From
Burundi, Cable
to UN & Ladsous
on Arms to
Imbonerakura,
Rwanda Echo
By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Alert
UNITED
NATIONS, April
9, 2014,
updated -- A
cable has been
sent to UN
Headquarters
from the Great
Lakes region
of Africa,
saying that
weapons are
being distributed.
The reference
is not to
Rwanda in 1994
but to Burundi
today.
April 3, 2014
to be exact:
the UN's
Parfait
Onanga-Anyanga
sent a cable
to UN
Headquarters
to the heads
of Political
Affairs
Jeffrey Feltman,
who is traveling,
and of UN
Peacekeeping
Herve Ladsous,
about the
alleged distribution
of weapons to
the
Imbonerakure
youth wing. It
resonates with
the so-called
genocide fax
sent from
Rwanda and
ignored by the
UN.
Inner
City Press has
reliably
confirmed that
the cable was
sent, and
received. And
so here is a
photo:
And now what?
Inner City
Press
understands
that the
allegation was
brought to the
attention of
the Security
Council in
closed
consultations,
a credit to
the Department
of Political
Affairs.
But as more
and more
information
comes out about
the Department
of Peacekeeping
Operations
withholding information
about attacks
on civilians
and even on
its own
troops,
Ladsous should
answer.
Inner City
Press has
asked the top
two UN
spokespeople:
"this
is a request
that your
Office confirm
to Inner City
Press as
quickly
as possible
the receipt by
USG Ladsous of
an April 3
cable from
Parfait
Onanga-Anyanga
at BNUB in
Burundi
concerning the
alleged
distribution
of weapons to
the
Imbonerakure.
Given the
stakes, as
well as the
echo of
Rwanda, please
respond as
quickly as
possible,
and also state
what if
anything USG
Ladsous has
done about
it."
So far, no
answer. When
one it is
received it
will be
reported.
Update:
at 6 pm UN
spokesperson
replied, but
did not answer
whether
addressee
Herve Ladsous
got the cable,
nor what if
anything he
did
about it:
Subject:
Re:
Press Qs: Pls
confirm
Burundi April
3 cable (on
alleged arming
of
Imbonerakure)
to USG Ladsous
received, what
done?
From: Stephane
Dujarric [at]
un.org
Date: Wed, Apr
9, 2014 at
6:03 PM
To:
Matthew
Russell Lee
[at]
InnerCityPress.com
Cc: FUNCA [at]
funca.info
Matthew,
the
UN is closely
monitoring the
situation in
Burundi. As
you know,
and would have
seen, the
Secretary-General
raised this
issue just a
few days in
ago when he
met with the
Vice President
of Burundi in
Kigali. The
readout is [here].
But
what
about
answering if
USG Ladsous
received the
cable, and
what if
anything he
did about it?
On April 7,
the 20th
anniversary of
the beginning
of the Rwandan
genocide against
the Tutsis,
the UN's
Ladsous
refused to
answer a Press
question about
when his Congo
mission will
belatedly go
after the Hutu
FDLR militia,
see below.
On April 8,
Ladsous heard
but did not
answer an
Inner City
Press question
about alleged
rapes by his
peacekeepers
in Mali - the
Department of
Public Information
enabler then
said the press
conference was
only about the
DRC, a topic
on which
Ladsous had
refused to
answer the day
previous.
For months, UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous dodged
and refused
questions
about rapes by
the Congolese
Army FARDC in
Minova. Video
compilation
here.
On April 9,
Ladsous
appeared for a
press
conference
with High Commissioner
for Human
Rights Navi
Pillay.
Ladsous
presented the
Minova cases
-- no
convictions --
as a success
for the UN's
Human Rights
Due Diligence
Policy.
Inner City
Press asked Navi
Pillay if she
should sixteen
months and
counting was
too long,
given that
Ladsous'
MONUSCO is
still working
with the
implicated
FARDC units,
the 41st and
391st Battalion.
Then Inner
City Press
specifically
asked Ladsous
about charges
of gang rape
against
peacekeepers
in his Mali
mission
MINUSMA. Have
those charged
been cleared?
Pillay said
she hadn't
presented
Minova as a
success, and
that she is
concerned
about the
delay. Then
Ladsous sat
silent. The Department
of Public
Information
moderator
said, "Mr.
Lee, I said
this was about
the DRC."
So rapes ascribed
to UN Peacekeepers
in Mali go
UNanswered?
There is a
pattern:
On April 7 it
was a simple
question to
Ladsous, which
he refused:
when will UN
Peacekeeping
go after or
neutralize the
Hutu FDLR
militia? It
was asked by
Inner City
Press on April
7, the 20th
anniversary of
the beginning
of the
genocide
against the
Tutsis in
Rwanda in
which the FDLR
were
perpetrators.
But UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous
replied, "To
you, Mister,
you know I
never answer
your
questions, and
you know very
well why." Video here,
and embedded
below.
Why,
then? Ladsous
was France's
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
at the UN in
1994 during
the Rwanda
genocide, and
he argued for
French
policies
including the
escape of the
genocidaires
into Eastern
Congo. See sample
memo, here.
It is
one thing for
France to so
deny this
history that
it decided its
Justice
Minister would
not attend the
genocide
commemoration
in Kigali. But
for a French
UN official to
openly refuse
to answer a
question about
his
responsibility,
to neutralize
the Hutu FDLR
militia in
Eastern Congo?
This
happened at
the
International
Peace
Institute on
First Avenue
across from
the UN
Headquarters.
On the panel
with Ladsous
as he said
this were
IPI's
Francesco
Mancini,
Italy's
Permanent
Representative
Sebastiano
Cardi,
Pakistan's
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
Khan and
Ameerah Haq,
Under-Secretary-General
for the UN
Department of
Field Support.
The audience,
witnesses,
were a range
of diplomats
and UN
officials.
Ladsous, ever
since Inner
City Press
asked him
about his
history, has
resisted
questions
inside the UN,
see video
compilation
here, UK
coverage in
the
New Statesman
here.
But
previously
Ladsous did
answer an
Inner City
Press question
at IPI, and UN
officials made
much of it to
Inner City
Press, as if
to say,
Ladsous is
reasonable, he
is not engaged
in censorship.
But he
is. Another
example: while
UN
Peacekeeping
spends a lot
of money
promoting
itself on
social media,
Inner City
Press has
asked why for
example its
MINURSO
mission in
Western
Sahara, in
which Morocco
and France
oppose a human
rights
monitoring
mandate, has
no social
media
presence.
The
answer given
at IPI -- not
by Ladsous,
who refuses
Inner City
Press
questions --
is that for
some missions,
countries do
no give
permission for
certain
equipment or,
apparently,
Twitter
accounts. But
who could it
be, banning
MINURSO in
Western Sahara
from social
media?
Ladsous
tries
to spoonfeed
information to
friendly
scribes; in
his favor
first the
UN
Correspondents
Association
(requested by
Agence
France Presse)
then the
current
spokesperson
of UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon have
made threats
to discourage
coverage.
There's more
on this - but
this
is today's
video, here;
this is
today's UN.
Watch this
site.
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