In
Sudan Under Fire Bashir
Offering Raises to Police As
UN Guterres Uses Security to
Rough Up and Bar Press
By Matthew
Russell Lee, CJR Letter
PFT Q&A
UNITED NATIONS
GATE, December 30 –
Despite Sudan's Omar al Bashir
being indicted for genocide,
Antonio Guterres has met with
him, as acknowledged to Inner
City Press by Guterres' deputy
spokesman Farhan Haq on 29
January 2018 (before Guterres
had Inner City Press roughed
up and banned
from the UN for 177 days
now) - and, we are now told by
UNHCR sources, in 2012, see
below. Now Bashir under fired
it offering as an inducement
for support raises and new
housing to "his" police. (At
the UN Guterres has used UN
Security to rough
up the critical Press
and put it without due process
on a non-public
"barred"
list that his official in
charge of media access Alison
Smale said
she has nothing to do with,
but would take under
advisement - then nothing,
including no answers to
questions.) On 20 December
2018, banned Inner City Press
asked Guterres and his
spokesman Stephane Dujarric
and Farhan Haq, "December
20-2: On Sudan, what is the
SG's comment and action on the
anti-government protests that
started on Wednesday in
northern Sudan and have been
spreading to other cities?"
Even by 7 pm on December 28
with more journalists arrested
in Sudan, for example Ahmed
Younes from Al-Sharq Alowsat
newspaper and Maha Al-Tilib
from Attayar newspaper, both
just for reporting on the
protests in Wad Nubawi,
Omdurman, there was no answer
at all, nor to 46 other
questions Inner City Press has
submitted including on conflicts
of interest by Guterres.
It turns out the UN has become
so corrupt under Guterres that
one of lead Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric's Associate
Spokespeople Ms
Keishamaza
Rukikaire who
actually seems to care or at
least re-tweet about Sudan has
been ordered not to answer
banned Inner City Press'
written questions about Sudan,
etc, see here.
Finally after 7 pm on December
28, from Guterres' spokes - /
hatchetman Stephane Dujarric,
this: "The Secretary-General
is following with concern
developments in the Republic
of Sudan, including the
reported violence and
fatalities. He appeals for
calm and restraint and calls
on the authorities to conduct
a thorough investigation into
the deaths and violence. He
extends his condolences to all
those who have lost loved ones
in the violence.
The Secretary-General
emphasizes the need to
safeguard freedom of
expression and peaceful
assembly." Meanwhile AI counts
at least 37 dead, and now
there's video of Al-Sudani
newspaper journalist Yassir
Abdallah taken to
hospital after being
assaulted by security
personnel who fired ammunition
into newspaper’s office. The
protests have spread and
Bashir's Rapid Support Forces
are being deployed in
Khartoum. Still silence from
Guterres, now on a murky
publicly funded junket with a
major conflict
of interest. In Sudan
Bashir has suspended
universities in Khartoum and
sought to cut the Internet.
Guterres is missing in action,
not even disclosing where he
is or how much it costs the
public. Birds of a feather.
Relatedly,
on November 23 the European
Union said
that "High
Representative/Vice-President
Federica Mogherini met today
with El-Dirdeiry Mohamed
Ahmed, Minister of Foreign
Affairs of the Republic of
Sudan. They discussed the
latest developments in
EU-Sudan relations and in the
Horn of Africa.
Federica Mogherini emphasised
that the EU is ready to engage
in dialogue and cooperation
with Sudan in view of further
progress on internal political
and economic reforms as well
as as well as its contribution
to peace and security in the
region.
The EU is closely following
developments with regard to
the preparations for 2020
elections. In this regard, the
High
Representative/Vice-President
Mogherini emphasised the
importance of a conducive
environment leading to
credible elections." No
mention that Bashir is under
an arrest warrant after
indictment for genocide. And
what, you asks, has the EU
done about the accelerating
slaughter of Anglophones in
Cameroon? We'll have more on
this - and on EU (in) action
on Guterres turning the UN
into a place of censorship for
corruption.
This week,
banned by Guterres from
attending and asking questions
at the UN noon briefing as I
am done under Kofi Annan (Rest
in Peace) and even Ban
Ki-moon, on September 10 I
submitted questions in writing
to Haq, to lead spokesman
Stephane Dujarric, to
Guterres' e-mail address and
that of his Deputy and Global
Communicator Alison Smale,
including this one: “September
10-1: Please confirm or deny
that Antonio Guterres has met
with Omar al Bashir.
Separately, if he met Bashir
in 2012, and if so why, and
when the ICC was informed.”
Not that day but
the next, Dujarric replied
adding his response in capital
letters: “September 10-1:
Please confirm or deny that
Antonio Guterres has met with
Omar al Bashir. Separately, if
he met Bashir in 2012, and if
so why, and when the ICC was
informed. NO CONFIRMATION.”
This seemed
strange, given Haq's answer on
29 January 2018, so on
September 12 Inner City Press
asked, “September 10-1 / Sept
12-4: Please confirm or deny
that Antonio Guterres has met
with Omar al Bashir.
Separately, if he met Bashir
in 2012, and if so why, and
when the ICC was informed. You
wrote, “NO CONFIRMATION.” But
here was Deputy Spokesman
Haq's answer to me on 29
January 2018 (before I was
banned from attending and
asking questions at briefing
71 days now): Video here,
picked up here,
among other places.
So how can you say “no
confirmation”? Is your Office
/ SG Guterres retracting what
was said at the 29 Jan 2018
briefing?”
After conducting
an empty briefing from which
Inner City Press was banned by
Guterres and Smale, and that
again had no a single question
on Africa (in fact, one
Dujarric's and Haq's favored
interlocuters used the
Press-less briefing to say
that the corruption of Ng Lap
Seng and the UN Office of
South South Cooperation was
“fabricated”), Haq sent this:
"Regarding the 29 January 2018
noon briefing, I made clear at
that time, as the transcript
itself shows, that there was
no formal scheduled meeting;
they were in the same (large)
venue at the same time:
Question [Inner
City Press]: And did he
meet [Omar al] Bashir? This
reported… I heard your litany
of countries and I couldn't
quite keep up with them, and I
didn't see a readout. But the
Foreign Minister of Sudan has
said that he met with Omar
al-Bashir, who's indicted by
the ICC (International
Criminal Court), as you know,
for genocide and war crimes.
Did he meet with him? And
what… what… is this a change
of policy?
Spokesman:
It's not a change of policy.
They were both at the same
summit. In that context, they
did meet with each other on
the grounds of the sort of
operational necessity that
does allow the
Secretary-General to meet from
time to time with him. That
doesn't obviate the need, of
course, for respect of the
International Criminal Court.
[Inner City
Press] Question: But was
Sudan in the list of countries
that you read out just at the
top of the briefing? And if
not, why not?
Spokesman: It was not,
because it was not a formal
scheduled meeting."
So
apparently Guterres and his
enablers believe he can meet
with alleged war criminals as
long as he doesn't write it
down on his schedule. We have
more details on the 2012
meeting(s) but they will be in
a longer profile currently
planned for publication when
Guterres returns from his 15th
publicly funded junket to
Lisbon. By banning Inner City
Press they have tried to make
its reporting more difficult.
This is censorship - but the
reporting is not impossible
and will continue. Watch this
site.
***
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