By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
July 16 --At
the UN, how
does
colonialism
work?
Let's consider
the
consecutive
"press
availabilities"
on Central
African Republic
by Herve
Ladsous, the
fourth
Frenchman in a
row atop UN
Peacekeeping,
and outgoing
French
Ambassador
Gerard Araud,
then the
resulting "reporting"
of Agence
France Presse.
Araud never
spoke on camera,
instead
standing in an
area called
the "Turkish
Lounge"
speaking to
French
reporters.
Ladsous came
to the camera,
but hand-picked
four
questions,
three in
French.
AFP quoted
Araud that CAR
will be
getting helicopter
patrols from
the Sri Lankan
army -- but
neither AFP
not Araud
apparently mentioned
the UN Human Rights
Council probe
into war
crimes by Sri
Lanka's army.
In fact, AFP's
story
doesn't
mention the slaughter
of Muslims in
CAR, and the
French Serval
force's
alleged role
in it.
Instead, its
single mention
of Muslim
links their
actions to
their own slaughter:
"CAR has been
in crisis
since the
mainly Muslim
Seleka rebels
seized power
in a March
2013 coup."
This is how
colonialism
and propaganda
work at the UN.
It's ironic
because it
was Araud who
on April 15
told a Lebanese
reporter, "You
are not a
journalist,
you are an
agent."
When UN
Peacekeeping's
Ladsous said
he
would take
questions
about
peacekeeping
in the Central
African
Republic,
Inner City
Press arrived
early to ask
about reports
the
current MISCA
peacekeepers
have killed
civilians, for
example in
Bozoum, here.
Ladsous
however
refused to
answer the
question.
First he
sought out a
softball
question in
French; then
when the Press
question about
MISCA
in Bozoum was
asked, he
shook his head
and said, “I
give the floor
to Madame.”
Earlier
in
the afternoon
at the same UN
Television
stakeout, the
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
of Rwanda had
answered Inner
City Press'
question by
stating that
Ladsous'
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations not
only flew a
sanctioned
FDLR militia
leader in the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo -- Ladsous
has also
refused to
answer
Rwanda's
formal June 26
complaint.
So
Inner City
Press asked
that question,
politely but
audibly. Again
Ladsous
refused to
answer,
looking desperately
around for a
friendly
question.
Ladsous
has adopted
this position
-- video
compilation
here --
since Inner
City Press
asked him
about his
history during
the Rwanda
genocide in
1994, as
France's
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
in the
Security
Council
arguing for
the escape of
genocidaires
into Eastern
Congo, sample
memo here.
It was and is
a straightforward
question, the
type public
officials
answer every
day. But
Ladsous has
refused, and
has gone
further.
Because
Ladsous is
protected --
was nominated
-- by the
French
government
which has
controlled UN
Peacekeeping
four times in
a row now,
this anamoly
is allowed to
go
on inside the
UN.
Here's
how it look
from outside,
in the UK New
Statesman.
And here
is a video of
Ladsous
ordering his
spokesperson
to take the
microphone
away so
that questions
about rapes by
his
partners in
the DRC Army
could not be
asked.
Here
is a video of
Ladsous taking
the friendly
scribes
atop the UN
Correspondents
Association
into the hall
for a private
briefing. To
this has the
UN
descended.
More
seriously, UN
Peacekeeping
by most
accounts
brought
cholera to
Haiti,
which has
killed over
8,000 people.
Inner City
Press asked
Ladsous,
loud and clear
(but nothing
but polite) if
his DPKO now
belatedly
screens
peacekeepers
from cholera
hot spots
before
deployment.
Ladsous
refused to
answer. To
this has the
UN descended.
The new Free
UN
Coalition for
Access has
formally
proposed that
UN Under
Secretaries
General not be
allowed to
take this
approach.
Watch this
site.