At UN,
Burundi
Ambassador
Defends Deaths
of Opposition,
Ban Silent,
Audio Here
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 14 --
As killings in
Burundi were
increasing, on
November 12,
the UN
Security
Council
adopted a
belated
resolution on
Burundi.
(Inner City
Press put the
full
text online
here, and
here
in French.)
On December
12, dozens of
corpses from
opposition
neighborhoods
were dumped in
the streets of
the capital.
Two days
later, the UN
of Ban Ki-moon
stil has no
response.
Instead, in
the UN
headquarters
Conference
Room 11 on the
morning of
December 14,
Burundi's
Ambassador to
the UN Albert
Shingiro said
the opposition
is run from
outside the
country, and
more. Having
been prevented
from getting
any answer on
this, and
being blocked
from
Shingiro's
Twitter feed
and whatever
he may be
saying on it,
Inner City
Press is publishing
the audio of
Shingiro's
remarks, here,
and will have
more on this.
When Ban took
three
questions at
the UN
Security
Council
stakeout on
December 14,
Inner City
Press asked
loudly about
the deaths in
Burundi, but
there was no
answer, only
to three
softball
questions from
the UN
Correspondents
Association
which, later
on December
14, is selling
seats with Ban
Ki-moon for
$6,000. Here's
Vine of
Inner City
Press' question.
There's
been a
European Union
process in
Brussels. But
even before
the killings
on December
12, what was
accomplished
in Brussels --
and,
relatedly, in
The Hague?
Inner City
Press' sources
say that the
large
Burundian
contingent to
Brussels
answered very
few of the
EU's
questions,
about
suspended NGOs
and political
prisoners,
satisfactorily.
But,
these sources
note, since
the
Netherlands'
foreign
minister Bert
Koenders
chairs the
Brussels
meeting on
Burundi, and
the
Netherlands is
running for a
Security
Council seat
in mid 2016,
against Italy
and Sweden,
the
Netherlands'
motivation is
split.
Burundi's
Ambassador to
the UN Albert
Shingiro, such
a diplomat
that he has
blocked Inner
City Press
from his
Twitter feed,
went to
Holland and
not Brussels,
for the Dutch
Security
Council seat
junket. Photo
here.
We'll have
more on this.
As to the
reference from
the Security
Council
stakeout on
December 11
about a
regional
peacekeeping
force, the
East African
stand-by force
alluded to
does not
really exist -
in any event
its make-up
would be
troops from
Somalia.. and
Burundi. Go
figure.
Finally
for now, the
rumor that
Burundian Army
spokesman
Gaspard
Baratuza will
be headed to
Central
African
Republic, for
the UN no
loss,
continues to
circulate. It
would seem
strange for
the UN to
accept this -
but UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous told
Burundi on
October 1 that
he is
“pragmatic” on
human rights.
So we'll see.
On December
11, the
Security
Council held a
closed door
meeting about
Burundi; the
French
Mission, which
is the
Security
Council's
"penholder" on
Burundi as on
Central Africa
Republic, DR
Congo, Mali
and Cote
d'Ivoire,
bragged it had
requested it.
After the
meeting, the
Council's
President for
December, US
Ambassador
Power, read
Press Elements
and took two
questions, one
of them on
Burundi. The
French Mission
did not speak.
On December 12
in Bujumbura
dozens of
corpses were
found. As
December 13 at
6 pm in New
York, nothing
from the UN.
Nothing at
all.
But from the
US, this
warning:
"The U.S.
Department of
State warns
U.S. citizens
against all
travel to
Burundi and
recommends
that U.S.
citizens
currently in
Burundi depart
as soon as it
is feasible to
do so.
As a result of
continuing
violence, the
Department of
State ordered
the departure
of dependents
of U.S.
government
personnel and
non-emergency
U.S.
government
personnel from
Burundi on
December
13. The
U.S. Embassy
is able to
offer only
very limited
emergency
services to
U.S. citizens
in
Burundi.
This Travel
Warning
supersedes the
Travel Warning
issued on
November 3,
2015.
Political
violence
persists
throughout
Burundi in the
aftermath of
the country's
contested
elections, an
attempted coup
d'etat and the
debate over
the President
standing for a
third
term.
Armed groups
operate in
Burundi and
gunfire and
grenade
attacks occur
with
frequency, but
are usually
not directed
at
foreigners.
If you
encounter such
a situation,
stay indoors
in a ground
floor interior
room away from
doors and
windows.
Government
command and
control of the
armed forces
and security
services is
not
complete.
Police and
military
checkpoints
throughout the
country have
the potential
to seriously
restrict
freedom of
movement.
Police have
also searched
the homes of
private U.S.
citizens as a
part of larger
weapons
searches....
Corruption is
endemic in
Burundi and
contributes to
an environment
where the rule
of law is not
respected.
Criminals who
have bribed
local
officials may
operate with
impunity."
