On
Burundi, UNSC To Hear From
Kafando June 20, No Comment on
Imbonerakure Hate Training
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
June 9 -- That
Michel Kafando
was being
pushed as
(part-time) UN
envoy on - but not
in -
Burundi
was first
reported by
Inner City
Press on April
20. Even
as the UN
Secretary General
Antonio
Guterres'
holdover
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric
refused
to answer
Inner City
Press'
question if
Kafando had begun his
"When Actually
Employed"
work, Inner
City Press learned, and
the UN then
confirmed, that
Kafando has
come to New
York. Now a
date for him
to brief
the Security
Council has
been set: June
20, in the
afternoon. But
Kafando and
Guterres, now
in Central
Asia for a
week, have
said nothing
about the most
recent examples
of hate
speech by the
ruling party's
youth wing /
militia.
Burundi's Ambassador
Albert
Shingiro, last
seen at
Australia's
June 8 event
promoting the Aussie
candidacy
for the UN
Human Rights
Council,
complete with
wet bar
and wire fish
sculptures,
will presumably be
present on
June 20 - as
will Inner
City Press.
On May
30, Guterres
was
set to meet
Kafando at
11:30 am, with
video of imbonerakure
militia hate training
online.
What would
Guterres and
Kafando say
about it?
Inner City
Press at the
May 30 noon
briefing asked,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: I
noticed that
the
Secretary-General's
meeting with Michel
Kafando today,
and I wanted
to ask, there are
reports of the
ruling party
militia in
Burundi
training
children to
denounce opponents
as lice... And
I wanted to
know,does
either Mr.
Guterres or
Mr. Kafando
have a
response to
this?
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric:
We stand
clearly
against hate
speech.
This is the
first occasion
for Mr.
Kafando to
meet with the
Secretary-General
in his new
role.
He's also
having other…
whole series
of other
meetings at
headquarters.
And if we have
more to share,
we will.
Seven hours
later, nothing.
The
mediation is
in shambles:
William Mkapa
has said his
documents were
leaked by the
EAC Secretariat
of Liberat
Mfumukeko to
his /
Nkurunziza's
Burundian
government.
And Mfumukeko
has
been accused,
by an inquiry
of most of the
EAC, of
misusing EAC
funded for
disproportionate
travel to Burundi and
otherwise.
(Mfumukeko says since
Burundi did not
participate in
the review it is
not an official
EAC
investigation).
We'll have
more on this.
On
May 23, Inner
City Press
asked the UN
about it,
transcript here:
Inner City
Press: on
Burundi, I'd
asked you
before whether
Mr. [Michel]
Kafando had
started yet,
and I didn't
understand the
answer.
Has he
started?
Is it true
that he'll be
coming to New
York next
week?
And does the
Secretariat or
DPA
[Department of
Political
Affairs]
intend to
comply with
the timeline
and file a
written report
with the
Security
Council about
Burundi in
June?
Spokesman:
As a matter of
policy, we… we
do our best to
follow the
instructions
and mandate
given to us by
the Security
Council.
It is my
understanding
that he will
be here next
week to meet
with officials
in DPA.
And so he'll
be here next
week.
Inner
City Press:
And can you
ask DPA
whether
they've agreed
not to file a
written
report?
Spokesman:
I think that
was my first
answer.
Extremely
troubling,
sources still
tell Inner
City Press
that the UN's
Department
of Political
Affairs has agreed
with France
to simply drop
the
requirement of
a written
report in June
to the Security
Council about
Burundi, including
human rights.
"They are
selling out,"
as one soure
put it. Tout
est a vendre.
After
repeated
no-comments,
UN spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric on
May 5
confirmed the
appointment.
Inner City
Press
immediately
asked, is it
part-time?
Yes: transcript
below. He's
had nothing to
say about the
dubious
pro-Nkurunziza
outcome of the
"inter-Burundian
dialogue." On
May 18, when
Inner City
Press asked
Dujarric about Musaga,
he wouldn't
even say if
Kafando has
begun work and
is being
paid. From
the UN transcript:
Inner City
Press:
In Burundi,
there's been
grenade
attacks
followed by
mass arrests
in this Musaga
neighborhood,
which is one
of the most
involved in
protests
against the
Government.
So,
particularly,
given the mass
arrests, I'm
just
wondering… I'd
asked you
before a
couple of
Burundi
questions… has
Mr. [Michel]
Kafando begun
his work yet,
and if so,
what does he
say about
these
developments?
Spokesman:
I don't have
an update on
Burundi, but
I'll see what
I can get for
you.
Five hours
later, like
clockwork, Dujarric
left having
provided no information
- except a
veiled
threat /
denunciation
of publishing
leaks.
What
will Kafando
say about William
Mkapa going
along with
Nkurunziza's
arrest
warrants
against his
opponents, problematizing any
trip to
Entebbe in
Uganda? On May
16, Inner City
Press asked
the UN's
holdover
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, UN
transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: about
Burundi.
