Amid
China
Detaining
Canadians for
Huawei Pompeo
Speaks With
Freeland Press
Questions
Ignored By UN
Guterres
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Video
I II
III
RS
HK
UNITED NATIONS
GATE, January 16 – The Chinese
government was quiet in
December 2018 when Patrick Ho
of China Energy Fund Committee
was convicted for a bribery
scheming using the UN where
CEFC is still accredited -
just as UN Secretary General
Antonio Guterres stayed silent
when Inner City Press asked
him why he left CEFC in the
UN. Video here.
After China detained Canadian
former diplomat to the UN,
current ICG staffer Michael
Kovrig, Guterres on December
20 had no response when Inner
City Press asked him and his
spokesmen, see below. Lead
spokesman Stephane Dujarric
had promised on
camera to answer Inner
City Press' questions - but
has shifted to total refusal.
Now on January 16, this Canada
read-out from US State
Department Deputy Spokesperson
Robert Palladino: "Secretary
of State Michael R. Pompeo
spoke yesterday with Canadian
Foreign Minister Chrystia
Freeland. The Secretary
and the Foreign Minister
discussed a number of global
and bilateral issues,
including Russia and
Venezuela. They expressed
their concerns about the
arbitrary detentions and
politically motivated
sentencing of Canadian
nationals. They noted
their continued commitment to
Canada’s conduct of a fair,
unbiased, and transparent
legal proceeding and U.S.
extradition request with
respect to Ms. Meng Wanzhou,
the Chief Financial Officer of
Huawei. The expressed
their concerns about the
detention of Paul Whelan in
Russia." On January 14
Inner City Press in writing
asked him and Guterres, Deputy
SG Amina J. Mohammed and USG
Alison Smale, "
January 14-6: On China and
Canada, again, what is the
SG's comment and action on
that China's Foreign Ministry
said on Monday that former
Canadian diplomat Michael
Kovrig, who was detained on
suspicion of endangering
China's national security, is
not entitled to diplomatic
immunity. Relevant departments
are handling the case in
accordance with the law, and
the claim that China
arbitrarily and unfairly
detained Canadian citizens is
groundless, Foreign Ministry
spokesperson Hua Chunying told
the press on Monday." But
there was not answer - this as
Guterres continued to cover
up his links with CEFC
China Energy which paid bribes
in the UN, and sought to buy
Partex Oil from the Gulbenkian
Foundation of which Guterres
was a paid board member. We'll
have more on this. Previously
Inner City Press asked:
"December 20-3: On China and
Canada, what is the SG's
comment and action on that a
Canadian military surveillance
aircraft monitoring United
Nations sanctions was harassed
in international airspace off
North Korea by the Chinese
military, and on the detention
of Canadians (and others) in
China, including Michael
Kovrig who previously worked
in the UN as a diplomat? And
on the case(s) against the
Huawei executive in Canada?"
There was no answer at all,
just as Guterres has not even
begun an audit of China Energy
Fund Committee after the
conviction for UN bribery of
CEFC's Patrick Ho. On December
21, Inner City Press asked
again, adding that Kovrig is
being denied the right to see
his lawyers or any consular
visit more frequent then once
a month - still nothing, as
Guterres prepared to set off
on an UNtransarent 11 day
trip, with public costs
UNdisclosed. Then on the
afternoon of December 21 from
US State Department Deputy
Spokesperson Robert Palladino,
this: "Canada, a country
governed by the rule of law,
is conducting a fair,
unbiased, and transparent
legal proceeding with respect
to Ms. Meng Wanzhou, the Chief
Financial Officer of
Huawei. Canada respects
its international legal
commitments by honoring its
extradition treaty with the
United States. We share
Canada’s commitment to the
rule of law as fundamental to
all free societies, and we
will defend and uphold this
principle. We also
express our deep concern for
the Chinese Government’s
detention of two Canadians
earlier this month and call
for their immediate release."
Canadian North Korea guide
Michael Spavor, who was
supposed to show up in Seoul
on December 10, has also gone
missing. Meanwhile at the UN
Security Council on December,
the speeches just rumbled
along, China, US, UN. Canada
is running for a seat, against
Norway and Ireland.
Kovrig's detention began
December 10; on December 10 in
Canada Huawei's Meng Wanzhou
was released on bail. Kovrig
should be released. Today's
UN and its
partners are
well versed in
hypocrisy -
but sometimes
things go so
far they must
be noted in
person, in the
street if
necessary. On
December 5
after an eight
day trial
Inner City
Press covered,
also here,
a jury in
lower
Manhattan
rendered seven
guilty
verdicts in
the UN bribery
case of US v
Ho, in which a
still UN
accredited NGO
known as CEFC
used the UN to
offer weapons
to Chad's
Idriss Deby
for oil and a
stake in the
Chad - Cameroon
pipeline. This
is a new low
even for the
UN of Antonio
Guterres, who
did not answer
through his
spokesmen the
written
request for
comment from
Inner City
Press, banned
from the UN
for 154 days
and counting
by Guterres.
Later on
December 5 in
front of an
expensive
catering hall
near the UN,
Cipriani 42nd
Street,
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres
lumbered out
of a Mercedes
and Inner City
Press asked
him, Any
comment on the
UN bribery
guilty
verdict?
Guterres,
whose
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric was
standing in
Cipriani's
entrance, made
a dismissive
gesture with
his hand and
went in. This
is today's UN.
Guterres was a
guest of honor
- of the UN
Correspondents
Association.
The UN bribery
verdict
questions must
and will
continue be
asked, and
should be
answered.
Watch this
site. The
tickets are
expensive and
the guest list
is secret.
Previously
this group,
formally the
United Nations
Correspondents
Association,
took money
from now
convicted UN
briber Ng Lap
Seng and then
provide Ng a
photo op with
the Secretary
General. Who
will be paying
this year? In
the UN bribery prosecution by
the US against Patrick Ho of
China Energy Fund Committee,
both prosecution and defense
did their summations on
December 4. On December 5 at 2
pm the jurors quickly found Ho
guilty on seven of the eight
changes against him: all five
under the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act and money
laundering and conspiracy for
the Uganda scheme with Sam
Kutesa and Museveni but NOT
for money laundering in Chad
There the payment was $2
million in cash - it was never
laundered. The UN has
yet to act: it has left CEFC
accredited while banning the
Press that reported on it, and
on this
(CEFC moving to violate
Iran sanctions). On December 4
prosecutor Daniel Richenthal
did a rebuttal on both the
Chad and Uganda schemes.
Richenthal tried to
rehabilitate Cheikh Gadio,
saying the money he took from
an unnamed courier from a
businessman was only $20,000
and that Gadio hadn't lied
about it. He emphasized the
emails as evidence and ended
with a photo of Ho with
Uganda's oil minister, looking
at a map of sites. Ho paid to
be there, Richenthal said.
This is what bribery looks
like. Judge Loretta Preska
deliverd a nearly two hour
jury charge, including the
Uganda anti-corruption law
that must mena little, if
Kutesa hasn't been charged
under it. Th jury will
returned at 10 am on December
5, now a Federal holiday in
honor of George H.W. Bush (who
nominated Preska). Defense
attorney Edward Kim urged them
to request and review many
exhibits, and it's to some of
those that Inner City Press
will not turn. Watch this
site. It still seems that the
US does not know if the gift
boxes CEFC brought to Kampala
on its jet included $500,000
in cash. Prosecutor Douglas
Zolkind said it doesn't
matter. But it surely did
matter to Museveni - and to
the Ugandan people, if they
and their votes matter (see,
e.g., Bobi Wine). And it
mattered to the defense, whose
Edward Kim made much of the
$500,000 discrepancy, as well
as calling Gadio a liar. Next
up: Richenthal for the
prosecution, and the charge.