On December
11, Inner City
Press at the
UN's noon
briefing asked
the UN to
confirm that
its Special
Envoy would
brief the
Security
Council later
in the day. UN
spokesperson
Farhan Haq
wouldn't
confirm it,
even as France
bragged online
that it, as
penholder, had
requested a
meeting.
After
the meeting,
past 6 pm,
Inner City
Press asked UK
Deputy
Ambassador
Peter Wilson
about the
African Union
observers not
leaving their
hotels. (Some
of Inner City
Press' sources
in Bujumbura
say the AU's
driver are
blocked). He
told Inner
City Press to
asked the
Security
Council
president,
Samantha Power
of the US,
about it. Periscope video here.
But
when Power
emerged, she
took only two
questions --
only one of
which was
about Burundi.
As selected,
Reuters asked
about another
topic. Vine
here.
Inner City
Press: About
Burundi and
then
separately
about UN
peacekeeping.
Yesterday, I’d
asked about
these… these…
covered in
mainstream
media killings
of five people
in, in
Bujumbura by
the
Government.
People are now
coming out
with names of
saying people
that are in
the, the
Burundian army
that took
place in
this. So
I wanted to
know, since
Burundi is,
again, used in
UN
peacekeeping,
what is… the
team that’s
there on the
ground, have
they been able
to go out and,
one, verify
this incident
and, and say
also whether,
whether the
same forces
used in UN
peacekeeping
were involved?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well,
regarding the
forces used in
UN
peacekeeping,
before they
join UN
peacekeeping,
they go
through our
human rights
due diligence
to make sure
that, and this
is true of all
peacekeepers,
to make sure
there are no
problems with
the human
rights records
of any of the
people who are
brought
forward and we
would continue
to do that
sort of
vetting before
they’re
included.
Regarding the
action,
activities on
the ground,
although I
can’t confirm
these
specifically
from here, our
Human Rights
Office is
still
operational in
Burundi, in
Bujumbura and
other
locations.
So they’re
continuing
about their
work.
And they’ll
coordinate and
continue to
report on
their findings
as their work
proceeds.
Inner City
Press:I wanted
to ask you
about
Burundi.
There's a
published
report and, in
fact,
photographs
of… the public
report says
that police
shot five
people at
point-blank
range in the
Cibitoke
neighbourhood
of Bujumbura,
and the
photographs
show just
that.
And what I'm
wondering is,
what is the
UN's
response?
It was said by
someone
yesterday that
Mr. [Jamal]
Benomar is in
Brussels, but
what… the team
that's on the
ground, what…
what are they
doing as this…
as these
events take
place?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well, our team
is being built
up. This
is the office
supporting the
work of the
Special
Adviser, Jamal
Benomar, and
he is
continuing
with his work
while we also
await, of
course, any
further
response by
the Security
Council to the
recommendations
made by the
Secretary-General.
As for the
violence, of
course, we
have continued
to be
concerned by
the violence
caused by
various groups
in
Burundi.
As you know,
we have been
reporting on
that
sporadically
as we get the
information,
but the
Secretary-General
has weighed
in. He
has also, as
you know,
spoken in the
past with
President
[Pierre]
Nkurunziza,
and we'll
continue our
contacts with
the parties on
the ground.
Inner City
Press:
Is it
possible… I
mean, given
that there's
photograph and
footage of the
victims that
are
supposedly,
you know, shot
at point-blank
range by the
police, i.e.,
extrajudicial
execution, I'm
wondering, how
fast does this
reporting take
place?
Has the UN
gone to the
site and seen
these… either
who's
responsible
or… that's
what I meant
by "What's the
response?"
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well, this is
a team, like I
said, that's
still being
built up, and
it's starting
with its
work. It
will pick up
the pace as
it's able to
do so.
But it will
report as much
as it can once
it's available
on the ground,
as well.
The
Security
Council'sNovember
12 resolution
called for the
UN Secretariat
to report back
to the UNSC,
on November
30.
On November
30, Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon made
proposals to
the UN -- two
versions, here
-- both
centered on a
mere support
team to the
Special
Adviser. On
December 7,
when UN Human
Rights
official Ivan
Simonovic
spoke of a
presentation
on Human
Rights Day on
December 10
about Ban's
“Rights Up
Front”
program, Inner
City Press
asked him if
it had
involved at
least checking
with the
Office of the
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights before
issuing this
weak Burundi
plan. Video
here.
Simonovic said
he had been
consulted,
then added
that he viewed
the support
team as only
the first
step, if
needed. If
needed? (If
Burundi's
mission to the
UN has an
answer, Inner
City Press
does not know:
its Ambassador
Albert
Shingiro has
blocked Inner
City Press
from his
Twitter feed:
Digital
Diplomacy in
action.)
Inner
City Press
also asked
about a Human
Rights Day
event in
Cambodia being
canceled due
to a crackdown
on NGOs (in
Burundi, more
than ten CSOs
have been
suspended),
and about
Saudi Arabia
moving to
stone to death
a Sri Lankan
maid. After
asking, still
during the
briefing,
Inner City
Press emailed
information on
all of these
issues to
Simonovic.
