UN
Peacekeeping Budget $7.3B, UN
Withholds Docs, ICP Obtains
Figures & Notes, Patreon
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Photo here
UNITED NATIONS,
June 30 -- While US Ambassador
Nikki Haley was taking
questions on the topic down in
Washington,
a UN budget committee expert
on June 28 approached Inner
City Press with news. The UN
Peacekeeping budget is being
cut by $600 million. While UN
Spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
despite requests, left on June
30 without providing any of
the approved budget documents,
a source has given Inner City
Press a photo with each
mission's budget number, and
more, in it. Publishing on
Patreon here.
The notes include the Chief
Gender Adviser in MINUSCA in
CAR being downgraded to the
P-3 level, and a Human Rights
Officer being abolished in
Liberia's UNMIL. More than
five hours after Inner City
Press published the news,
Haley confirmed it, see below.
So on June 29, Inner City
Press asked the UN Spokesman
Stephane Dujarric for comment
- but got none. And on June
30, even after the UN General
Assembly voted, the budget
documents on $7.3 billion were
not available. Photo here.
Nothing was heard from
holdover spokesman Dujarric
even as his office prepared to
stop even taking questions for
five day. But an African
Permanent Representative
described to Inner City Press
how they, an African Troika,
had wanted $7.4 billion and
"the US then wanted only $7.1
billion and after a meeting
with the African Troika the
$7.3 billion was agreed." The
African diplomat took issues
with a claim he'd seen online
that it was all about the
European Union; surprise was
also expressed at the slow
pace of reform, and lack of
opening up, under new SG
Guterres. From the UN's June
29 transcript:
Inner City Press: on the
peacekeeping budget and the
reduction from 7.9 to $7.3
billion, what are the next
steps for DPKO [Department of
Peacekeeping Operations]? Do
you have any comment generally
on it?
Spokesman: Well, I…
first of all, my understanding
is that the budget will not be
officially approved until this
afternoon, voted on this
afternoon. So we will
react more officially at that
point. Obviously, it is
the right and responsibility
of the legislative bodies of
this Organization to set the
budget. Once we see what
actually has been voted on, we
will take the appropriate
measures to follow up and
ensure that our mandates are
fulfilled with the resources
that are given to us.
Inner City Press: Can we
get DPKO to come and do some
kind of briefing on this?
Spokesman: I said I
will… We will have some sort
of reaction afterwards.
The Budget
committee voted that
afternoon, but still nothing
from Dujarric, who threw Inner
City Press out
of the UN Press Briefing
Room and UN,
and restricts
it still. Haley on June 28
said: "We have an obligation
to the American people to show
value in the use of their
taxpayer dollars. Just five
months into our time here,
we’ve already been able to cut
over half a billion dollars
from the UN peacekeeping
budget and we’re only getting
started." The DR Congo mission
MONUSCO is next. What of the
smaller but calling out for
cuts UN Department of Public
Information, which has used
its resources to engage in censorship
of the investigative Press,
including on June 28 requiring
a minder
for Inner City Press to cover
a General Assembly meeting?
What about WIPO and its
retaliation? Inner City Press
asked the UN Spokesman; watch
this site. Back on May 15 with
the mandate of the UN mission
in Abyei set to expire, the US
as penholder proposed cutting
a part of the mission that has
not been functions, the
support of the Joint Border
Verification and Monitoring
Mechanism (JBVMM). But
Ethiopia, the lone troop
contributor to the mission,
and others pushed back. On the
evening on May 15 a revised
draft was approved - Inner
City Press put it online here
- which extended the
mandate, while setting
condition(s), something of a
six-month deadline. But that
could, of course, change. See
here. Back on May 12
while the Council met behind
closed door, Inner City Press
the lone media at the stakeout
- also the only one evicted
and still
restricted by the UN -
broadcast, here.
Afterward a Sudanese diplomat
emerged and told Inner City
Press of a possible
compromised; he waved off the
UNTV boom mic, a new entrant
through an opaque process.
Finally Uruguay's Elbio
Rosselli, president of the
Council, emerged and said
negotiations continued. Inner
City Press asked him if
instead of cuts there might be
"benchmarks;" there seemed to
be recognition. Video
here. Then at the
May 12 noon briefing Inner
City Press asked the UN's
holdover spokesman Stephane
Dujarric, UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: I
wanted to ask you, the Council
had been set today to vote on
UNISFA (United Nations Interim
Security Force for Abyei) and
now it’s… the negotiation
seems like there is a
disagreement with the
Secretary-General's report on
support provided by the
mission to the Joint Border
Verification and Monitoring
Mechanism. So, some
people are saying that it's a
totally non-func… it doesn't
work. No work is being
done. And so that the
500 troops are essentially a
waste. I wanted to know,
other than just say it should
continue to be paid for, can
you articulate from this
podium or sometime during this
what is the rationale for
continuing, without changes,
the support?
