At
UN, ICP Asked Of Southern
Cameroons
Crackdown,
Then Paul
Biya Happy Talk
with SG
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Photo,
video
UNITED NATIONS,
September 23 – When Cameroon's
President for the past 30-plus
years Paul Biya came to meet
Antonio Guterres, he was
accompanied by state media
and... Inner City Press.
Earlier on September 22 Inner
City Press interviewed
Southern Cameroonians out on
47th Street, then asked
Guterres' spokesman Stephane
Dujarric about people killed
that very day. From the UN transcript:
Inner City Press:
there’s a protest right now of
Southern Cameroonians on 47th
Street, but more importantly,
there’s one in Southern
Cameroon where five people
have been killed today, as
Paul Biya gave his speech, so
I’m wondering… I know
the Deputy Secretary-General
had some interest in the
issue. There’s Mr.
[Francois Lonseny] Fall.
Are they aware of these
protests? Spokesman:
"We’ve seen the reports I
think we would definitely… we
would call on the authorities
to show restraint and ensure
that people have the right to
demonstrate freely." But on
the UN's 27th floor, it was
all smiles. And much later the
UN put this read-out on its
website: "The
Secretary-General met today
with H.E. Mr. Paul Biya,
President of the Republic of
Cameroon. The
Secretary-General appreciated
Cameroon’s hospitality towards
the refugees.
They discussed the latest
political developments in the
country, as well as regional
issues, including Boko Haram
and the situation in the
Central African Republic. The
Secretary commended Cameroon
for its efforts to combat Boko
Haram, and reiterated the
readiness of the United
Nations to support the
Government in all areas." No
mention of the Anglophone
areas, much less the day's
killings. This is a new low,
even for today's UN. UN
Department of Political
Affairs chief Jeffrey Feltman
had left the floor with the
Australian delegation; it was
unclear if any UN Human Rights
official was present. One of
Biya's handlers even signed
the UN visitors book in
advance for him. When Guterres
greeted his next visitor he
did so in French then
apologized, the last meeting
was in French. Back September
19. Guterres ended with two
photo ops. The first was
Paraguay's President Horacio
Manuel Cartes Jara, who spent
a long time writing in the
UN's visitors' book, followed
by a short meeting. Alamy
photos here.
Next and last was Uzbekistan's
President Shavkat Mirziyoyev.
Guterres said pointedly, just
the signature. But something
was lost in translation: he
still started writing. Alamy
photos here.
Then the Press was ushered
out. Alreay on the way in
before the Paraguay photo op,
the Media Entrance on 47th
Street was locked. The
questions about double
standards of media access,
including retaliatory
restrictions still in place on
the investigative Press while no-show,
no-question state media like
Egypt's Akhbar al Yom have
full access have yet to be
answered by the official now
responsible, Alison Smale.
According to a photographer
allowed into the smaller
"G-200" room, Smale was there
to greet "her" Prime Minister,
Theresa May. The previous day,
Guterres was to have met
Ugandan President Yoweri
Kaguta Museveni, trying to get
Presidential age limits in his
country removed, at 4:40 pm on
September 18. Inner City Press
went, with UN Security, to the
27th floor for the photo op.
But moment before, the
Security said to change the
flag from Uganda to Denmark,
or really just UN blue. Then
they said to switch it to
South Africa for Jacob Zuma.
This was attributed to New
York City traffic. Alamy
photos here.
UN Department of Political
Affairs official Taye Brook
Zerihoun, there for the Uganda
meeting, stayed on as he has
in his post. Would he stay for
Denmark, or South Korea's
Moon? Periscope video here.
When Italy's Foreign Minister
Angelino Alfano took media
questions at the UN on
September 18, they were all in
Italian except for a final
chosen question about Donald
Trump. Inner City Press
insisted and asked, in
English, if Italy funds
militia in Libya to detain
migrants and refugees.
Alfano's answer was in
Italian, but a handler from
the Italian Mission offered a
translation: that Italy has
denied it. So what due
diligence does Italy do, over
the funds it gives to the
UN-propped up government in
Libya? We'll have more on
this. Alamy photos here.
When US President Donald Trump
gave his UN reform speech on
September 18, he noted that UN
staff have doubled since 2000,
but we haven't seen the
results. He could have said
more: what HAS been seen
includes inaction on mass
killings in Sri Lanka and
Yemen, Myanmar and Cameroon.
Not mentioned in Secretary
General Antonio Guterres'
speech, nor in his answers the
two times Inner City Press has
asked him, is the UN bribery
guilty verdicts in the case of
Ng Lap Seng / John Ashe. The
UN was shown, only this
summer, to be for sale. And
nothing has changed. As UN
General Assembly week started
up on Sunday, the US announced
that Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson would meet with his
Russian counterpart Sergey
Lavrov at 9 pm, at Russia's
Mission to the UN. Inner City
Press after asking Cote
d'Ivoire president Alassane
Ouattara a question about
Myanmar - without answer -
biked up to that Mission on
67th Street. There in the half
light were dozens of reporters
and photographers, waiting for
Tillerson to leave. In the
street were US body guards
with machine guns. Tillerson
emerged and said nothing,
driving away. Video here.
Most of the Western wire
service correspondents, one a
photographer who'd been at the
UN photo op with Ouattara but
not the stakeout with Ivorian
media, turned and left. Then
the spokesman for Lavrov, and
before him for now deceased
Ambassador Vitaly Churkin,
emerged and briefed in Russia.
Inner City Press was informed
second hard that she said the
topics had been Syria, Ukraine
and Minsk implementation, and
“North Africa.” Later the US
State Department said, “U.S.
Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson and Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov met
this evening in New York on
the sidelines of the United
Nations General Assembly. The
two recommitted to
deconflicting military
operations in Syria, reducing
the violence, and creating the
conditions for the Geneva
process to move forward,
pursuant to United Nations
Security Council Resolution
2254.” So what about North
Africa? Peacekeepers in
Ukraine? Watch this site.
***
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