We'll have
more on this.
On
November 30,
then UNSC
President
Matthew
Rycroft said
he would speak
to the media
at 5:30. Inner
City Press
tweeted this;
Burundi's
ambassador to
the UN Albert
Shingiro retweeted
Inner City
Press. After
that, Inner
City Press
covered
inconsistencies
in the UN's
and some
Burundi
officials'
communications.
On
December 5,
when directed
to one of
Burundi's
Ambassador's
tweets, Inner
City Press
discovered
that
Ambassador
Shingiro, a
diplomat, had
blocked
Inner City
Press from
reading his
tweets.
Inner
City Press was
sent one of
Shingiro's
tweets, in
which he
claimed that
oppositition
to Pierre
Nkurunziza's
third terms
was like a
staged “Arab
Spring”
rebellion. He
said, blocked,
that the
insecurity in
some section
of Bujumbura
is one of the
consequences
of the arabic
spring [sic]
operation
targeting
regime change
in Burundi."
Burundi's
officials have
started mixing
metaphors, and
apparently
they don't
want the press
that covers
the UN to see
what they are
saying. We'll
have more on
this.
Some time
after the
November 30
closed-door
meeting ended,
outgoing UN
Security
Council
president
Matthew
Rycroft of the
UK gave a
short summary
of the meeting
and then took
questions.
Reuters
intoned that
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon had
proposed three
options and
was
recommending
the third, a
support team
for the
Special
Adviser. Since
this “three
options” is
different than
the two-option
letter that is
Ban's formal
proposal,
where did it
come from?
Particularly
because the
proposal(s)
are so weak,
the question
is important.
On a
piece of
furniture in
the UN
Spokesperson's
office which
is called the
Grey Lady
there was a
signed letter
from Ban
Ki-moon to the
Council,
setting out
three options.
As Inner City
Press and the
Free UN
Coalition for
Access have
previously
detailed, the
UN
Spokesperson's
office uses
this Grey Lady
to give
information
without
attribution;
often Reuters
has been
informed of
such a “dump”
just before
the
Spokesperson's
Office closes,
and then
claims an
exclusive or
says, “seen by
Reuters.”
But
here, what the
UN put out in
the Grey Lady,
though signed
by Ban, was
not the real
or right
letter. Inner
City Press
asked on
December 4 for
an
explanation.
Video here.
Ban's Deputy
Spokesperson
said that the
letter, signed
by Ban, was a
draft. Then
why was it
signed? Why
had his office
put it out in
the Grey Lady?
Inner
City Press
asked if the
signed letter
was changed
AFTER the
stakeout by
then-Council
President
Matthew
Rycroft of the
UK. Haq did
not answer
this. We'll
have more on
this, and on
Burundi.
Back on
November 30,
Inner City
Press asked
Rycroft about
the suspension
of ten civil
society
organizations,
and the
blockades of
neighborhoods
(today, Jabe
and Kinama).
Rycroft said
the CSO
closures had
been much
discussed in
the closed
consultations.
For a possible
Council trip
to Burundi, he
said there is
a significant
minority which
says December
may be too
soon. (Inner
City Press
understands
this is
Angola's
view.)
Rycroft
said there is,
essentially,
no dialogue.
What was hoped
for from
Uganda's
Museveni, how
ever
unrealistically
given his
President
Forever
slogan, hasn't
materialized.
Inner
City Press
also asked
Rycroft why
the talks on
Yemen,
projected for
mid November
by the UN
envoy, haven't
taken place.
He said the
talks may take
place in the
first week(s)
of December.
We'll see.
At the
November 30 UN
noon briefing,
Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
the blockading
of the Jabe
neighborhood,
and
Presidential
Adviser Willy
Nyamitwe
linking the
opposition to
"Islamists,"
see below. Now
indicative of
the
atmosphere,
the US has put
this warning
online:
"Security
Message for
U.S. Citizens:
Bujumbura
(Burundi),
Heightened
Security
Situation
11/30/2015
U.S. Embassy
Bujumbura has
become aware
that Burundian
National
Police
searched at
least two
residences of
U.S. citizens
associated
with NGOs on
Saturday,
November 28,
2015.
Because of
this, Embassy
Bujumbura
reissues the
following
information on
cooperating
with police in
a residential
search.
The
Embassy
recommends
U.S. citizens
cooperate with
Burundian
police if
asked to enter
their
residence for
the purpose of
a search. If
subject to a
police search,
U.S. citizens
should notify
the Embassy at
+257-22-20-7000
or after-hours
at
+257-79-938-841.
A legal
document
regulating
police
searches of
private
residences
mentions the
following
requirements:
·
Only officers
of the Public
Prosecutor's
Office or
agents of the
Judicial
Police are
entitled to
proceed with
searches. An
officer must
identify
himself with a
card before
entering the
house.
·
Before
entering the
house the
police have to
present a
search
warrant,
signed by the
appropriate
authority."
