After
UN Silent During
Biya's Internet
Cut, Deputy
Offers Words on
Southern Cameroons
By Matthew
Russell Lee, interviews
I, II
UNITED NATIONS,
July 27 – For 94 days this
year, Cameroon's Paul Biya
government cut off the
Internet to millions of people
in the Anglophone regions, or
Southern Cameroons. Inner City
Press asked the UN about it a
dozen times, yielding two
canned statements.
Now amid reports
that the UN is providing
electoral assistance in
Cameroon, where Biya has ruled
for more than 30 years, Inner
City Press on July 27 asked UN
Spokesman Farhan Haq about the
assistance, and for a read-out
of a reported meeting between
UN Genocide Prevention
official Adama Dieng and a
delegation from Southern
Cameroons. Video here,
from Minute 17:25.
Haq claimed there
is UN electorial role -
seemingly false
- and said that Dieng rarely
gives read-outs. In fact, as
Inner City Press learned after
waiting to speak to the
delegation, it was not Dieng
but his assistance Mr. Castro
they met with. Periscope of
interview(s) here,
with Ms.
Caleche Bongo
and others. Photo
here.
Given the UN's
Francois Fall's false report,
it is unclear if Castro will,
in fact, get any action from
the UN's Human Rights
machinery in Geneva. As Inner
City Press similarly filmed,
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres' chief of staff and
his Deputy SG Amina J.
Mohammed both attended the
Cameroonian UN Ambassador's
celebration of the
extinguishment even of
Federalism in the Cameroons.
We'll have more on this.
After Inner City
Press repeatedly asked
Guterres and his spokesman
about Cameroon's Internet
cut-off and abuses, the UN's
answer after its Resident
Coordinator Najat Rochdi was
shown to block the Press and
then left for the Central
African Republic was that the
UN Office on Central Africa
(UNOCA) envoy Francois
Lounceny Fall would be
visiting in May. This turned
out to be misleading like so
much with today's UN system,
including UNDP and the UN's
media "partners."
While on July 27
Felix Aghbor Balla and others
Inner City Press has
repeatedly asked the UN about
are hauled back into court, in
the UN a group
which never asked about
Cameroon and actively got
Inner City Press thrown out
and still
restricted says it is
hosting human rights advocates
calling for the release of a
U.S. citizen of Southern
Cameroonian origin currently
detained in the country by
government officials... at the
United Nations Correspondents
Association."
But this UN
Correspondents Association
UNCA is a group which, when
Inner City Press sought to
covering their event (video here) in the UN Press Briefing
Room to see if they discussed
having taken full page ads
from an entity owned by UN
bribery indictee Ng Lap Seng
got UN Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric and then DPI Cristina
Gallach to evict Inner
City Press (audio here,
video here)
and restrict it still.
So on July 27,
after the delegation greeted
Inner City Press (which had
previously interviewed one of
them at the UN gate), it
waited more than an hour in
the hall outside the office it
was evicted from, assigned to
a former UNCA president,
representing Egyptian state
media Akhbar al Yom, who
rarely comes in, and never
asks questions. This is what
the UN - and UNCA, the UN
Censorship Alliance -- want.
While in New York the UN
belatedly answered Inner City
Press with another statement
of concern for the Anglophone
areas, it was quietly
conferring with the Yaounde
racket run for more than
thirty years by Paul Biya,
rigger of many elections.
Among the
tellingly quiet UN team:
Francis Nadjita - one step
down from UNOCA's Francois
"Failing" Fall - and Pascale
Roussy. They were told, again,
about the abuse of Anglophones
the UN has so long cooperated
in. Yet have they said
anything? We'll have more on
this. The UN at the
highest level is enabling the
abuses. UN Office on West
Africa director Chambas, when
Inner City Press asked him
about Cameroon forces killing
97 Nigerians and abuses of
Anglophones, said to focus on
"bigger ticket items" - Boko
Haram. Video
here
from 8:25. But
in that fight, as exposed in
detailed by Amnesty
International, Paul Biya's
forces engage in torture, in
the Salak base with French
military presence. Amnesty
says "Cameroon’s authorities
and security forces, including
the DGRE and the BIR, have
committed systematic human
rights violations and
violations of international
humanitarian law."
