As
Koreas
Exchange Fire,
Ban Ki-moon Is
Near, But To
What End? What
is UN's
"Comparative
Advantage"?
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 10 --
As South and
North Korea
exchange fire
near the
Northern Limit
Line and
Yeonpyeong
Island, the irony of UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon sejour
in South Korea
for the coming
days may
deserve more
notice than
it's gotten.
When
Ban became
Secretary
General five
years ago,
many thought
that the award
of the
top UN post to
a former South
Korean
minister of
foreign
affairs and
trade would
help improve
matters
between Seoul
and North
Korea.
Five
months into
Ban's tenure
atop the UN, in May 2007, he
was angered by the leak to
Inner City
Press of ainternal
memo ("Korea
Peninsula UN
Policy and
Strategy
Submission to
the Policy
Committee")
proposing that
the UN use its
"comparative
advantage" to
become central
to a
de-escalation
between the
two
Koreas.
But
little was
done, and in
March 2010 the
South Korean
warship
Cheonan was
torpedoed,
killing 46
sailors.
In
November 2010,
North Korea
barraged
Yeonpyeong
Island, the
first such
attack since
the end of the
Korean war in
1953, killed
four South
Koreans,
including two
civilians.
When
a North
Korean
delegation
recently
visited New
York, staying
in the
Millennium
Hotel just
across First
Avenue from
the UN, Ban
Ki-moon
had little to
say, and did
not list any
meetings with
them.
Ban in Seoul
last year, now
he's back
again: to what
end?
Now,
amid Ban's
sejour in his
native South
Korea -- on
August 9, his
acting deputy
spokesman
Farhan
Haq was unable
or unwilling
to provide
Inner City
Press with
any
information
about Ban
giving a UN
job to another
South Korea,
click
here for that
-- this
exchange of
fire occurs.
What will Ban
do?
Watch this
site.
* * *
At
UN,
No Answers on
Migiro's
"Official
Travels,"
Budget
Chief Leaving,
Ban's
Job Gift to
Koo
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 9 --
With the UN's
two top
officials both
out of New
York, their
spokespeople
are having
trouble explaining
what they are
doing.
Secretary
General
Ban Ki-moon is
in South
Korea, while
Deputy
Secretary
General
Asha-Rose
Migiro is
listed on
"official
travel" from
July
18 to August
16.
Yet
despite two
requests from
Inner City
Press for an
explanation of
this
"official"
travel, not a
single
official UN
act has been
described.
Nor does Ban's
spokesperson's
office, when
asked, seem to
know what Ban
is doing in
his native
South Korea.
On August 9,
Inner
City Press asked
Ban's acting
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq
about one
of Ban's
actions while
away:
Inner
City
Press: Ban
Ki-moon has
named Samuel
Koo as the UN
Commissioner-General
for the Yeosu
Expo. This was
in the South
Korean press,
and I just
wanted to
know, what is
this
Commissioner-General
position? Is
it a paid
position?
What’s this
all about?
Acting
Deputy
Spokesperson
Haq: It’s not
an
announcement
that we have
made from
here. We’d
have to check
what the
report is on
this
particular
thing. It’s
certainly not
an appointment
that we’ve
announced from
here, however.
Have a good
afternoon,
all.
But
for the rest
of the
afternoon, and
evening, no
answer at all
was given. The
Korea
Herald had
reported:
"U.N.
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon
appointed
Samuel Koo, a
former U.N.
official and
journalist, as
the U.N.
commissioner-general
for the
2012 Yeosu
Expo... In
Korea, Koo has
also held
posts related
to
culture,
tourism and
convention,
including
culture
ambassador for
the
Foreign
Ministry and
president of
Seoul Tourism.
Koo now chairs
the
culture and
tourism
committee of
the
Presidential
Council on
Nation
Branding."
So
Ban gave out a
grandiose-sounding
UN position
without his
spokespeople
knowing, or
even bothering
to look into
and
provide an
answer on for
sixteen hours
and counting.
Koo was also
at one time a
UN
correspondent,
seeking
information
not without
success from
the Office of
the
Spokesperson
for the
Secretary
General in the
past. And now?
Meanwhile,
Inner
City Press has
twice asked
about DSG
Migiro's
month-long
"official
travel," first
asking Ban's
lead spokesman
Martin
Nesirky, who
said he would
look into it
and provide an
answer, then
when he
didn't, asking
Haq on August
8:
Inner
City
Press: this
was actually
just kind of a
follow-up.
It’s
something I
had asked
Martin last
week, I don’t
have an
answer, so
it’s not
really a
follow-up.
It’s a
reiterated
question.
Everyday in
the
Spokesperson’s
Office there
is a sheet
saying that
the DSG
[Deputy
Secretary-General]
is on official
travel, and
he’d
said he’d look
into it. I
wanted to
know, what is
that official
travel?
Acting
Deputy
Spokesperson
Haq: She is on
home leave.
She is on home
leave
in [the United
Republic of]
Tanzania, but
she does have
some official
functions and
we’ll let you
know about
those as they
come.
But
a day and a
half later and
counting, not
a single
official act
has been
reported.
Inner City
Press followed
up:
Inner
City
Press: what’s
the
distinction,
because I have
seen sometimes
things listed
as leave, but
this has been
a full month
stated as
official
travel. What’s
the
distinction?
Acting
Deputy
Spokesperson:
Like I said,
it is home
leave, but it
does
include some
official
functions.
What
are
those
functions?
Sources tell
Inner City
Press that the
African Group
of
member states
at the UN is
being lobbied
to get Ms.
Migiro a
second
term, like Ban
got. Others
say there is a
European for
that position.
Ban's
Koo per Korean
Herald -
answers from
Ban's OSSG not
shown
When
Ban came in,
through his
now long-time
chief of staff
he said that
the
expectation
was that none
of his
officials
would serve
more than five
years in
their jobs.
But many have
been there
longer now,
with no move
to
replace them.
There
is a near
total lack of
transparency:
Inner City
Press has
twice asked
when
Controller Jun
Yamasaki is
leaving,
without
answer.
His job was
already
advertised in
The Economist;
another UN
source tells
Inner
City Press
Yamazaki is
slated to
leave on
August 18, but
might stay
on for a
month. But why
won't the
Secretariat
answer these
things?
For
the just-filed
Iraq envoy
post, Inner
City Press
reported that
there were
three
candidates,
all German. A
regional
Permanent
Representative
asked
Inner City
Press, "Which
Germany will
get it?" It's
like
Ban's
UN has deemed
the Department
of
Peacekeeping
Operations a
French post,
with three
candidates,
all French.
This is UN
reform?
Watch this
site.