Both Burundi
governmental
spokespeople
and the UN's
Department of
Political
Affairs put
out
photographs of
Pierre
Nkurunziza and
Ban's Special
Adviser Jamal
Benomar smiling
(some
questioned,
about what?)
Meanwhile,
at the same
time Pope
Francis tried
to salve real
splits in the
Central
African
Republic
between the
Christian
anti-Balaka
and the Muslim
ex-Seleka,
Nkurunziza's
spokesperson
Willy Nyamitwe
equated
opponents to
the third term
with Islamist
extremists.
Even some
Nkurunziza
supporters
said this was
going too far;
Nkurunziza has
said nothing.
Inner
City Press'
question about
who was
referred to by
the phrase,
directed by an
Islamist, has
not been
answered.
So
while on the
one hand
Nkurunziza's
government
tried to
project an
image of
cooperating
with the UN
system -- and
today's
constellation
of the UN is
amenable to
this image,
for a variety
of reasons --
that same
Burundian
government is
closing down
civil society
organizations
and trying to
equate
opponents with
jihadists.
What will be
said to the UN
Security
Council, and
what will the
Council do?
There is talk
of a visit to
Burundi during
the US'
December
presidency.
Watch this
site.
On November
12, Inner City
Press asked UK
Ambassador
Rycroft, the
President of
the Council
for November
what steps
would actually
be needed to
send any
peacekeepers
from MONUSCO
in DR Congo
(he said there
are
discussions).
Inner City
Press managed
to ask French
Permanent
Representative
Francois
Delattre why
UN
Peacekeeping
keeping using
and paying for
Burundian
troops and
police in the
Central
African
Republic (a
Press question
both the
UK and US
Ambassador
Samantha Power
have seen fit
to respond to.)
Delattre
declined to
answer - but
more politely
than his
deputy had,
here.
In Burundi,
the Pierre
Nkurunziza
government has
taken to
suspending and
freezing the
bank accounts
of civil
society
groups, not
only political
but even
medical ones.
Earlier, Inner
City Press
published
this:
"Declaration
of Civil
Society
Organizations
on freezing
civil society
organizations’
assets and
suspension of
activities of
associations
ACAT BURUNDI,
AMINA, APRODH,
FOCODE,
FONTAINE
ISOKO, FORSC,
MAISON SHALOM,
PARCEM, RCP
and SPPDF
Civil Society
Organizations
condemn the
serious
violation of
the right of
association,
sabotage of
Burundi Civil
society and
the abject
threats
directed
against human
rights
defenders.
Since April
26, 2015,
peaceful
demonstrations
were held to
protest
against the
third term of
Pierre
Nkurunziza,
which project
was regarded
as the very
seriously
violation of
the
constitution
and the Arusha
agreement for
peace and
reconciliation.
Ever since,
fierce
repression
against
protesters was
organized and
carried out in
the opposing
neighbourhoods
and areas...
Civil society
organizations:
- Urge
immediate and
unconditional
cancellation
of measures
take to freeze
accounts and
suspend
activities of
associations
ACAT Burundi,
AMINA, APRODH,
FOCODE,
FONTAINE
ISOKO, FORSC,
MAISON SHALOM,
PARCEM, RCP
and SPPDF;
- Will file
cases against
Mr Valentin
Bagorikunda
and Mr Pascal
Barandagiye
for abuse of
authority
should they
refuse to
cancel
arbitrary and
unlawful
measures that
they took
against civil
society
organizations;
- Commit to
engage the
various human
rights
mechanisms for
serious
violation of
the right of
association,
as well as for
direct and
despicable
attack against
human rights
defenders by
the state of
Burundi;
4. Commit to
participate in
the peaceful
resolution of
the Burundian
crisis by
dialogue and
loudly declare
that they will
never agree to
negotiate
their rights
and freedoms,
the lifting of
the
proceedings
against them
or the closure
of their
offices
5. Denounce
again the
resort to
violence by
any party
whatsoever;
6. Undertake
to continue
their struggle
for the
dignity,
rights and
freedoms for
all
Done at
Bujumbura,
November 25,
2015
On behalf of
the Campaign
Halte au
troisième
mandat
Me Vital
Nshimirimana
Délégué
Général du
FORSC."
On November
24, before new
reports on
prison
sentences,
Inner City
Press asked
the UN about
this again, video here, transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: the
question that
I asked you
yesterday on
Burundi, one
had to do with
this free… it
turns out it’s
now more than
freezing bank
accounts; it’s
actual
suspension of
these NGO’s
(non-governmental
organizations)
and also the…
the… the… the
imposition by
the U.S. on
these
sanctions on
four
individuals,
one of whom
I’d asked you
about before
about possible
involvement UN
peacekeeping.
Is there any,
like,
involvement of
Mr. Benomar…
[Cross talk]
Spokesman:
Mr. Benomar is
currently in
Bujumbura
meeting with
various
parties.
We hope to
have some
details of his
meetings.
He’s also been
in Addis
meeting with
the AU
(African
Union) and in
Uganda,
preparing to
report back to
the Security
Council on the
options they
asked for,
looking at
various
aspects of the
conflict,
including
contingency
planning.