On the afternoon of December 3
the jury charge was agreed to,
after the defense temporarily
argued that "New York, New
York" might not be in
Manhattan and thus in the
Southern District's
jurisdiction. Prosecutor
Daniel Richenthal said he was
ready to re-open his case to
prove the 60 Wall Street,
where Deutsche Bank is, is in
fact in Manhattan. Defense
attorney Benjamin Rosenberg
said, after a time, "We won't
make that objection. Judge
Preska said, "That's a wise
move." She also asked if the
exhibits had been made
available. Inner City Press
replied Not yet, which remains
the case as least as to it as
of 6:35 pm the night before
summations. (Before 9 am Inner
City Press had written
requesting particular
exhibits, on which we will
have more.)
Despite
Wednesday's national holiday
in honor of George H.W. Bush
(of whom Judge Preska spoke a
number of times during
Tuesday's down-times), Ho will
on that day be produced
(legalese requiring
translation from the largely
Hong Kong media left) the jury
will deliberate. We'll be
there. There was hardly any
defense, other than the
explosive cross examination of
Senegal's former foreign
minister Cheikh Gadio (who
admitted taking cash from an
undisclosed businessman for
his previous presidential
campaign). The government
finally put into evidence
CEFC's purchase of Apartment
78B in Trump World Tower,
which PGA Vuk Jeremic, Gadio
and others visited. There were
weapons for oil offers
prepared inside the UN. The
jury will be charged on
December 4. on the morning of
November 30 the
prosecution detailed how
CEFC bought UN PGA Sam Kutesa
- and played an audio wiretap
of Ho discussing bribing UN
PGA John Ash with Sheri Yan,
who did jail time in the first
UN bribery case of Ng Lap
Seng. As to Uganda, CEFC
instead of $500,00 case did a
wire transfer - it was
cheaper, through pliant HSBC
bank which also money launders
for Mexican drug cartels - and
there was Ho, in purple like
today, as Museveni's
inauguration. He brought gift
with him - a vase, painting,
what locked to be a clock - to
a dinner at Kutesa's
residence. Then the
prosecution flashed a list of
the times Ho entered the UN -
the UN has that information,
you see, though they refused
to provide it when Inner City
Press asked, as to Francis
Lorenzo, Ho and Carlos Garcia,
preferring to ban Inner City
Press. The prosecution left
for Monday showing the
agreement under which CEFC and
its missing Chairman Ye bought
unit 78B in Trump World Tower.
After a wan cross examination
by Ho's lawyer Benjamin
Rosenberg (Judge Preska
essentially shut him down),
the jury was told they may get
the case as early as
Wednesday, when Antonio
Guterres like his predecessor
will be put up for sale at
Cipriani on 42nd Street. This
week, along with the depths of
UN corruption, revealed how in
China the formal government
has a murky relationship with
quasi state firms like CEFC,
which on the one hand paved
Xi's way into the Czech
Republic and on the other,
tried to get Chad's Deby to
"make" Chinese state oil
company CNPC to get it a piece
of the action, perhaps for the
Defense Committee of the
Chinese Communisty Party,
presumably the sources of the
weapons and drones CEFC was
offering to Deby and others in
Libya and South Sudan. This is
the NGO that Antonio Guterres
has refused to audit and keeps
in the UN while roughing up
and banning Inner City Press.
Kutesa's sale of the UN began
through previous PGA Vuk
Jeremic, who told Kutesa it
would be "win - win" with
CEFC. Then Ho emailed Kutesa's
chief of staff Arthur Kafeero,
whom Inner City Press wrote
about before being banned from
even entering the UN by UNSG
Antonio Guterres. Later Ho did
his emailing with Sam's wife
Edith Gasana Kutesa, who asked
for money to supposedly make
good on an electoral campaign
to pledge help Kutesa's
young constituents (although
she also bragging that Kutesa
had no opposing candidate).
She wrote, Youth are impatient
- so send me the money! Ho
arranged for $500,000 while
pitching Edith on all the
things (and people) CEFC had
bought in Czech Republic. As
Inner City Press reported and
asked about before being
roughed up and banned by UNSG
Antonio Guterres, the Czech
Ambassador headed ECOSOC,
which refused to even look
into CEFC's accreditation
after Ho's arrest. CEFC used
the UN to pitch weapons to
dictators. And Guterres is
covering up for them. Ho met
Kutesa and his son Isaac for
three hours in the PGA office
- the type of entry Guterres
is trying to prevent coverage
of - and as his "PGA
residence." Ho would email
Kafeera and be scheduled
as speaker at the UN,
which under Guterres took
CEFC's $1 million even AFTER
Ho was arrested. The UN of
Guterres is corrupt. Periscope
video here.
Also on November 30, finishing
up on the Chad scheme with FBI
Agent Galicia, a CEFC web page
with Bill Clinton was shown.
We'll have more on this. On
November 29, Senegal's former
Foreign Minister Cheikh Gadio
admitted he took $20,000 from
an unnamed courier from a
businessman he did not want to
identify. Then Gadio pushed a
journalist in the street and
told Inner City Press he would
answer its questions later. Video
here
(YouTube),
shorter
(Twitter).
But if that
seemed to give
home to Ho,
the upcoming
Uganda scheme
should not.
Whether not a
disputed
prosecution
chart comes
into evidence,
the undelying
timeline is
damning. Ho
for CEFC told
then UN
President of
the General
Assembly Vuk
Jeremic,
who was
already
working for
CEFC, that
they wanted to
meet his
successor Sam
Kutesa of
Uganda. This
culminated, while Kutesa was
still UN PGA, in CEFC's
chairman Ye Jianming being
named a special adviser to the
United Nations PGA. This is
disgusting, given that CEFC
was pushing weapons to Idriss
Deby in Chad. More disgusting,
Ho used Ye's inroaded into the
Czech Republic, whose
ambassador to the UN, chairing
UN ECOSOC, refused to act on
ECOSOC accredited CEFC even
after Ho was arrested.
Guterres and his spokesman
Stephane Dujarric played their
cover up roles in this. We'll
have more on all this. Gadio
is not the defendant in this
bribery case - he is, at least
so far, the prosecution's lead
witness, with a Non
Prosecution Agreement. But
does that NPA cover Gadio,
after his testimony, pushing a
journalist on the street
outside the court? Video here
(YouTube), shorter
(Twitter). Inner City
Press along with other
journalists, mostly from Hong
Kong media, waiting outside
the Southern District of New
York courthouse at day's end.
Gadio emerged and Inner City
Press asked him how he thought
the day had gone. He did not
answer but rushed past. Inner
City Press asked, louder, "Are
you still running for
president of Senegal?" Gadio
turned back and pushed a
journalist who was following
him. This happened again a few
blocks away. Finally on the
stoop of a pharmacy on Canal
Street Gadio's companion said
he would not be answering
questions today but to give
your business card. Inner City
Press gave its and asked if
the former President of
Senegal Gadio who took money
from China for dropping Taiwan
was Abdoulaye Wade. Gadio
looked back in recognition -
then was gone. Inner City
Press previously questioned
him in the UN when he was the
Organization for Islamic
Cooperation's envoy on the
Central African Republic. Much
has changed since then. As
Inner City Press reported
yesterday, Gadio was already
on shaky ground when his email
to Ho complaining he hadn't
gotten Chinese money after, as
Senegal's foreign minister in
2005, he worked to drop Taiwan
and recognize the PR of China.
But the bag of (campaign) cash
allegation, dropped without
warning in cross examination
by Edward Kim, caused a break
in the proceeding. Inner City
Press rushed down to retrieve
its phone and tweet
and quickly live stream the
news, here.
Back upstairs, the name of the
businessman was not disclosed,
allegedly to protect him -
from current president Macky
Sall? We'll have more on this.
Gadio testified for a second
day about how he tried to
broker weapons to Chad's
President Idriss Deby from
CEFC's Patrick Ho, who
delivered gift boxes with $2
million in cash inside.
