1 – Ban Ki-moon left
the UN on December 31, after
dodging Press questions about
corruption and, in fact,
evicting and restricting Inner
City Press.
Tellingly
Ban's first move was to take
legal action against the
press. Before he left, he
named his own son in law Siddarth
Chatterjee to the top UN
top in Kenya.
In South
Korea, Ban Ki-moon's campaign
failed, as his long decade of
corruption and censorship were
quickly exposed (see last week's
Sisa Journal, and this
in English from Hankyoreh the
week before, including
Inner City Press' reporting on
Ban's brother Ban Ki Ho mining
in Myanmar, listed by
the government as part of a
"UN delegation").
And on
February 1, barely three weeks
after Ban Ki-moon returned to
South Korea, amid mounting
corruption charges Ban Ki-moon
dropped out of the race he
long used the UN for.
He
said, apparently without
irony, "I have decided to fold
my pure-hearted plan."
His
claims to have known nothing
about the charges against his
nephew Dennis Bahn and brother
Ban Ki Sang make no sense,
given that Inner City Press
asked Ban's spokesperson about
them, for example at the May
15, 2015 noon briefing on UNTV.
It won't be the Blue House
(South Korea's presidential
mansion) - could it be the
jail house?
On January
30, Inner City Press staked
out the annual meeting of the
United Nations Correspondents
Association, a group which had
made Ban Ki-moon their guest
of honor at a $1200 a plate
dinner on Wall Street on
December 16, 2016. Inner City
Press asked if the honor
should be revoked. One
correspondent said yes.
It was the
previous year, on January 29,
2016, that Inner City Press
went to cover and live-stream
the UN Correspondents
Association's annual meeting
held in the UN Press Briefing
Room. Ban's spokesman Stephane
Dujarric, still somehow at the
UN, at the request of UNCA big
wigs asked Inner City Press to
leave, without showing any
paperwork that the event was
"closed."
Inner City
Press asked for the basis, but
said if a single UN security
officer asked it to leave, it
would. An officer arrived and
said, The spokesman wants you
out. Inner City Press left,
and wrote the story and
uploaded the video.
Three
weeks later Ban's head of
communications Cristina
Gallach, still promoting herself
at the UN even for an event in
March 2017, ordered Inner City
Press out of the UN after ten
years, with no hearing, no
appeal. At her (and Ban's)
direction Inner City Press'
files were thrown in the
street, and its office is
being given to an Egyptian
state media Akhbar al Yom
whose correspondent Sanaa
Youssef rarely comes to the UN
and never asks questions (but
is a past president of UNCA).
This is disgusting and must be
reversed.
Ban's spokesman
Dujarric canceled the February
1 noon briefing, ostensibly in
exchange for an 11 am stakeout
by Ban's successor Antonio
Guterres. We'll have more on
this.
In 2016
Ban's UN spokespeople
repeatedly told Inner City
Press that Ban was "all UN"
until January 1. But now Ban
has said he decided in
December. On January 25, Inner
City Press asked Ban's lead UN
spokesman Stephane Dujarric, UN transcript
here and below.
And on
January 26, when Inner City
Press asked about efforts to
ascertain with whom Ban met,
using the UN, spokesman
Dujarric claimed that daily
schedules which are taken
offline are in fact online. Video here. From the UN transcript:
Inner City
Press: there are some in
the South
Korean media asking to
know where it's available to
find the daily schedules that
are put up every day.
Are they just thrown out, or
is there some repository of
who met with the
Secretary-General…?
Spokesman: Well, I'm
glad you're… you've asserted a
role as the Spokesman for the
South Korean media but they
can look on the website, and
everything should be archived.
Where? Meanwhile,
Dujarric threatened Sisa
Journal in South Korea for its
reporting (he said it wasn't a
threat.)
***
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