Obviously,
anything that
limits the
legitimate
rights of
civil society
in any country
is of concern
to the United
Nations.
On
November 23
the Press
asked the US
State
Department
about
Burundi's
move, but its
deputy
spokesperson
had no comment
at the time or
in response to
that and
another
written
question.
On November
24, State
Department
Deputy
Spokesperson
Mark Toner
returned with
this: "We can
confirm that
the government
of Burundi has
suspended the
activities and
frozen the
accounts of
multiple local
civil society
organizations
in what is a
clear step
backward in
pursuit of
peace and
dialogue in
Burundi. We
want to see an
open,
unfettered and
comprehensive
political
dialogue take
place there in
which all
voices are
heard. That
remains the
only credible
route to
stability and
and effort to
achieve
consensus and
forge a
peaceful path
forward for
Burundi's
people.
"As the crisis
deepens, and
media outlets
of course
continue to be
shuttered and
repression of
civil society
is the exact
opposition of
what needs to
happen."
Also on
November 24,
Inner City
Press asked
the UN again
about the
CSOs'
suspensions;
the UN
spokesman's
reply was
about Ban
Ki-moon's
special
adviser
traveling to
the African
Union and
elsewhere
before
returning to
advise the
Security
Council.
Inner City
Press: in
Burundi, the
Government has
suspended and
frozen the
bank accounts
of a number of
civil society
organizations,
including the
one run by
Pierre Claver
Mbonimpa, who
you’ve spoken
about from
this podium
before.
What’s the
UN’s response
to basically
shutting down
civil society
and…?
Spokesman:
I think it’s
clear that
every society
needs a
healthy civil
society, needs
room for civil
society.
The
Secretary-General
has spoken out
on that
repeatedly.
As for
Burundi, Mr.
[Jamal]
Benomar is
arriving in
Burundi today,
or as we
speak.
He will have
meetings
there, which
we hope to be
able to report
back [to]
you. And
this is part
of the mandate
given to the
Secretariat by
the Security
Council to
report back,
which we will
in due course.
Inner City
Press:
And I don’t
know if you’ll
comment on
this, but this
morning, the
Obama
administration
announced
targeted
sanctions on
those
contributing
to the ongoing
crisis in
Burundi,
unquote.
Do you think
that’s a
useful move?
Spokesman:
I haven’t seen
that report.
When
the UN
Peacebuilding
Commission
Burundi
Configuration
met on
November 18 it
was it was to
hear from
Swiss
Permanent
Representative
Lauber about
his trip to
the region,
including
three days in
Bujumbura. He
described a
climate of
fear -- while
adding that
Burundians are
resilient --
and of a 10 pm
curfew. He
quoted the
World Bank
that the
government has
cut health
spending; he
said he aim to
return to the
country in
January or
February. What
will the
situation be
them?
Burundi's
Permanent
Representative
Shingiro
responded that
the problems
are caused by
opposition
outside of the
country and
“the media”
within. He
stated that
Lauber had a
meeting of
confident with
Pierre
Nkurunziza,
November 11 at
noon for 45
minutes. He
said the
specter of
genocide is a
“tactic of the
radical
opposition
abroad.”
US Deputy
Permanent
Representative
David Pressman
called out
authorities'
hate speech in
the country,
as did UK
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
Peter Wilson.
When it came
the turn of
France, the
penholder on
Burundi in the
Security
Council, to
speak, neither
Permanent
Representative
Francois
Delattre nor
his Deputy
Alexis Lamek
was there.
There are two
explanations,
not mutual
exclusive.
At the
day's noon
briefing,
Inner City
Press asked
the UN about
those trying
to flee not
being allowed
to leave the
country and,
on behalf of
the Free
UN Coalition
for Access,
about
Shingiro's
comment about
the media.
During the
briefing, a statement
came in from
civil society
on Burundi,
signed by
Vital
Nshimirimana,
naming hate
speech and
even the
training of
the ruling
party's
militia the
Imbonerakure
at Kiliba
-Ondes in
Eastern DRC,
on which Herve
Ladsous' UN
Peacekeeping
never acted. Plus
ca change.
On November
13, the
spokesperson
for the Pierre
Nkurunziza's
government
issued a
response to
the
resolution,
saying that it
"toes the
line" of the
Government and
that the
problems in
the country
are "nothing
other than
poverty,"
here.
On the
evening of
November 11,
the UN
Spokesperson's
office
announced that
there would be
a formal
Security
Council
meeting on
Burundi at
12:15 pm on
November 12,
that would be
to approve the
draft
resolution. An
unnamed
official of
Herve Ladsous
UN
Peacekeeping
-- wonder who
that could be
-- got Reuters
to retype
without
analysis the
idea the UN
would send
peacekeepers
from "Congo" -
that would be
DRC -- into
Burundi.