Gadio's testimony got more
specific, that in March 2015
Deby wanted to keep the
meeting with CEFC small and
confidential, "because of the
war situation." Gadio cited
Boko Haram, and Ho in a text
message said CEFC's offer, for
CNPC's 10%, was $200 million
"and some arms." This is the
head of a still UN accredited
NGO, offering weapons for oil
- with no audit by SG Antonio
Guterres. Gadio tried to get
paid for offering
opportunities with the Chad -
Cameroon pipelines. Gadio's
firm Sarata had its bank
account in Dubai closed for
not being able to document
where the money came from; his
joint UN tax return with his
wife, the head of the UN in
Equatorial Guinea, was found
to be false and is part of
Gadio's non prosecution
agreement. And the UN? And
Gadio's reiterated dream to
run for President of Senegal,
after saying in writing he
wanted money from China, while
foreign minister, for flipping
the country from Taiwan to the
PR of China? The defense began
its cross examination shortly
before the lunch break,
getting Gadio to admit he
misspoke when he claimed Deby
was calling him everyday.
Mid-day Periscope video here.
These will be more in the
afternoon, which we'll report,
while Guterres' UN tries to
cover up the corruption in its
walls - by banning the Press.
Watch this site.
- and what
happened afterwards. But there
are clouds on the horizon,
unless Judge Preska swats them
down, for the cross
examination of Gadio. The
lawyers for Ho, who it seems
clear was using the corrupt
UN's "special consultative
status" to promote oil
business and military
equipment, point out these US
statements, which the
prosecutions does not want the
jury to hear about: "That Dr.
Gadio had intentionally
omitted a key asset from his
disclosures to
Pretrial Services (Ex. A at 20
(“[T]he only reasonable
interpretation of that is Mr.
Gadio doesn’t want to admit
his association with that firm
although it is not
reasonably subject to
dispute.”));
• That Dr. Gadio’s statement
in an email to Dr. Ho in 2014
was “referring to a $2
million bribe that Mr. Gadio
later wrote about how he
should get a fee for and he
negotiated it and he got
$400,000 to the firm that he
omitted from the Pretrial
Services report” (id. at 21);
• That Dr. Gadio had “admitted
facts that the law recognizes
as criminal” (id. at
25);
• That Dr. Gadio had omitted
foreign income from the
Pretrial Services report
“both to avoid taxes and
because he didn’t want anyone
to know what it was for
because it’s a lot of money,
$400,000 wire or two $200,000
wires . . .” (id.); and
• That the omissions are “an
additional indication [Dr.
Gadio] is running away from
what I’m referring to as the
Gadio Firm which he omitted in
the description of his
employment because that is a
serious problem” (id. at 26).
" These statements, like
Gadio's threat to trash CEFC
to Deby unless CEFC paid him
money, are serious problems -
unless blocked. The only
certainty here is that the UN
is corrupt, and a venue for
corruption. Gadio texted Deby
that his "Chinese friends"
were coming to N'djamena with
"excellent offers." But when
the meeting happened, after
speeches by Deby and Ho and
CEFC's Zang, suddenly CEFC
brought in gift boxes, "as big
as that TV," Gadio told the
court. Deby accepted them. But
then Gadio, back in his hotel,
got a call to return to meet
Deby alone. According to
Gadio, the coup leader Deby
was offended. He had no
problem with the cash staying
in the country, but required a
letter re-characterizing it as
a donation. This was provided
but Gadio criticized how it
was written. By this time, the
email made clear, Gadio was
mostly focused on getting
paid. He'd asked CEFC for
$100,00 for a Dakar event
co-sponsored by France's
then-President Francois
Hollande. (He also took money
from Total, Hertz and a
Zimbabwe cell phone company).
Gadio texted his son Boubker
in Dubai that if the Chinese
didn't pay him by January "we
will go to Chad in January and
destroy their reputation and
strategies in Chad! The
President will listen to us!"
This was ALL IN CAPS. When
asked about the threat by
Douglas Zolkind of the
prosecution, getting ready for
the defense's cross
examination, Gadio said he as
"translating my frustration"
which Zolkind repeated as
channeling. This might not
work well on cross, which we
will be covering, watch this
site. Day 3 video here.
Initially, UN President of the
General Assembly Vuk Jeremic
set it up, putting CEFC who he
went on to work for in contact
with Gadio. Both met Ho -
Jeremic with UN Security who
said nothing - in Trump World
Tower. Gadio used the UN to
reach Deby, in a "high level"
meeting on Central African
Republic. (In another Gadio UN
connection, when confronted
about the $2 million in cash
Gadio called his wife, the
head of the UN in Equatorial
Guinea.) UN PGA Jeremic's deal
making culminating in CEFC
offering tanks and
surveillance equipment to
military coup leader Deby
(Gadio lauded him a Pan
Africanist, citing no less
than Marcus Garvey).
Gadio's
emails may kill off once and
for all his ambition to run
again for President of
Senegal. In one, he complains
that in 2005 when he was
Foreign Minister and Senegal
switched from recognizing
Taiwan to the PR China, he
didn't get paid. He wrote that
the then President of Senegal
got millions of dollars from
the Chinese but didn't pass
through any to him and that he
complained to his Chinese
counterparts about it. How
will this play in Senegal?
Watch this site. The opening
statements were given on
November 26. US Prosecutor
Paul A. Hayden said Patrick Ho
used UN accredited NGO CEFC to
cultivate Sam Kutesa while he
was President of the General
Assembly, and is caught on
audio tape planning to bribe
other high UN official(s) -
and still no audit by UNSG
Antonio Guterres. On November
27 after former UN President
of the General Assembly Vuk
Jeremic under subpoena
testified about the role of
Cheikh Gadio in CEFC reaching
Chad's president Deby, Gadio
himself took the stand at 4:35
pm. Post-testimony stand-up
video here.
He said he didn't
know that CEFC's Ho would have
$2 million in gift boxes to
hand over at Deby's mansion --
he said he could "only think
of it as a bribery attempt" --
but that he "didn't walk
away." Why not? Gadio said he
wanted to get paid for his and
his company SARATAs work - and
then Gadio said Deby needed
help to fight Boko Haram, an
excused use for example by the
also long term president of
Cameroon, Paul Biya. Inner
City Press has heard from
Senegal that, contrary to a
portion of the defense's
opening statement, Gadio is no
longer running for president
there but instead supports
incumbent Macky Sall. He
stopped abruptly a few minutes
before five o'clock and,
unwittingly, stayed in the
court room as defense and
prosecution began to argue
about whethere Ho's visits to
the US when he did not enter
the UN should still come into
evidence. Inner City Press has
repeatedly asked the UN to
disclose its knowledge of how
many times Ho, from his base
across First Avenue in Trump
World Tower, entered the UN -
but Guterres' UN has refused.
Likewise, Gadio when asked to
disclose his jobs after being
Senegal's foreign minister
listed a political party but
NOT his stint as the
Organization for Islamic
Cooperation's envoy on Central
African Republic. We'll have
more on this - and this:
earlier on November 27 a CEFC
voluteer then staffer, David
Riccardi-Zhu, said he was
referred to CEFC by his father
who worked for the UN. He
attended meetings in CEFC's
office / apartment in the
Trump World Tower, where Ho
met with a yet to be named
"foreign representative from
the United Kingdom." He
described UN DESA bending over
for CEFC and its sustainable
development award - which in
2017 Guterres' DESA still took
CEFC's money for even after Ho
was arrested and indicted for
UN bribery. Inner City Press
asked the UN repeatedly about
it - and was then roughed up
by Guterres' security and has
been banned from entering the
UN 145 days and
counting. Earlier on
November 27, Jeremic described
doing work for CEFC while
still PGA. He tried to get
CEFC business with Mexico's
PEMEX through "Emilio." He
later tried to broker the sale
of a potash mine - in court he
said since this is related to
fertilizer, it is "a high
priority of the UN." He went
to meetings in Trump Tower -
the one across from the UN, in
Apartment 78B, not the one on
Fifth Avenue - and acted as a
go-between for a CEFC Texas
foray, with Noel Thompson who,
Jeremic said, promoted
wrestling in the UN. The UN
comes off as entirely corrupt.
And it emerged that Ho was
trying to cut his own deal,
around CEFC which is paying
his legal fees. As soon as
Jeremic left he started the
process to sign on as a CEFC
consultant at $333,333 a year.
