UN
Hinders
Coverage of
Advisory Group
& War
Criminal
Silva's Role,
Minders?
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
April 6 --
When it
emerged in
January that
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
Senior
Advisory Group
on
Peacekeeping
would
have on it Sri
Lanka General
Shavendra
Silva,
whose 58th
Division is
depicted in
Ban's own
Panel of
Experts report
as engaged in
war
crimes, Inner
City Press asked Ban
about it
and went
to stand
outside
the first SAG
meeting on
February 22.
Ban said it
was a
decision of
member states,
and on
February 22
Inner City
Press was
ejected
from the
UN-rented
building at
380 Madison
Avenue, after
spotting Silva
in attendance
(and then filming
him driving
away in a
$100,000 BMW).
The
chair of the
SAG, Louise
Frechette,
issued a press
release that Silva's
participation
would be
inappropriate.
Sri Lanka
sought the support of
the Asia Group,
and vowed that
Silva would
attend the
next SAG
meeting, set
for April 2.
Ban still said
nothing.
On
April 2, Inner
City Press
again went to
380 Madison
Avenue to
observe who
went in to
the 16th floor
meeting room.
As Inner City
Press stood by
the
elevators,
various SAG
members came
to speak,
noting that
Silva had
yet to show
up.
A
UN Security
officer came,
and Inner City
Press
explained what
it was doing.
The
officer went
into the suite
of offices and
emerged to say
that they
weren't asking
for the Press
to be removed.
He added that
he'd told
them that if
they later
did, they
should call
and he would
ask the
Press to
leave. Fine.
After
this, the
UN's Media and
Accreditation
Unit has twice
written to
Inner City
Press. The
first:
"I
wanted
to double
check with you
if you went to
cover recently
a
meeting of the
senior
advisory group
on
peacekeeping,
which took
place in UN
offices
located on
Madison
Avenue."
While
this inquiry
was cc-ed
elsewhere in
the UN, Inner
City Press
went directly
to the
sender,
usually
genial, and
explained
exactly what
happened,
including that
UN
Security had
inquired and
then allowed
Inner City
Press to stay.
But
then this
formal
follow-up:
"Thank
you
for your
explanation
regarding your
presence a few
days ago on
Madison when
the Senior
Advisory Group
for DPKO met.
It's not clear
exactly to
whom the
security guard
in question
spoke to but
the
organizers say
they did not
give their
permission for
press coverage
nor did they
speak to a
security
guard.
"As
we
discussed with
you and the
UNCA Executive
Committee
recently in
Stephane's
office, press
need to
contact MALU
if they want
to cover
anything in
the UN offices
on Madison,
the Innovation
Building, DC1
&
2, and any
other
off-campus
building. I
recall
Stephane being
extremely
clear on this
point. So if
you wish to
stake-out a
meeting
in one of
those places,
just call us
and we will be
happy to
help."
It
is unclear who
the referenced
"organizers"
are, since the
SAG is a
meeting
of many
countries'
Permanent
Representatives,
some of whom
invited
and spoke with
Inner City
Press. If the
undisclosed
organizers
"did
not give their
permission for
press
coverage" --
some concept,
that -- why
would they in
the future?
And if not,
what help
would be
provided?
In
the referenced
meeting, the
Correspondents'
Association
did little to
fight for more
access -- but
later told
Inner City
Press that it
had been
resolved,
and that such
meetings could
be covered.
At
the same time,
the
Correspondents'
Association
complained
that another
of Inner City
Press' Sri
Lanka related
articles was
inappropriate,
and asked that
it be changed.
Previously,
the Correspondents'
Association
screened
inside the UN
the Sri Lankan
government's
response
to Killing
Fields,
which itself
was never
screened in
the UN. As
Inner City
Press noted,
the
President of
the
Correspondents'
Association
used to accept
money
from Sri
Lankan
Ambassador
Palitha Kohona
as rent --
far in the
past,
he now argues.
So what
it is,
about the UN
and Sri Lanka?
Why are the
SAG meetings,
primarily of
member states'
Permanent
Representatives,
held not in
the North Lawn
building but
in 380
Madison? Why
the attempt to
apply
different
rules
there, as if
it were a
staff meeting?
In
context, the
UN's Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit rather
than helping
to
cover UN news
is acting like
a "minder," as
many criticize
for example in
North Korea.
Why should Ban
Ki-moon's
minder unit be
permitted to
shadow the
Press, either
observing who
speaks or
discouraging
such contact
by its
presence? Why
have these
issues
never been
brought up?
Watch this
site.