Spokesman: I think the
mission provides critical work
in an area that has been a
flashpoint of conflict in the
past. Obviously, the
mission, as every other
peacekeeping mission, operates
under the mandate of the
Security Council. And
we’ll obviously wait to see
what Security Council members
have to say and what the
resolution looks like and will
implement the resolution, as
directed by the Security
Council.
Inner City Press:
Right. The question is
not about the mission as a
whole, it's specifically about
this JBVMM (Joint Border
Verification and Monitoring
Mechanism). Is it the
Secretary-General's position
that this thing is actually
functional, that there is
something to be supported?
Spokesman: The
Secretary-General's position
has been articulated through
his reports to the Council and
briefings. As it's under
very close discussion by
Council members now, I'm not
going to add to what I've
already said.
That's not
much of a defense of this
spending, or failure. But will
the showdown be avoided and
the money continue flowing
unchanged? Watch this site.
After the UN Security Council
had closed door consultations
on Guinea Bissau and Lebanon
on May 11, the office of UN
Spokesperson Stephane Dujarric
announced that Council
president Elbio Rosselli would
speak at the UNTV stakeout.
But other than Inner City
Press, which Dujarric evicted
and still restricts, no other
media came. Still Rosselli to
his credit agreed to do
Q&A. Inner City Press
asked him if the withdrawal
from Guinea Bissau of ECOMIS
was discussed - it was - and
for how long Jeffrey Feltman
will fill in on Resolution
1559 on Lebanon (it's
unclear). Then Inner City
Press asked Rosselli of
something he'd said two days
before, that there might be
more than a Press Statement on
North Korea's most recent
missile launch. Rosselli
replied that work continues,
then he left. Still, he took
questions and responded to
them - better than many in the
UN Secretariat. On May 9 after
members of the UN Security
Council met with Kofi Annan
and fellow Elders Lakhdar
Brahimi, Gro Harlem Brundtland
and Mary Robinson on May 9,
Inner City Press asked the
Council's President for May
Elbio Rosselli of Uruguay if
Myanmar, on which Annan and
The Elders have worked, came
up. No, he said, the focus had
been on impasses in the
Council on Syria, South Sudan,
the conflicts springing from
climate change. The latter
topic he said had been raised
by Annan and Robinson, in the
closed door meeting at the
International Peace Institute
across from the UN (Uruguay's
mission arranged for an
elevator foyer stakeout, which
was appreciated.)
Earlier
on May 9 Inner City
Press asked
Gro Harlem
Brundtland and
Lakhdar
Brahimi about
the Rohingya
and whether
Aung San Suu
Kyi was or is
on the path to
becoming an
Elder. Gro
Harlem
Brundtland
said Suu Kyi
was a form of
Elder while
imprisoned,
but cannot be
while involved
in politics.
And after she
retires? If
the Rohingya
are still
treated this
way? Brahimi
cited Annon's
report
forthcoming in
October.We'll
see.
Back on May 1 when he took on
the Presidency of the UN
Security Council for the
month, Ambassador Rosselli on
May
1 took questions from
the media about the month's
Program of Work. Inner City
Press asked him about new
envoys for Burundi (Michel
Kafando) and Western
Sahara (Horst
Kohler, apparently Inner
City Press' 227th
question on Western Sahara
according to Morocco's count),
and about the May 30 meeting
on Yemen. Video
here. Rosselli said the
envoys are up to the Secretary
General and spoke about
Morocco's ouster, now
reversed, of the MINURSO
mission. On Yemen he said the
meeting is at the end of the
month because it is hard to
move these around, it's like
Tetris. On behalf of the Free
UN Coalition for Access Inner
City Press asked Rosselli
after the month's eight closed
door consultations to hold
on-camera stakeouts on UNTV.
We note
that Frente Polisario's April
28 stakeout, unlike that of
Morocco's Omar Hilale, is
still as of this writing on
May 1 not on the UNTV website.
We'll have more on this.
Back at
the beginning of March,
then-incoming UNSC President
Matthew Rycroft of the UK
answered Inner City Press on
Burundi by referring to France
as the penholder. On Yemen --
on which the UK holds the pen
-- he said sometimes there is
a benefit to a closed door
discussion. Fine: but what's
the problem with an open
briefing, then closed
consultations? The Free
UN Coalition for Access
will continue to pursue this.
On Yemen
Inner City Press also asked if
the UK's findings as it looks
into more than 250 incidents
of the Saudi led coalition
will be shared with the
Security Council. It remains
unclear.
At the end,
Inner City Press asked Rycroft
if Nick Kay is still a
candidate to be UN Envoy to
Libya. Rycroft said the UK
supports current envoy Martin
Kobler but if he is to be
changed, it should be fast,
there is momentum.
Rycroft
said that civil society will
be invited to participate in
the month's wrap up session, a
first. Boris Johnson will
chair the March 23 meeting on
South Sudan, and something on
Somalia later that day. We'll
have more on this.
***
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