This require a waiver from
Serbia, where he had been
foreign minister. But the UN,
then as now, has NO cooling
off period. Inner City Press
asked Jeremic about it during
the court's lunch break. He
said he had complied with
rules - Serbian rules. There
are no UN rules; UNSG Antonio
Guterres refused to audit
CEFC, lawlessly roughs up and
bans Inner City Press which
asks, including banning it
from UNGA week which must now
be seen as a hotbed of oil and
gas and potash deals. We'll
have more on this - it is
unclear if Jeremic will take
up the rest of the court's
day, or if Gadio may start
before the end of November 27.
On November 26 at 9 am before
heading to cover jury
selection, Inner City Press in
writing asked Guterres, his
Deputy Amina J. Mohammed and
Global Communicator Alison
Smale: "November 26-7: On this
the day the UN bribery trial
of Ho / China Energy Fund
Committee / PGA Kutesa begins,
please immediately provide the
UN's read out of the DSG's
meeting Nov 22 with China's
FM, and separately state where
the increasingly reported
issue of Chinese (government
aligned) NGO bribery in the UN
was discussed. Relatedly,
again, what safeguards are in
place for the SG's appearance,
for which money is being
charged, to ensure that the
(Ng Lap Seng) pattern does not
repeat itself on the evening
of December 5, 2018." Hours
later, lead UN Spokesman
Stephane Dujarric's deputy
Farhan Haq replied with this,
seeming recycled from the Ng
Lap Seng case: "Regarding
question Nov. 26-7, we can say
that the Organization has
cooperated extensively in this
matter by making thousands of
pages of documents available,
as well as providing access to
UN personnel." Did Guterres'
UN really make thousands of
pages of documents available
in this Patrick Ho case? If
so, how can Guterres claim the
case does not concern the UN
and merit an audit? We'll have
more on this. In the US'
opening, Hayden described Ho
meeting Cheikh Gadio for the
first time steps from the UN;
defense lawyer Benjamin
Rosenberg countered that
Gadio's desire to run for
president of Senegal made him
cut a deal at any cost.
Periscope just after leaving
court, here.
Longer YouTube here.
Before these openings, dozens
of prospective jurors were
whittled down to 12 with three
alternates. Among those not
agreed on to stay were the
editor of a major magazine and
a retired investment banker
who travels to get Democrats
elected to national office.
(We are not using names or
more - the insider scribes say
there is an understanding, on
which we'll have more). Most
jurors said they read few
newpapers, with a reference to
the Daily News for the
commute, Yahoo "junk" and
social media. They filed into
Courtroom 12A, the prosecution
estimated the trial will take
two, possibly three weeks. Ho
was brought in, wearing
purple; he looked to the back
of the courtroom, eight or so
most Asian journalists, Inner
City Press, no one apparently
from the UN. Some 35
prospective jurors were
assigned numbers and were told
the case involved charges of
bribery of Chad's President
Idriss Deby and of Sam Kutesa,
then the President of the UN
General Assembly, still
Uganda's foreign minister. Did
any juror feels biased? No one
raised their hand. Any juror
particularly burdened by a two
or three week trial? Many
stood up and, after sidebars,
some were excused including
one Amy Tan (called back to
the sidebar twice). The
defense had a jury consultant,
one Dr. Blackburn, described
to the jurors by the defense
as "with us." Mid-day
Periscope live stream at
courthouse door here.
The day before the U.S. has
asked that Cheikh Gadio not be
asked what he heard about how
the $2 million Ho gave to
Chad's President Idriss Deby
was used. The government
argues in a letter motion
to Jude
Loretta A.
Preska that
Ho didn't know: "Gadio has no
personal knowledge as to what
happened to the $2 million
cash that the defendant and
his CEFC colleagues brought to
Chad and presented to
President Déby. Gadio has no
firsthand information as to
whether these funds were
ultimately used, in whole or
part, for “good” or “bad” or
“permissible” or
“impermissible” purposes after
CEFC sent the so-called
“donation” letter. However,
Gadio’s 3500 material reflects
that, at some point, a
third-party told Gadio that
the money was directed to a
supposed good and permissible
use. Gadio does not know
whether this is true, and in
any event, he never spoke
about this with the defendant.
Thus, the defendant should be
precluded from cross-examining
Gadio
about what he learned
after-the-fact from any
third-party." The U.S. also
seeks to prevent Gadio being
cross-examined about
misstatements to pre-trial
services when he was Ho's
co-defendant. It is not clear
when Preska will rule on the
letter motion. She has said
the trial will begin at 10 am
each day but she is willing to
hear arguments in her chambers
before that. Inner City Press,
which covered the pre-trial
hearing even while banned
from the UN by UNSG Antonio
Guterres who is trying to
cover it up, not even auditing
CEFC's other and ongoing
activities in the UN, will be
covering the trial. Ho has
tried to use CEFC's ongoing UN
"Special Consultative Status"
to avoid criminal charges.
This and Ho's other motions
were denial by Judge Preska on
November 14, including a
motion to exclude testimony
from Cheikh Gadio, from
government expert Mr. Walkout,
and to exclude Ho's dealings
with Sam Kutesa's predecessor
as UNGA President Sam Ashe.
All of this will come in at
trial - and makes the failure
by UN Secretary General
Antonio Guterres to even audit
CEFC's bribes in the UN more
outrageous. This UN-accredited
NGO offered to broker arms not
only to Chad but also Qatar,
Libya and South Sudan, about
which Guterres and the UN
purport to care so much. Ho
and CEFC offered themselves
as way to evade Iran
sanctions. This evidence will
come in a trial; the
government has agreed not to
mention terrorism or US - Iran
relations. A 23 minute video
of Ho's UN speeches will not
come in, being called "gauzy"
as is the UN of Guterres who
has banned Inner City Press
which covers the UN's
increasing corruption, from Ng
Lap Seng and Ashe to CEFC,
Kutesa and beyond, ongoing.
We'll have more on this. Ho
was trying to exclude
testimony from initial
co-defendant Cheikh Gadio
about Chadian President Idriss
Deby's reaction to the bribe.
The papers were filed on
November 13 and are first
being reported by Inner City
Press, which as it covers this
second UN bribery case has
been roughed up and now banned
for 132 days by UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres who
won't even audit CEFC's
ongoing activities in the UN.
Four months after the arrest
for UN
bribery of former
Senegalese foreign minister
Cheik Gadio and Patrick Ho,
the head of China Energy Fund
Committee full funded by CEFC
China Energy, his ultimate
boss at CEFC Ye Jianming was
brought in for questioning in
China. On October 4 Ho was
again denied bail. Periscope
video here.
On October 22, the new trial
date was set for November 26.
On November 12 Inner City
Press, banned from the UN by
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres amid its questions
about the CEFC bribery and its
connection to the Ng Lap Seng
conviction, asked Guterres and
his spokesmen: "November 12-4:
Now that it is clear that
Foreign Intelligence
Surveilance Act wiretaps show
Sheri Yan, jailed for UN
bribery in the PGA John Ashe
case, communicating and
planned with Patrick Ho of
CEFC, please explain why SG
Antonio Guterres has not even
started an audit into the
range CEFC's bribery and
interactions in the UN, why it
still has access to UN while
Inner City Press which which
pursued Ng Lap Seng's and
Yan's bribery even into the UN
Press Briefing Room (29 Jan
2016) and the Patrick Ho /
CEFC case, has been denied
access to anything in the UN
for 131 days with no due
process." Guterres' deputy
spokesman Farhan Haq conducted
a noon briefing Inner City
Press was banned from,
starting with a total of three
correspondents. Video
here. He and the UN have
not answered since, see below.