UNasked
by Reuters,
actively
covered up, is
that Ladsous'
MONUSCO has
been unable or
unwilling to
protect
civilians in
parts of the
Eastern DRC,
and has refused
to neutralize
the Hutu FDLR
militia.
So it would
take on Pierre
Nkurunziza's
forces and
youth wing in
Burundi?
This
youth wing was
allowed by
MONUSCO to
train in
Eastern Congo;
nothing was
said by
MONUSCO when
DRC detained
a Burundian
journalist.
None of this
in the
Reuters, or
AFP, or even
more
derivative
Voice of
America story.
But to retain
this "access,"
these media do
not report
when the UN's
Herve Ladsous,
on camera,
links
peacekeeper
rapes to
"R&R." Video here. This is a
scam. Watch
this site.
While
the November 9
meeting was
still ongoing,
the UN
announced that
French
Permanent
Representative
Francois
Delattre would
address the
press in ten
minutes. But
when it
happened it
was the French
Mission's
deputy Alexis
Lamek,
moderated by
the Mission's
spokesman
Thierry
Caboche.
After bragging
about a draft
resolution
French
belatedly
circulated,
Lamek and his
spokesperson
twice refused
to take a
Press question
about UN
Peacekeeping
still using
the same
Bururdian
forces accused
of the
abuses.
NewVine
here.New video,
with UK
contrast,
here.
"Ask
him," Lamek
said off
camera,
referring to
Ladsous who repeatedly refuses Press
questions on
this (and on
covering up
French
Sangaris
forces rapes
in CAR.)
Moments
later when
Inner City
Press asked UK
Deputy
Ambassador
Peter Wilson
if the UN
should keep
using
Burundian
troops or vet
them, Wilson
called this a
"big issues"
that "needs to
be looked at."
Audio
including
Elements to
the Press,
here. Fast
transcript by
InnerCityPro.com,
here:
Inner City
Press asked,
the UN uses
Burundian
peacekeepers
in CAR. Is
there, or
could there
be, some
review of
that?
UK Deputy
Peter Wilson:
"on
peacekeepers,
I think this
is a big
issue, and I
think it’s
something
certainly that
needs to be
looked at in a
wider context
of what
response we
take to the
events in
Burundi right
now. I
wouldn’t urge
precipitate
action on
that, but I
think it’s one
of the issues
that we need
collectively
to consider."
Strange
then, that the
penholding on
Burundi and
controller of
UN
Peacekeeping
wouldn't even
take the
questions. The
history of the
Great Lakes
runs deep.
More recently,
Inner City
Press is
informed is
belated
discussion
among Security
Council
Permanent Five
members that
Ladsous is a
liability,
should or can
he even be
allowed to
stay on to the
end of Ban
Ki-moon's
term.
Inner City
Press: I'll do
Burundi first
as a follow-up
to that.
Yesterday at
the stakeout,
Peter Wilson
of the UK said
that the issue
of continued
or… or service
of Burundian
peacekeepers,
particularly
those involved
in the
violence in UN
peacekeeping,
is a big
issue, is
something that
needs to be
looked at in
the wider
context of the
response to
the events in
Burundi right
now.
Since… I think
I've
previously
asked you
about… my
understanding
is the
Under-Secretary-General
of
Peacekeeping
waived Burundi
not having the
right
equipment
twice in a row
in CAR.
I wanted you
to describe,
if you could,
what is the
process, one,
for vetting
individuals
that come out
of the… what
you described
as a… big
violence in
Burundi, but
also of giving
these
waivers.
Is this
something
that's done
unilaterally
by the
Secretariat?
Spokesman:
I'm not… I
can't speak to
the waivers
because I
can't… I don't
know if what
you say is, in
fact, a fact.
Spokesman:
As far as… as
far as
Burundian
troops, they
continue to
serve in the
Central
African
Republic and
other
missions, if
I'm not
mistaken.
They are
rotated
through the
standard human
rights vetting
process, which
involves the
UN, which
involves the
government,
which involves
the High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights, and
which involves
the more… the
broader human
rights
community.
Inner City
Press:
What about the
issue of…
there have
been several
complaints by
the
peacekeepers
themselves of
not getting
paid leaving
some in
Burundi to
say, in fact,
this is a way
in which the
UN is
subsidizing
the Government
and the very
activities
that Mr. Zeid
was condemning
yesterday?
What steps are
taken to
ensure that
the money
reaches the
peacekeepers?
Spokesman:
Obviously, it
is critical
whether it's
in the case of
Burundi if it,
in fact,
happens or
other
countries that
individual
peacekeepers
receive the
monies that
are owed to
them.
Inner City
Press:
But Mr.
[Hervé]
Ladsous right
here in
September said
that he's…
that he's not
sure whether
this money
reaches
soldiers.
So what steps
does the UN
take,
particularly
in a case like
Burundi, where
you're
accusing the
Government of
cracking down
on the people,
what steps are
taken?
Spokesman:
As I said, I
think it's
incumbent on
the
governments to
ensure that
their soldiers
get
paid.
Did you have
another
question?
