By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
January 20, more
here --
This week in
the Central
African
Republic, a
French aid
worker was
taken hostage,
then a UN
Peacekeeping
mission staff
member was
detained.
Given the
refusal of UN
Peacekeeping
chief to
answer even
basic Press
questions, see here and below, Inner City
Press wrote
for the second
time to the
mission in Bangui.
But nothing.
So
at the January
20 noon
briefing at UN
headquarters,
Inner City
Press asked
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
the staff
members -- he
said she was
detained but
then released
-- and about
the French aid
worker. On the
latter,
Dujarric said
he had no information.
Previously,
Inner City
Press has
asked Dujarric
why Ladsous'
mission,
MINUSCA, does
not report on
the more
pervasive
killings of
Central
African
Republic
residents. And
the question
remains.
On
the MINUSCA
mission's
website, only
one press
contact is listed.
But it did not
answer the
Press, eight
days ago nor
today. Some UN
Missions under
Ladsous don't
even have any
contact
information.
He is taking
UN Peacekeeping
-- Ladsousifying
it, as the
phrase has it.
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.
Ladsous had
told the
Security
Council that
"inmates
inside the
Bangui central
prison seized
weapons and
shot and threw
hand grenades
at UN
peacekeepers
providing
static guard
duty outside
the prison.
Three UN
troops and one
UN police
officer were
injured in the
incident."
But should
UN
peacekeepers
be functioning
as prison
guards? When
Ladsous left
the Security
Council --
unlike his
predecessors
Alain Le Roy
and Jean-Marie
Guehenno
Ladsous does
not to
question and
answer
stakeouts on
UNTV -- Inner
City Press
asked him,
Does the UN
guard prisons
in the Central
African
Republic?
Ladsous
indicated, as
he has before,
I do not
answer your
questions,
Mister, and
walked to the
elevator. But
he is paid
both to run
DPKO and to
explain it to
the public,
including
answering
questions.
How many
attacks on
civilians in
CAR is his
MINUSCA not
reporting?
This is what
Ladsous'
mission in
Darfur is
accused of:
covering up
attacks on
civilians and
even
peacekeepers.
(But scribes
like Voice of
America, here,
merely retype
the speech
Ladsous reads,
with no
mention of
jails or
Ladsous' lack
of any
question and
answer
stakeouts.)
Ladsous on
December 9
scarcely
mentioned the
impact of his
country,
France, on the
CAR, including
a recent
incident in
which Gazelle
helicopters it
pulled out of
CAR were
stopped in
Nigeria, under
suspicion, on
their way to
Chad.
Back on
December 2,
Inner City
Press asked
Chad's
Permanent
Representative
to the UN
Mahamat Zene
Cherif about
the rights of
refugees from
the Central
African
Republic.
Mahamat
Zene Cherif
said there are
100,000 in
Chad and more
in Cameroon.
In his
national
capacity, he
said they
should be
allowed to
vote and
participate in
CAR, that will
be a gauge of
the process.
He mentioned
mobile voting
places and a
role for the
UN.
On
December 9,
the Council
heard about
Cameroon: "The
National
Electoral
Authority has
also conducted
a mission to
Cameroun to
assess the
voter
registration
modalities for
refugees
there. Further
missions in
the sub-region
are also
planned to
ensure the
participation
of this
important
constituency
in the
elections.”
Here's hoping.
Back on
December 2
before the
first
questions of
the press
conference,
Inner City
Press for
FUNCA Free
UN Coalition
for Acce
thanked Mahamat
Zene Cherif
for the
briefing. It
has been
absurdly
argued that
there is some
rule or
precedent that
the old UNCA,
become
the UN's
Censorship
Alliance,
gets a
set-aside
first
question. From
today, that is
no longer the
case. (Earlier
on December 2,
FUNCA asked
the UN about
censorship in
Libya, here.)
Mahamat
Zene Cherif
fielded
questions on
North Korea
(that was
UNCA's, as
second),
Libya,
Security
Council
reform, Syria,
Ebola and
others. He
announced that
only that
morning five
soldiers from
Chad were
injured in
Mali by a
mine: news,
when a Troop
Contributing
Country holds
the Security
Council
presidency.
During the
month, the
Sahel, the
African Union,
the delayed
Kosovo debate
and
Afghanistan,
among others,
will be
considered,
and covered on
this site.
Amid calls for
UN Security
Council reform
of the powers
of the
permanent five
members, there
are also
slights among
the elected
ten members.
With
Chad set to
take over
Presidency of
the Security
Council on
December 1, on
November 13 it
bristled when
this month's
President,
Australia,
circulated a
“Program of
Work” for
December,
Chad's month.
Chad's
protest, which
multiple
sources
exclusively
provided to
Inner City
Press and
which it is publishing
here in
redacted form,
tells the
Australian
Mission's
Political
Coordinator
Michael Bliss
that
“Chad
is surprised
by your email
circulating
the December
POW. The
procedure is
that the
mission
assuming the
presidency of
that month is
the one
authorized to
do so. We
think it is a
profound lack
of
responsibility
by the
Australian
Mission. I
hope that we
will continue
to respect
ourselves as
non permanent
members of the
Security
Council.”
That
is, Chad not
only
challenged the
violation of
procedures,
but noted that
it was one
non-permanent
member doing
it to another.
The
email of
Michael Bliss
of the
Australian
Mission
angered those
who provided
it to Inner
City Press. In
a reference to
Bob Geldof's
“Do They Even
Know It's
Christmas,”
Bliss wrote
that
“in
respect to
that question
asked long ago
by Bob Geldof,
and friends of
some other
Africans, the
Chadian
mission do
know that it
is Christmas
time in the
week of 22/12
but, I am
told, has
resisted
SCAD's
strenuous
attempts to
arrange the
program so
that scheduled
work concludes
by 19/12.”
SCAD
is the UN
Department of
Political
Affairs'
Security
Council
Affairs
Division. On
the one hand
this seems to
be a problem
between member
states,
elected
members of the
Security
Council from
different
continents, of
different
religions and
different
cultures.
Inner City
Press reached
out to the
Australian
mission and
understands
that the
joking
reference was
to wanting a
quiet
Christmas, and
is now to
their credit
acknowledged
as
ill-considered.
But on the
other hand,
Inner City
Press is
informed,
others up to
the level of
Permanent
Representative
wonder who
gave Chad's
Program of
Work to
Australia -
whose Bliss
said it came
from "off the
back of a
truck." Which
truck? We'll
have more on
all this.