After he did not answer - but
he did answer
Yahoo News for a story which,
inexplicably, does not mention
Guterres or his failure to
audit CEFC's activities at the
UN. Others who have done
nothign about the bribery, or
about Guterres' roughing up
and banning of Inner City
Press, like HRW's
Ken Roth and
FP's Colum Lynch,
belatedly retweeted the Ho /
Yan corruption story. But what
will they and the UN they love
so much do? On November 4 Ho's
attempt to "suppress all
evidence obtained or derived
under the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act" was denied,
with a decision that no
hearing on it was needed. The
FISA information includes
wiretaps of Ho and another
bribing NGO the Global
Sustainability Foundations's
Sheri Yan or her deputy
planning to pay bribes. This
is described
today by the Sydney
Morning Herald, which while
saying that UN officials who
it leaves unnamed are
lavishing praises on the Belt
and Road which Ho now uses as
a defense of his alleged
bribes, fails to mention main
praiser Antonio Guterres. Nor
does SMH
- Shaking My Head -- mention
that unlike even Ban Ki-mon
with Ng Lap Seng, Guterres has
refused to even start an audit
into Ho's (and Yang II's)
bribery in the UN, but instead
had roughed up and banned
Inner City Press which reports
on it. Ng Lap Seng paid money
to a group Guterres is slated
to headline a fundraiser for
on December 5, a group he and
his spokesman Stephane
Dujarric use to support their
attack on the investigative
Press. We'll have more on
this. Hong Kong television has
broadcast a report on these
alleged UN and Deby bribes,
including an interview with
Inner City Press which has
been banned from the UN by
Antonio Guterres amid its
coverage of UN corruption and
Guterres' refusal to even
audit, has been broadcast. The
Court's ruling against Ho on
FISA notes that "FISA requires
a finding of probable cause to
believe that: (1) the target
of the electronic surveillance
or physical search is a
foreign power or an agent
of a foreign power."
There will be at least one
more court session before the
trial starts; voir dire and
jury instructions are being
debated. The reckoning time is
approaching. In a hearing
Inner City Press covered -
there were no other UN
correspondents there, for this
UN bribery case - it emerged
that the prosecution has
turned over 3,300 emails to a
vendor, and that each side
will meet with Judge Preska
"in camera" about Confidential
Information, under US v
Mustafa, 992 F. Supp. 2d 335.
Video here.
We'll have more on this. Ho's
lawyers, paid by CEFC, are
arguing that the Chinese
government's One Belt, One
Road (OBOR) campaign, under
which they says Ho's payments
were made, must be considered
at the delayed trial with
testimony from "Professor
Kirby as 'an expert in
contemporary China’s business,
economic, and political
development with a particular
focus on international
activities.'" Given the many
times
as UN Secretary General that
Antonio Guterres, who has
refused to even audit CEFC's
and Ho's payments in the UN,
has praised China's One Belt,
One Road - might Guterres be
called or offer himself as a
pro-Ho defense witness at
trial? Guterres already maintains
a secret banned from the UN
list including "political
activists," see here. His
failure to audit is also
covering up UN-accredited NGO
CEFC's communications with
"Iranian officials, apparently
so that they could discuss
potential transactions
involving oil or precious
metals. (See Gov’t Br. at
11-12.) The government
proffers “evidence of the
defendant’s interest in and
willingness
to broker transactions in
arms.” (Gov’t Br. at 12.)
Specifically, the government
proffers evidence that Dr.
Cheikh Gadio purported to pass
to Dr. Ho a request from
President Déby that CEFC
Energy intervene with the
Chinese government to cause it
to provide arms to Déby so
that he could fight Boko
Haram. (Id. at 12-13.) It also
proffers evidence that Dr. Ho
emailed with “an individual”
in March and April 2015 about
selling arms to South Sudan,
Qatar, and Libya." On October
9 the prosecution requested
that the trial begin later
than the scheduled November 5,
writing to Judge Loretta
A. Preska
among other things that "this
past Friday, October 5, 2018,
the defendant submitted a
classified notice pursuant to
Section 5 of the Classified
Information Procedures Act
(“CIPA”). The defendant could
have filed such notice a
number of weeks ago, but
waited until the very last day
on which such a filing would
be deemed timely under CIPA.
The defendant also did not
notify the Government that he
intended to submit such a
notice until the Court
directed the parties to confer
during last
week’s conference. The
Government now has to draft,
have approved for submission,
and submit
a classified response in
opposition, in which it
intends to request a hearing
concerning the use, relevance,
and admissibility of
classified information that
would otherwise be made public
by the defense during the
trial, and expects, assuming
appropriate authorization is
provided, to request that the
hearing be held in camera."
If Ho's lawyers were slow, the
US government's Voice of
America is more so: it took it
five days to report on the
public bail hearing held in
lower Manhattan on October 4.
Tellingly, the report
did not include VOA's
long-time UN embedded reporter
Margaret Besheer, nor did it
mention Ho's arms brokering to
South Sudan nor the name of
previous and convicted UN
briber Ng Lap Seng. Besheer
has worked with Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres'
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric to
bar Inner City
Press from even entering the UN
and is involved with a pro-UN
correspondents group which
took $50,000 from Ng then
provided the venue for his
photo op with the UN Secretary
General. Similar quid pro
quos are expected with
Guterres on December 5 on 42nd
Street, watch this site. Back
on October 4 Ho's lawyers
argued that dropping the case
against Gadio - who will
testify against Ho - means
that Ho conspired with no one.
But Gadio will say he didn't
know Ho had $2 million in cash
for Chad President Deby in
gift boxes; he's being allowed
(or made) to say that Deby
didn't know either. But this
ham handed bribe was converted
into a bogus philanthropic
gift -- consciousness of
guilt, as it were. The trial
date of November 5 may not be
set in stone, as the defense
is planning a filing under
Section 5 of the Classified
Information Procedures Act
(CIPA) to use classified
information. Ho has a $2.1
million account in UBS, but
Judge Preska said this wasn't
the main factor in denying
bail. The sleight of hand on
Gadio has no impact on the
"Uganda scheme" with Sam
Kutesa, with whom UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres has
dealings. Guterres still
hasn't started an audit of
CEFC - which was openly named
in the court hearing on
October 4 - in the UN. We'll
have more on this. This week
in court filings the
prosecution make it clear how
corrupt the UN is, and why it
has banned Inner City Press
which reports on it: Ho bribed
not one but two Presidents of
the General Assembly, and
brokered weapons not only to
Chad but also Qatar, whose Al
Jazeera got the exclusive of
Guterres' selection as SG and
after getting spoonfed by
Guterres' spokesman Stephane
Dujarric on June 19
collaborated to get Inner City
Press roughed up and banned
since by Guterres' corrupt UN.
And STILL Guterres,
whose son does UNdisclosed
business in Angola, Namibia,
Sao Tomo and Cabo Verde, has
not even started an audit,
only roughed up the Press and
banned it now for 93 days.
From this week's filing:
"Evidence of Transactions with
Iran The evidence of the
defendant’s interest in and
willingness to broker
transactions in or with Iran
principally consists of
emails, spanning a
multiple-year period. To
choose a few examples: In
October 2014, the defendant
sent his assistant an email
stating, “I am going to BJ
[i.e., Beijing] this Friday to
see [the Chairman of CEFC NGO
and CEFC China] on Sat
afternoon. The documents I
want to send him before hand
in separate items are: . . .
7. Iranian connection
(brief).”4 On the same date,
the defendant sent his
assistant another email,
attaching a document, which
stated, in pertinent part: 7)
Iranian Connection . . . Iran
has money in a Bank in china
which s under sanction. Iran
wishes to purchase precious
metal with this money. The
precious metal is available
through a Bank in HK which
cannot accept money from the
Bank in China which holds the
money but is under sanction.
The Iranian agent is looking
for a Chinese company acting
as a middle man in such
transactions and will pay
commission. (details to be
presented orally) The Iranian
connection has strong urge to
establish trading relationship
with us in oil and products .
. . . The following year, in
June 2015, the defendant
received an email that stated,
in pertinent part: “The
Iranian team will arrive in BJ
. . . . See the attached.” The
attachment referenced in the
email was a PowerPoint
presentation entitled
“Presentation to Potential
Partners Iran Petroleum
Investments.” The next day,
the defendant forwarded the
email to his assistant,
stating, “For writing report
to [the Chairman of CEFC NGO
and CEFC China].”
The following year, in June
2016, the defendant emailed
another individual,
blindcopying
his assistant, and stated, in
pertinent part, “Will get [two
executives of CEFC China] to
meet with [oil executive at
company with operations in
Iran] in BJ, and [another
individual] also on another
occasion if he comes. You can
start organizing these. . . .