At the
November 9
meeting,
Burundi's
Nyamitwe
droned on by
video by
Bujumbura,
even as
Security
Council
President
Matthew
Rycroft asked
him to bring
it to an end.
He continued
speaking as
the other
speakers on
video --
Prince Zeid,
Adama Dieng,
Swiss
Ambassador
Lauber --
squirmed,
seeming like
the audience
to wonder if
Rycroft would
just cut his
mic (he
didn't.)
On
November 7
came reports
of killings,
including it
was said a UN
system staff
member. This
has been
confirmed by
UNDP - but
only the local
Buurndi
office. Still
from the UN,
nothing. The
Security
Council issued
a Press
Statement on
November 7...
about Libya.
Burundian
journalist
Blaise
Célestin
Ndihokubwayo
has been
arrested and
sent to the
Service
national de
renseignement
(SNR). Where
is UNESCO and
its director,
who wants to
be the next UN
Secretary
General?
On October 23
Inner City
Press asked UN
Ambassador
Matthew
Rycroft about
the status of
the draft
Presidential
Statement in
the UN
Security
Council. He
said there are
differing
views, but the
UK is
concerned
about the
"threat of
genocide." Video here. On November 3,
Inner City
Press again
put a Burundi
questions to
Rycroft, now
President of
the Security
Council for
November. Video here, story
here.
The son of
human rights
defender
Pierre Claver
Mbonimpa has
reportedly
been murdered,
after Pierre
Nkurunziza
tweeted that
"No one living
abroad should
consider
himself
superior to
those who
stayed in
Burundi, since
most of them
have left
their families
here."
On
November 6, a
belated
Security
Council
meeting on
Burundi was
announced --
from Paris, by
French foreign
ministry
spokesperson
Romain Nadal.
Why the delay?
Why announced
in that way?
Later on
November 6, UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon (whose
spokesman
could not tell
Inner City
Press if Ban
will have any
representative
in the
Security
Council's
meeting on
Monday) put
out this
statement.
Inner
City Press at
the November 6
UN noon
briefing asked
how these
concerns were
consistent
with Ban
deferring to
the Ugandan
Defense
Minister (for
the EAC, Ban's
spokesman
pointed out),
and asked if
Ban will even
have a
representative
briefing the
UN Security
Council on
Monday.
UNclear. Video
here.
The US'
Tom Perriello,
filmed at the
State
Department,
noted the
weekend
deadline. But
why then was
the UN
Security
Council
meeting left
until after
the deadline?
US
Ambassador
Samantha Power
put out
this
statement,
here.
Behind
the continued
killing,
here's an
issue: Inner
City Press is
informed that
a number of
Burundian
civil society
leaders and
journalists
have
improperly
been flagged
to Interpol as
if their
passports had
been stolen.
This has made
it impossible,
for example,
for Vital
Nshimirimana
to travel to a
speak about
the crisis in
Burundi at a
conference in
(Ban Ki-moon's
native) South
Korea.
Inner
City Press on
November 4
asked the UN
Office of the
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights' Ivan
Simonovic and
UN spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
this.
Interpol often
brags at the
UN how it is
useful on the
issue of
foreign
fighters. It's
Secretary
General Jurgen
Stock spoke
before the UN
Security
Council on May
29, 2015. But
what about
when Interpol
is misused by
a government
like Pierre
Nkurunziza?
What do it,
the Security
Council and
its members do
that? Watch
this site.
On
November 2
Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
two speeches
given in
Burundi (the
full text of
one is below).
Video
here, UN transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: In
Burundi, there
was a speech
by the
President of
the Senate
[Révérien
Ndikuriyo]
saying that
opposition
neighborhoods
may be razed
[or raided.
Some] people
are calling it
a genocide
speech.
There's also a
speech by the
President,
saying anyone
who doesn't
disarm within
the next five
days will be
treated as an
enemy of the
State.
So, I'm
wondering, not
to overdo it,
but things
seem pretty
serious.
I wanted to
know:
what is the UN
doing?
Spokesman:
"It's clear
that those in
position of
power, whether
in Government
or in the
opposition,
have a
responsibility
not to incite
fear or hate
of any
kind. I
think that's
very important
and that
whatever
security
measures the
Government
takes fully
comply with
international
law and
respect for
the right of
people to
freely
assemble and
protest."
After
Burundi was
elected to the
UN Human
Rights Council
with 162 votes
on October 28,
on October 31
security
forces in
Burundi opened
fire on a
funeral
procession in
Buringa,
killing
many.
These are the
Burundian
forces that UN
Peacekeeping
under Herve
Ladsous keeps
in service,
offering
waivers
while the
Government
keeps the
payments?
It is
reported the
Burundian
authorities
are accusing a
medical NGO of
offering
treatment to
insurgents,
and are ready
to attack.
Frankly, the
weak UN
Security
Council
Presidential
Statement
which France
belatedly
proffered in
the Council,
then didn't
even hold a
question and
answer
stakeout
about, is
woefully
insufficient,
as is the UN
Secretariat's
response.