There's two
things have
happened.
One, the
intra-Burundian
dialogue is
over with a
move to now
amend the
Constitution.
Some people
say it would
allow now for
a fourth term
for Pierre
Nkurunziza.
And also, a
group of the
opposition
members have
written to… to
Mr. [Benjamin]
Mkapa very
upset that
he's asked
them to sign a
legal waiver
to go to the
next round of
talks, which
would
basically,
they think,
allow them to
be arrested on
what they call
trumped-up
arrest charges
by Nkurunziza,
the same issue
that took
place in
Tanzania.
So, I wanted
to know, do
you… either
does the
Secretary-General's
Office have a
comment on
this or his
new part-time
envoy, Mr.
[Michel]
Kafando…?
Spokesman:
I don't have
anything on
Burundi today.
And six
hours later as
he left,
nothing. From
today's
letter: "we
were surprised
to find that
the invitation
to the session
scheduled from
24 to 25
May 2017
contains
several
clauses that
exclude civil
society
leaders. In
effect, it is not
normal for the
facilitator's
team to
request some
associations
to nominate representatives
who are not
under arrest
warrants... The
organizations
concerned*
urge the
Facilitator
and the
Mediator in
person to
address the
situation and
remove all
ambiguities
and guarantee
the effective
inclusiveness
and security
of the
participants
in the
dialogue
session
dedicated to
civil society
in exile in Entebbe
as well as the
future
sessions."
Inner
City Press asked UN
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres'
spokesman
Stephane Dujarric
if when
Guterres met
Yoweri
Museveni he
even brought
up Burundi.
No, was the
answer. What
happened to
"preventative
diplomacy"?
What happened
to the UN
Security
Council's
resolution to send
226 UN Police
to Burundi? When
Security
Council member
Sweden's
Permanent Representative
Olof Skoog
entered the
Council on May
8 and Inner
City Press
asked him
about Kafando
being
part-time,
Skoog
expressed
surprise,
saying "I
think this is
a full time job."
UNTV boom mic
video,
put on YouTube
by Inner City
Press, here.
So did
the UN
Secretariat (and penholder
France) not tell
Security Council
members this
important
information
about the When
Actually Employed
envoy to
Burundi, a
country where
the UN says
there is a risk
of genocide?
* The
signers: 1.
ABR, Sé
Patrick
Nduwimana,
President 2.
ACAT, Sé
Maitre Armel
Niyongere,
President 3.
APRODH, Sé
Pierre Claver
Mbonimpa,
President 4.
FOCODE, Sé
Pacifique
Nininahazwe,
President 5
.FORSC, Sé
Maitre Vital
Nshimirimana,
President 6.
OPB, Sé
Innocent
Muhozi,
President
On
May 9, Inner
City Press
asked Secretary
General
Antonio Guterres'
holdover
spokesman Stephane
Dujarric, UN
transcript here.
The Pierre Nkurunziza
government's Ambassador
to the UN Albert
Shingiro
insists that
Kafando was
not named Special
Envoy on
Burundi but
Special Envoy "in
general who
Guterres could
send to
Burundi or
elsewhere."
Photo of
Shingiro's
tweet here.
This is
a new low, on
which we'll
have more.
From the May 5
transcript.
After
publishing the
exclusive, on
April 21 Inner
City Press
asked
French
Ambassador to
the UN
Francois
Delattre about it.
He smiled
and said
"bonne
question."
Then Inner
City Press
asked the UN's
holdover
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, who
refused
to comment.
From the UN transcript:
Inner
City
Press: I
wanted to ask
you on
Burundi.
Inner City
Press has
reported and I
believe has
some
confirmation
from the
French Mission
that there is
a proposal by
France and
possibly the
EU for an UN
envoy to
Burundi,
specifically
Burundi only,
not conflict
prevention:
Michel
Kafando, the
former
transitional
President of
Burkina Faso,
and I wanted
to know from
you whether
the
Secretary-General
has discussed
this proposal
with the
proponents and
if he thinks
given the
urgency of the
situation if
it’s a good
idea and what
the next steps
would be?
Spokesman:
I have no
comments on
that.
But later on
April 21 a UN
official told
Inner City
Press that
Burundi's
Pierre
Nkurunziza has
approved it.
Another
diplomat told
Inner City
Press that
Burundi's
Ambassador
Albert Shingiro
was summoned
to the UN
Department of
Political
Affairs. We'll
have more on
this. The
UN has sunk so
low that the
lead spokesman
for Secretary
General Antonio
Guterres
Stephane
Dujarric on
April 10
refused to
even take a
Press question
about Burundi,
where the UN
itself says
there is a
risk of
genocide. When
Inner City
Press said
"Can I ask a
question about
Burundi,"
where there
increased hate
speech
amid a warning
from other
parts of the
UN of a threat
of genocide,"
Dujarric
replied, "No,
we're done." Video here, contrasted.
More
here.
***
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