Other matters ftf [i.e., face
to face].” And also "an email
exchange in which Gadio asked
the defendant: “Do you think
CEFC can intervene with the
Chinese state to get an
urgent, extremely confidential
and significant military
weapon assistance to our
friend [the President of Chad]
who has engaged in the battle
of his life against the devils
of Bokko Haram?,” to which the
defendant replied, “Your
important message has been
forwarded. It is being given
the highest level of
consideration. Will inform you
once I hear back.”
The defendant also sought to
and did broker arms
transactions unrelated to the
Chad and
Uganda schemes charged in this
case. For example: In March
2015, an individual sent the
defendant an email, stating,
“I have the list and end user
agreement. Pls advise next
step.” On the same day, the
defendant replied, in
pertinent part, “Find a way to
pass them onto me and we can
execute that right away[].”
The individual replied,
“Attached. [W]e have the
funding and processing
mechanisms in place. If it
works nice there will be much
more. Also for S. Sudan.” The
attachment to this email was a
document entitled “End User
Certificate,” certifying that
the user of the goods in
question would be the Ministry
of Defense of the Republic of
Libya. The goods listed on the
document included numerous
arms. The following month, the
defendant sent an email that
stated in pertinent part: “It
so turns out Qatar also needs
urgently a list of toys from
us. But for the same reason we
had for Libya, we cannot sell
directly to them. Is there a
way you could act as an
intermediary in both cases?”
The person whom the defendant
emailed replied: “Qatar good
chance bc there is no embargo.
Libya is another case bc going
against an embargo is tricky.”
The defendant responded:
“Qatar needs new toys quite
urgently. Their chief is
coming to China and we hope to
give them a piece of good
news. Please confirm soonest.”
This is outrageous, that an
NGO still accredited under
Guterres was selling weapons
into South South, Libya and
Qatar. Resign. And, on
multiple PGAs: "among the
individuals whom the defendant
[Patrick Ho] is charged with
bribing is Sam Kutesa, the
Ugandan Foreign Minister. The
Government expects that the
evidence will show that the
corrupt relationship between
the defendant and Kutesa
developed between in or about
September 2014 and September
2015, when Kutesa was serving
as the PGA (specifically, the
PGA for the 69th session of
the UN General Assembly). The
evidence, in both the form of
emails and a recorded phone
call, also shows that, just
as he did with respect to
Kutesa when he was the PGA,
the defendant sought to
cultivate a
business relationship with
Kutesa’s predecessor, John
Ashe, who served as the PGA
between in
or about September 2013 and
September 2014. As he did with
Kutesa, the defendant began by
introducing himself to Ashe as
the Secretary-General of CEFC
NGO. And just as he did with
Kutesa when he served as the
PGA, the defendant invited
Ashe to visit CEFC NGO in Hong
Kong and to speak at various
events.
In mid-April 2014, Ashe
traveled to Hong Kong and met
with the defendant and others.
After the trip, Ashe’s aide
sent a letter to the defendant
thanking the Chairman of CEFC
NGO (who was also the Chairman
of CEFC China) for the
contribution of $50,000 to
support the PGA. The aide had
solicited the contribution
from the defendant prior to
the Hong Kong trip, and the
defendant had confirmed that
CEFC NGO would make the
contribution.
In or about early June 2014,
the defendant requested that
Ashe officiate over a forum
that
CEFC NGO was planning to hold
at the UN, and also attend and
officiate over a luncheon at
the UN the following day. (The
defendant made virtually the
same request of Kutesa once he
became the PGA.) The day
before the forum (July 6,
2014), the defendant emailed
two business associates of
Ashe, who assisted him in
raising funds, to invite them
to the forum and luncheon and
to request their assistance in
“urg[ing] the PGA to grace the
occasion with his presence and
to deliver a short remark.”
On or about the same day, the
defendant and one of these
associates (“Associate-1”)
spoke by phone. (See Ex. A
(draft transcript).) During
the call, which was recorded,
the
defendant confirmed that he
wanted Ashe to attend his
event. The following
conversation then took place:
Associate-1: So the last
question, so sorry if I ask
too direct. . . . [H]ave you,
made some
contribution to him . . . ?
The defendant: Yeah, we
already paid.
Associate-1: Oh you did?
OkayThe defendant: Well, not a
whole lot but it’s—it’s okay.
On a couple of occasions. But
I
think the major contribution
will come in after we talk
about what he can—what he can
help us with.
Associate-1: What you—what you
mean major contribution? It’s
after he return uh—
leave the job?
The defendant: Yes, yes.
. . .
Associate-1: Wonderful . . .
okay.
The defendant: That’s not
a—that’s not a problem. The
problem is—uh, it’s give and
take.
Associate-1: Give and take.
That’s—of course. This is
the—this is business, right?
The defendant: Yeah, right.
2 These two business
associates subsequently
pleaded guilty to bribing
Ashe, based on
conduct unrelated to the
defendant and CEFC. Ashe was
charged with tax offenses
arising from
his allegedly failing to
disclose bribe payments as
income. He passed away before
trial, and the
charges against him were
therefore dismissed." We'll
have more on this. On July 19,
the lawyers for Patrick Ho,
led by Benjamin Rosenberg of
Dechert LLP, argued before
U.S. District Judge Loretta
Preska that count after count
of the indicts should be
dismissed. Edward Kim of
Krieger Kim & Lewin LLP
tried to get Ho's emails and
text messages suppressed,
without success. On August 9,
Ho's appeal to the Second
Circuit Court of Appeals to
get out on bail was again
denied. Now the
prosecution,
opposing yet
another Ho
bail
application,
has written:
"Gadio has
been meeting with
the Government
for some time
and he is
expected to
testify at
trial pursuant
to a recently
executed non-prosecution
agreement.
And far from
weakening the
case, Gadio’s
testimony will provide
substantial
evidence of
the
defendant’s
guilt. As
the defendant
is well-aware
from a written
disclosure
made by the
Government
more than
four months
ago, Gadio is
expected to
testify, in
sum and among
other things,
that (i) the defendant
provided $2
million in
cash,
concealed
within a gift
box, to the
President of
Chad in connection
with a
business
meeting in
Chad in or
about December
2014, (ii) the
President
refused to
accept this
obvious bribe,
which Gadio
understood was
connected to
the
defendant’s
interest in business
opportunities
in Chad, and
(iii) the
defendant
thereafter
drafted a
letter to the
President, purporting
to pledge this
$2 million to
charitable
causes, but
the defendant
appeared to
have no interest
in doing
charitable
works in Chad,
and indeed,
the defendant
never asked
Gadio about
the status
of the
purported
“donation” or
made any other
reference to
the subject.
(See Def. Ltr.
Ex. A.) This
expected
testimony
considerably
strengthens
the
Government’s
proof beyond
the
already-strong
case reflected
in the
detailed
Complaint. The
Complaint
explained
that,
following a
December 2014
business
meeting in
Chad, the
defendant
drafted a
letter
pledging a $2
million so-called
“donation” to
“the people of
Chad at [the
President of
Chad’s]
personal
disposal to support
[his] social
and other
programs as
[he] see[s]
fit.” (Compl.
¶ 28(a).) The
Complaint did not,
however,
explain
whether—and at
what point—any
money was
actually paid.
Gadio’s expected
testimony
makes clear
that, in fact,
the defendant
provided $2
million in
cash directly
to the
President,
concealed
within a gift
box, and that
the pledge
letter was
drafted after
the bribe had
already been
offered. Thus,
the evidence
of the defendant’s
intent to
bribe the
President of
Chad is,
on the whole,
much more
robust in
light of
Gadio’s
expected
testimony." On
September
24, a letter
from May was disclosed: UN
accredited
executive of
an NGO still
in ECOSOC handed
Deby of Chad
$2 million in a
box, for oil.
