As
MSF Describes
UN Failure in
CAR, Post Sri
Lanka "Rights
Up
Front" In
Question
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 13 --
Directly
calling into
questions the
UN's new
"Rights Up
Front"
promises,
Doctors
Without
Borders has
slammed the UN
non-response
in the Central
African
Republic in an
open letter
asserting:
"MSF
has repeatedly
asked UN
agencies to
deliver food,
tents and soap
to
the more than
15,000 people
displaced in
the vicinity
of Bangui’s
airport,
without any
reaction; in
Bossangoa, UN
aid officials
on
security
lock-down
inside the
FOMAC compound
did not even
provide
assistance to
the displaced
sheltering
inside the
same compound,
forcing MSF to
intervene once
more.
Following the
fighting in
Bossangoa, the
UN remained on
security
lock-down for
days,
abandoning
the more than
30,000
displaced
persons in the
main Bossangoa
camps,
while MSF and
ACF teams move
through the
city to
provide
emergency
assistance."
In
belated
response to
its failure in
Sri Lanka,
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
administration
came out with
a "Rights Up
Front"
plan. Inner
City Press
obtained and
published a
leaked copy; Ban's
spokesperson
Martin Nesirky
said it "may
or may not
exist."
Now
Deputy
Secretary
General Jan
Eliasson has
cited Rights
Up Front in
speaking of
Central
African
Republic, as
has UN Human
Rights deputy
Ivan
Simonovic, vying to
shift much of
the UN's "rule
of law"
machinery into
his office.
But what MSF
describes is
hardly "Rights
Up Front."
Inner City
Press intends
to ask about
it -- if,
unlike
December 12,
Ban's
spokesperson
Nesirky allows
it more than
one question
(while
granting
another fully
four
questions).
Watch
this site.
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