On
October 28,
Inner City
Press asked UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
another
threat. From
the UN
transcript:
Inner City
Press: this is
a tweet
from the
official
account of
Pierre
Nkurunziza,
President of
Burundi:
"No one living
abroad should
consider
himself
superior to
those who
stayed in
Burundi since
most of them
have left
their families
here."
So people see
this as an
open-source
threat to
retaliate
against the
families of
those who have
fled the
country.
And I'm
wondering…
Spokesman:
I haven't seen
the
tweet. I
shall look at
it.
Inner
City Press
showed it to
him on his way
out. Earlier
on October 28,
Burundi got
162 votes for
the UN Human
Rights
Council, less
than the other
also unopposed
candidates,
but still
enough to get
on the
Council. The
UN Security
Council had
just issued a
Presidential
Statement,
here,
which gave
weight to the
Museveni
"mediation,"
and which the
US
later
"welcomed."
Usually it's
the penholder
(France) which
speaks. But
not here, not
on Burundi
(see Ladsous,
below).
On
October 28
Burundi was
poised for
election to
the UN Human
Rights
Council, as
one of five
African Group
candidates for
five seats.
Meanwhile on
October 26,
the European
Union adopted
the letter
to President
Pierre
Nkurunziza
that Inner
City Press
asked the UN
about last
week, here.
Can EU
members on
October 28 not
vote against
Burundi's
"Human Rights"
Council
candidacy at
this time? And
other Western
NGOs coming to
the UN early
this week to
set forth
their
positions,
will they just
phone it in
with regard to
Burundi? Watch
this site.
Inner City
Press: I
wanted to ask
on Burundi,
just this
morning the UK
Ambassador
said that the
UK is
concerned of a
threat of
genocide, is
the word that
he used, so
I'm wondering
under Rights
Up Front what
are your
thoughts about
Burundi and
what the UN or
the
Secretariat
can do.
SG Ban: "On
this genocide
issues, I hope
there should
be some
creative
investigations
by the
relevant
experts and
there should
be, first of
all, a clear
understanding
and
investigations.
And if the
conclusion is
that there
were such kind
of genocide
issues, then
there should
be
accountability,
justice must
prevail and
perpetrators
must be
brought to
justice."
But
what is the UN
Secretariat
DOING about
it?
On
October 16
Inner City
Press asked
Haq if the UN
thinks the
government can
investigate
itself. This
was based on
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
October 15
statement that
"The
Secretary-General
condemns the
killing of
nine civilians
and two police
officers in
Bujumbura on
13 October...
He urges
Burundian
authorities to
undertake a
rigorous and
prompt
investigation
into the
circumstances
and motives
behind these
despicable
crimes in
order to
ensure that
their
perpetrators
are brought to
justice."
So can
the Nkurunziza
government
investigate
itself (as the
UN purports to
be
investigating
or "auditing"
itself in the
wake of
corruption
revelation
about former
Presidnet of
the General
Assembly John
Ashe among
others)? Inner
City Press
asked this
question (video
here) as
well as
following up
on
this, from
October 13:
Inner City
Press: the
Burundi
question is
one that maybe
you can check
with DPKO
[Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations].
Burundian
human rights
activists say
that an
officer,
Jerome
Ntibogora,
N-t-i-b-o-g-o-r-a,
who was
accused of
being involved
in killing
people in a…
in a hospital
after they
fled from the
Government,
has now been
deployed to
MINUSMA
[United
Nations
Multidimensional
Integrated
Stabilization
Mission] in
Mali. So
I wanted to…
Spokesman
Dujarric:
Let's see what
we can find
out.
Dujarric did
not come back
with an
answer, by
this deputy
when Inner
City Pres
asked again on
October 16
said he,
Ntibogora is
not being
deployed.
We'll see -
watch this
site.
Amid
crackdowns in
Burundi by
security
forces, and
allegations of
sexual abuse
by Burundian
peacekeepers
serving under
the UN flag,
UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous on
October 1 held
a meeting with
Burundian Vice
President
Joseph Butore.
Inner
City Press has
already tweeted
a photograph
of the
meeting, but
has now
received the
complete UN
read-out,
which raises
more questions
about Ladsous.
On the
crackdown,
Ladsous
assured Butore
that he has a
“pragmatic
approach” and
is of no mind
to question
what happens
in any
country, does
not involve
himself in
"domestic
affairs."
On the sexual
abuse
allegations,
Ladsous spoke
only in
platitudes,
without
requiring or
even inquiring
into any
actions taken
by the
Burundians on
the alleged
abuse.
Even though
Burundi was
already given
a “grace
period” to
bring
appropriate
equipment into
the Central
African
Republic for
the MINUSCA
mission, they
have not done
so. In the
meeting,
according to
the read-out,
Butore
"acknowledged"
the
substandard
equipment.
Butore
requested, and
Ladsous for
now granted,
yet another
extension to
bring the
requirement
equipment --
until March
2016 for light
equipment, and
to June 2016
for heavy
equipment.