This is the
UN, which
won't even
audit this
scandal. Guterres
is corruption
- and on September
26 even banned
Inner City
Press which reports on
this from a
human rights
event. We'll
have more on
this. On
September 15,
the day after
Ho's
co-defendant
Cheik Gadio
had the case
against him
dropped by
Prosecutor
Douglas
Zolkind, who
ask worked to
convict Ng Lap
Seng using
testimony of
apparently
still free
Francis
Lorenzo.
Sean Hecker, a lawyer for Mr.
Gadio said that “Dr. Gadio
looks forward to continuing to
cooperate with U.S.
authorities." But when Agence
France Presse reported it, as
picked
up in the media in
Nigeria, it was "Gadio Is
Cleared." Is that how they
report, for example, Manafort?
It is, you see, a serious UN
bribery case, even as UN
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres not only does not
start an audit of who else has
been bribed by CEFC and Ho,
but audaciously ousts,
roughs up and imposes a
ban on -- extended on
August 17 to
life
or at least #UNGA73 when
representatives of China and
Chad, Uganda and Senegal will
be in the UN -- the only
media, Inner City Press, which
asks him about it. Instead his
team solicits the same trolls
army as before, to monitor and
leak files to try to
post-facto justify Guterres'
censorship. This is
corruption, to the heart of
the UN. The trial of the still
incarcerated Ho begins in
November. Somewhere, one
imagines, UN PGA Sam Kutesa
worries, Chadian head of state
Idriss Deby less so. And the
UN of Antonio Guterres,
implicated, doesn't even audit
who at the UN took CEFC's
money, preferring instead to
rough up, oust and ban the
Press which asks. Fox
News story here,
GAP blogs I
and II,
Independent here.
On July 19 first Rosenberg
argued that under the Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act, if
Patrick Ho is a "domestic
concern" some counts of the
indictment must be dropped.
The prosecution called the
argument absurd -- Ho is a
national of China and a
resident of Hong Kong who
acted for the "Energy NGO"
China Energy Fund Committee in
allegedly bribing UN President
of the General Assembly Sam
Kutesa, as well as Chad's
President Idriss Deby - and
the judge agreed. Next they
argued that even a series of
transfers from HSBC in Hong
Kong to HSBC in New York to
Mashreq Bank in NY to Mashreq
Bank in Dubai did not fall
under the money laundering
statute. The judge, citing the
the Daccarett case and Julius
Baer cases from DC, disagreed.
Periscope video here.
The motions to dismiss
were denied, and Inner City
Press left the court to deal
with the UN, where Guterres
even has Inner City Press
banned from covering his July
20 meeting with US
Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo, and Pompeo's press
remarks with Nikki Haley,
UNwisely held inside the UN.
We'll have more on this. Inner
City Press made this
connection: the president of
ECOSOC is Marie Chatardová,
Permanent Representative of
the Czech Republic to the UN.
Her president, in Prague
Castle, is Miloš Zeman -- who,
like Uganda's Foreign Minister
Sam Kutesa when he was UN
President of the General
Assembly, made Ye Jianming an
official adviser.
(Inner City Press' CEFC
investigative covered has been
picked up in the Czech media,
for example here.)
Now on
April 17,
Zeman is set
to meet this
week
with another
Chinese state
owned
firm, CITIC
and its
chairman, Chang
Zhenming. CITIC
is reportedly
seeking to buy a
stake in
CEFC's
Czech-based
unit CEFC
Europe. So
Inner City
Press asks,
would CITIC buy its
way into China
Energy Fund Group's
consultative
status with
ECOSOC, presided
over by the
Czech
Republic? The
Czech Mission
to the UN, and
ECOSOC's
supposed
spokesperson
Paul Simon, have
yet to answer
any of Inner
City Press'
written
questions.
This is
today's UN,
under Antonio
Guterres.
Earlier, Zeman sent two
officials to Chinese to
inquire into the status or, or
help, Ye Jianming:
chancellor Vratislav Mynár and
economic advisor Martin
Nejedlý flew to Shanghai on
March 13, along with
CEFC European division
head Jaroslav Tvrdik, and have
now returned. They said Ye “is
being investigated for a
suspicion of breaking the
law,” after meeting CEFC
President Chan Chauto. CEFC’s
Czech-based unit CEFC Europe
said: “CEFC Europe has been
informed about the planned
change in the shareholder
structure in which Mr Ye
Jienming will no longer be
active as a shareholder nor in
the company’s leadership. NOW
might Zeman's Representative Chatardová
belatedly take
action in the
UN ECOSOC of
which she is
President?
Inner City
Press has repeatedly written
to the Czech Mission to the
UN, to the attention of
Marie Chatardová
as President of ECOSOC, asking
how China Energy Fund
Committee given all of the
above can remain in special
consultative status with
ECOSOC. The Czech
Mission has not answered,
including when the question
is raised
at the UN's televised
noon briefing,
as Inner City
Press asked again
on March 19, UN transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: Deputy SG
Amina J. Mohammed
is going
to the Czech
Republic about
ECOSOC [Economic
and Social
Council].
So, I was going
to and may still
ask Brenden
[Varma] this,
but I wanted to
ask you
this. It
has arisen that the
China Energy
Fund Committee, the
ultimate owner
in Shanghai has
purportedly been
brought in for
questioning, and
it turns out he
was not only an
adviser to Sam
Kutesa as PGA
[President of
the General
Assembly], but
also an adviser
of the Czech
Republic
President.
The
Czech Republic
has sent people
to sort of look
into his
situation, but
the Czech
Republic also
has the
presidency of
ECOSOC.
So, noting that
I haven't gotten
any answer from
the Czech
Mission, my
question is…
Spokesman:
I think those
are questions
that you should
address to the
Presidency of
ECOSOC.
Inner
City Press:
I guess but my
question is an
overall UN
question.
Is there… is
there any… it
seems like it
might be a
conflict of
interest if your
President has a
business
relationship
with an NGO to
be in charge of
the committee
that is either…
how do we get an
answer if…?
Spokesman:
That is a
question for
the… that’s a
question for
Member
States.
Member States
elect the
Presidency of
ECOSOC.
They elect the
bureau.
Those are Member
State
questions.
I struggle to
answer the
questions
directed to the
Secretary-General.
I think Member
States need to
answer other
questions."
But again, the
Czech Mission
has not
answered repeated
written
questions. For
example:
"Hello - this concerned
ECOSOC, reiterating Inner
City Press' question from
November 28: yesterday in US
Federal Court, China Energy
Fund Committee was described
as a front for bribes paid
to former PGA Kutesa and
others.
See, e.g.,
HlidacipPes.org, Czech
Republic: “Global corruption
scandal. The CEFC scrap,
which the Czech Republic
does not notice much, though
it should” [citing
Inner City Press' UN
corruption coverage]
The US has executed search
warrants on this NGO's
offices. But it is still
saying it is in "special
consultative status" with
ECOSOC.
What action has been taken
by ECOSOC and/or its NGO
Committee? How is the
months-long inaction
consistent with the
principles of the UN and
ECOSOC?
I asked again yesterday at
the UN noon briefing, but am
told the Secretariat has or
will take no role. So I am
asking you again. Please
confirm receipt. Thank you
in advance."
The
Czech Mission, like Antonio
Guterres' Secretariat's
spokesperson for ECOSOC, has
refused to answer. As to the
Czech Republic, the reason for
inaction and stonewalling of
the Press may now be clear -
alongside Antonio Guterres'
Secretariat. We'll have more
on this.
Nor was the UN
even mentioned in the New York
Times' story about CEFC -
Kutesa was, but not that he
was PGA. This is propaganda.
This comes while the UN,
embroiled in a second
corruption case involving Ng
Lap Seng whose assistant
Jeffrey Yim was sentenced to
seven months in prison on
February 28 (Inner City Press
coverage here),
has yet to even remove CEFC
from its "special consultative
status" to the UN Economic and
Social Council. Now with the
Chinese government taking
action, for whatever its
reason, will the UN belatedly
move? Inner City Press asked
UN Spokesman Stephane Dujarric
on March 1, video here,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: this China
Energy Fund Committee (CEFC)
case, the head of the whole
organization in China has been
called in for questioning, Mr.