On July 20, Inner
City Press asked UN Spokesman
Farhan Haq, UN transcript here, Inner
City Press: sure, I wanted to
ask you. Amnesty
International has put out a
report alleging in great
detail torture in Cameroon of…
in connection with the fight
against Boko Haram, but
saying… naming the places
where it took place, saying
that some of the… some of
these bases are also used by
international US and
French troops, so I wanted to
know what's the
response? I've noticed
that there is now a new
Resident Coordinator, Allegra
Maria Del Pilar
Baiocchi. Is there any
response from the UN country
team to… to this torture
that's been taking place,
whether from Mr. [Mohammed
ibn] Chambas or anyone else in
the UN system?
Deputy Spokesman: Well,
we're concerned about any
allegations of human rights
abuses and certainly, we hope
that this particular report
will be followed up by the
authorities in Cameroon.
Inner City Press: The
authorities have responded
today by saying that Amnesty
International is working for
Boko Haram and that the report
is… they are not going to
follow up on it, so I just
wanted… I'm asking you because
Mr. Chambas at the… at the
stakeout recently when asked
about the… the 97 Nigerians
allegedly killed in the
Bakassi Peninsula, said it was
time to focus on bigger-ticket
items, meaning the fight
against Boko Haram. So,
is the UN actually in this
fight against Boko Haram,
taking note like… this is a
detailed report of torture of
suspects. There's a
journalist actually who's been
sentenced to 10 years for
reporting on the fight, Mr.
Ahmed Abba. So, I'm… I'm
asking for a little bit…
something less than generic on
this.
Deputy Spokesman:
Obviously, any fight against
terrorist entities, whether
it's Boko Haram or anyone
else, has to be accompanied
hand in hand with respect for
human rights. We have
made that very clear over and
over again, that if basic
human rights are not observed
in a fight against terror
entities and terrorism, the
entire battle could be
lost. Part of what
you're trying to do is make
sure that the population
themselves feel respected by
the authorities under which
they live. And so it's
our point of principle that
human rights need to be
respected throughout… by
whatever authorities are
conducting counterinsurgency
or anti-terror
operations.
As to UNESCO,
while its 2015 field report
on the Dja Reserve, where
Hevea’s plantation is having a
negative environmental impact,
is being cited, why has UNESCO
done so little for people in
Cameroon, specifically in
Southern Cameroons about the
scam GCE exam? We'll have more
on this. As to UNDP, its Acting
Resident
Representative
in Cameroon.Jean
Victor Bouri Sanhouid has been
bragging about the agency's work
against poverty in the country,
on this
UNDP entirely French website.
UNDP hosts the website of the
UN's country team in Cameroon, here.
Under Antonio Guterres, it seems
- Guterres' holdover spokesman
Stephane Dujarric declines
to answer Inner City Press'
questions on UN "reform" - UNDP
functions will be taken over by
Guterres' deputy Amina J.
Mohammed. What would that
change? Watch this site -
and see this
Patreon video, the short
interview with Southern
Cameroonians on July 11 outside
the UN gates.
On July 13 the 97 killed by
Cameroon were dismissed
at the UN in favor of the
"bigger ticket item" of Boko
Haram. Video here
from 8:25. Inner City Press
asked the UN's genocide adviser,
on the margins of a meeting
about religion, about the murder
of Bishop Bala as well as other
topics - on which he answered,
without mentioning Cameroon. Here, near end. Paul Biya,
meanwhile, was said to use his
Bastille Day letter to lobby to
meet with French President
Emmanuel Macron, just after the
latter's speech decrying African
women for having "seven
children." Macron video here,
and here
Inner City Press' question to
the French Mission, the talking
points of which are passed
through by some feting the
Mission in New York. Ah, la
Franco-Phony. Ah, the UN
Censorship Alliance. We'll have
more on this.
***
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