By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
January 29, more
here -- On
Central
African
Republic,
today's report
by Human
Rights Watch
tries to limit
abuses to the
African Union
force and not
the UN force
of French
Sangaris - but
the UN's own
Commission of
Inquiry
recited
complaints
against all
three.
HRW says:
"Some
AU
peacekeepers,
while
providing
important
civilian
protection
during their
deployment,
also committed
serious human
rights abuses,
although
according to
the UN
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations,
those facing
allegations
were not
integrated
into MINUSCA."
This is going
soft on the UN
and its head
of
Peacekeeping
Herve Ladsous,
who as
noted
undermined the
UN's stated
"human rights
due diligence
policy."
Back
on January 21
when Philip
Alston and
Fatimata
M'Baye, two of
the three
members of the
UN Commission
of Inquiry
into the
Central
African
Republic, took
questions,
Inner City
Press asked
about alleged
abuses in CAR
by the MISCA /
MINUSCA
peacekeepers
and French
soldiers in
Sangaris.
The report
says that
complaints
were received
against all of
these, but
only MISCA
(the African
Union force)
was looked
into. It
describes
allegations in
PK12, Baoli
and Bossangoa
and proposes
that the UN
Security
Council set up
a mechanism.
But what about
prosecution,
Inner City
Press asked,
and why
weren't the
allegations
against
Sangaris and
the current
MINUSCA even
looked into?
Report here,
Para 542.
Alston, whom
Inner City
Press has
previously
asked about
Sri Lanka, for
example,
emphasized
that it may
not be
realistic or
productive to
speak of
referring
these to the
International
Criminal
Court, but
that the
mechanism
proposal is
new. (It is;
we'll have
more on it.)
Inner City
Press asked if
this mechanism
proposal would
apply, for
example, to
the UN
bringing
cholera to
Haiti. Alston
said that
problem has
“plagued” the
UN; in the
case of
individual
peacekeepers,
he said, there
should be
accountability.
And
how about
this?With
UN
peacekeepers
in the Central
African
Republic
guarding
prisons,
Ladsous on
December 9
refused to
answer a
simple Press
question about
the practice.
Video
here, and
embedded
below.