Ye Jianming. And I
wanted to know, because it
seems like since that
indictment in November, China
Energy Fund Committee has
remained with special
consultative status…
Spokesman: We've… I've
answered that question
already. That is an
issue… the Member States… a
Member State committee grants
that special consultative
status to the NGO. That
Member State committee needs
to act if they want to
withdraw that status. Inner
City Press: António Guterres
is the head of the UN
system. Does he have…
does he have… has he taken
note that there are two
separate developing UN
corruption cases involving
briberies taking place at the
UN and what’s his response…?
Spokesman: We're very
much aware of the issue and
our legal counsel… our legal
office is cooperating on these
cases with the national
authorities." We'll have more
on this claim. Tellingly,
Reuters which barely covers
the UN corruption cases - in
fact, it has a board seat on
the UN Correspondents
Association which accepted
$50,000 from Ng Lap Seng's
South South News - "reports"
on the question of
Ye Jianming
and CEFC's business in the Czech
Republic, Russia (last
year's deal for a 14 percent
stake in Rosneft PJSC
for $9 billion) and Kazakhstan
without even MENTIONING
the indictment of Ho of CEFC,
and the clear reference to Ye
Jianming
in the indictment, in
connection with Sam Kutesa and
the Uganda scheme. We'll have
more on this. Ho was denied
bail on February 5, in a
lengthy oral order that found
the weight of evidence against
him substantial. On November
20, the US Attorney for the
Southern District of New York
issued an indictment against
the head of the UN ECOSOC
accredited China Energy Fund
Committee (CEFC) Patrick Ho
and former
Senegal
foreign
minister
Cheikh Gadio,
accused
together of bribing Chad's
President Idriss Deby -- as
well as, for Ho, of bribing
former UN President of the
General Assembly Sam Kutesa,
now as then the foreign
minister of Uganda, since
2005, allegedly for the
benefit of President Yoweri
Museveni. On February 5, Inner
City Press asked the UN
Spokesman why CEFC is still in
"special consultative status"
with ECOSOC, transcript here
(video here)
and below, than ran to the
courthouse. There, US District
Court Judge Katherine Forrest
asked Prosecutor Daniel C.
Richenthal to describe the
weight of the evidence. "How
strong is your case?" she
asked, to some laughter. Very
strong, he said, adding that
Ho has been emailing the
"Shanghai-based Energy
Company" (that would be CEFC
China Energy) from MCC
detention, to launch a public
relations campaign. It may be
backfiring: Judge Forrest in
her ruling denying bail noted
that if Chinese government
press is describing the case
as political, it would make
fleeing and remaining in China
all the easier. Richenthal
said that Ho could travel to
other places - he listed Chad,
Uganda, Iran and Russia. The
continued home detention of UN
bribery convictee was raised
by Richenthal and Judge
Forrest, and not favorably.
Gadio was alluded to as not
yet indicted - he'd said to be
talking about a plea - and
Judge Forrest emphasized
November 5 as the trial date.
She said there was leave to
re-apply for bail but said
such an application should
include what Ho's lawyer Mr
Kim called the "context" of
the payments. Kim said they
including country-wide
charitable and military aid.
From a Chinese energy company?
From the UN's February 5 transcript:
Inner City Press: Patrick Ho,
who is the head of the China
Energy Fund Committee, is
arguing again for bail
today. And the US, in
opposing it, put it in writing
that they've executed a search
warrant at China Energy Fund
Committee, the NGO's
(non-governmental
organization) offices in
Virginia. It seems the
China Energy Fund Committee is
still in special consultative
status with ECOSOC (Economic
and Social Council) even as
its offices are being raided
and… and its head is in
jail. What are the
procedures for… for…?
Spokesman: As far as I'm
aware… you know, the
consultative status of ECOSOC,
as opposed to the DPI
(Department of Public
Information) status, is one
that is managed by the Member
States. There is a
committee of ECOSOC that is
made up of Member
States. They give… they
grant or deny consultative
status to various NGOs.
I think we'll have to look…
you can contact ECOSOC to see
what the exact rules are, but
my assumption would be that,
if Member States grant, only
Member States can take away."
So, Guterres is doing nothing.
On February 6, after another
non-response by ECOSOC's
chair, Inner City Press asked
Guterres' and Dujarric's
Deputy Farhan Haq, video here,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press:
yesterday, the… Patrick Ho,
the head of the China Energy
Fund Committee here, was
denied bail. And in the…
in the hearing, basically, the
prosecution said and the judge
said that she found weight to
be given to the evidence that
basically the NGO
[non-governmental
organization] was a front for
bribery to Sam Kutesa and
others. So, given that…
how this trial is going, I'm
wondering, again, Stéphane
[Dujarric] had said that the
Secretariat plays no role in
sort of following through and
making sure that China Energy
Fund Committee can't continue
to say it's a… in special
consultative status with
ECOSOC [Economic and Social
Council]. I've written
to the ECOSOC chair now twice,
28 November 2017 and today,
but I don't have anything
back. Is there any
spokesperson for ECOSOC that
can at least say what the
process is? Deputy
Spokesman: There is a
spokesperson for the President
of the Economic and Social
[Council], and I can give you
that contact afterwards. Inner
City Press: Because… because
Brenden… oh. Yeah.
Anyways, I'd written before to
that same individual, and
there was no response.
I'm just… guess I'm wondering,
what is their… what is the…
does the Secretary-General…
given that trial that's now
moving forward and what's
coming out in it, does he
believe in the same way that
he has… asserting himself as
to agencies on other issues,
that he should maybe get
involved to ensure that
there's not a… a named briber
saying that they're in
consultative status with the
UN? Deputy Spokesman:
"Well, UN bodies themselves
have been dealing with the
problems created by the China
Energy Fund Committee in their
own ways, but what you're
talking about is consultative
status that's granted by
Member States through the
Economic and Social Council,
and that decision would have
to be taken by Member States."
Then Inner City Press emailed
the alluded to spokesman, one
Paul Simon. Hours later,
nothing. In advance of the
February 5, the prosecution in
writing asserted that "since
the Complaint
was signed and
Ho was
arrested, the
evidence of
his guilt has
only become
stronger, as
the Government
has
interviewed
witnesses,
executed
search
warrants
(including for
the Virginia
office of the
Energy NGO),
and obtained
documents from
third
parties."
Tellingly,
this Energy
NGO, China
Energy Fund
Committee, is
*still* in
special
consultative
status with
the UN's Economic and
Social Council - and Guterres
met with Uganda's Museveni,
who is in the complaint, at
the same AU summit where
Guterres met
Sudan's Omar al Bashir,
without issuing any read-out.
The prosecution's letter cites
the "President of the UN
General Assembly (the “Ugandan
Foreign Minister”). Ho also
provided the Ugandan Foreign
Minister, as well as the
President of Uganda (who is
the Ugandan Foreign Minister’s
relative), with gifts and
promises of future benefits,
including offering to let both
officials share in the profits
of a potential joint venture
in Uganda involving the Energy
Company and the officials’
family businesses." On January
27, after belatedly dropping
CEFC from the UN Global
Compact, Guterres in Addis
Ababa met Museveni, with
Kutesa himself in Addis as
well. Museveni tweeted a photo
and read out -- "Met UN
Secretary General
@antonioguterres on the
sidelines of the 30th AU
Ordinary Summit in Addis
Ababa. We discussed regional
peace, UN reforms and support
for refugees." Meanwhile,
consistent his declining
transparency, Guterres did not
issue any read out. Did the UN
bribery scandal come up? Or
get further covered up? As
Inner City Press pursues this
story and others, Guterres and
his "Global Communicator"
Alison Smale, seen January 26
in South Carolina praising
a Chinese airline while
mis-allocating funds
meant for Kiswahili radio,
keep Inner City Press more
restricted in the UN than
no-show state media. This is
censorship for corruption.
***
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
Past (and future?)
UN Office: S-303,
UN, NY 10017 USA
For now: Box 20047,
Dag Hammarskjold Station NY NY 10017
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other, earlier Inner City Press are
listed here,
and some are available in the ProQuest
service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright 2006-2019 Inner City
Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at]
innercitypress.com for
|