At UN,
Culture Wars
Doom CPD48 to
Early Failure,
Of Ban &
Saudi
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, April
17 -- Is diplomacy
at the UN
getting more
or less successful?
Last year,
April 12, 2014
to be exact, a
Commission on
Population and
Development
text was
agreed to on a
Friday into
Saturday.
This year, the
Friday ended
earlier in
failure: no
text agreed,
an angry
speech by
Babatunde
Osotimehin,
complaints by
Nauru that his
UNFPA tried to
pressure
Nauru's
capital, and
alternative
cheers from
the gallery in
Conference
Room 4.
When the
Deputy Permanent
Representative
of Nigeria
spoke, some
including a group
of women in a
range of
Islamic
headscarves clapped.
A different
group cheered
when Norway
spoke, and
again when the
facilitators
purported to
wrap up.
How was a deal
possible last
year and not
this? The
previous night
in Washington,
Ban
Ki-moon
vaguely told
the National
Press Club
that diplomacy
is doing well
in his UN
-- as he
prepared to
allow Saudi
Arabia,
launching
airstrikes on
Yemen, to choose its
own
replacement
for mediator
Jamal Benomar
whom it pushed
out. Diplomacy?
Apropos of
CPD, might Ban
dare to
nominate a
woman
nominator?
Inner City
Press asked
- so far
without answer.
CPD, like the
NGO Committee
at times,
involves the
culture wars.
After the
failure of the
meeting,
Nigeria's
affable DPR
took selfies
with a slew of
supporters.
Others
streamed out,
cursing. Up in
the Delegates
Lounge, the
drinking had
moved out onto
the porch over
the East River
and Rose
Garden. The UN
goes on.
Last
year it was
just another
Friday night
into Saturday morning at the UN, this time a fight over
the Commission
on Population
and
Development.
Again, the
culture wars:
a dispute over
"sexual and
reproductive
health" and
rights. It
culminated in
speeches
between 6 and
7 am.
We
open past
11 pm. The
Permanent
Representative
of Kenya, this
month's chair
of the African
Group, said
there would be
no sleight
of hand
solution.
He went into
Conference
Room A with
other
Permanent
Representatives,
including
those of
Norway and
then of
Cameroon, who
told Inner
City Press
that "in
African we
don't do
Programs of
Action, we do
Declarations."
It would be
another long
night.
Others
noted the
irony that the
UN Population
Fund, UNFPA,
is headed by
Babatunde
Osotimehin of
Nigeria but
his country is
taking a
different
view. This
split was
contrasted,
for example,
with elsewhere
in the UN
system
Frenchman
Herve Ladsous
using
his post atop
UN
Peacekeeping
to serve
France.
"That's not
the UN," a
Permanent
Representative
said. But for
now it is.
Meanwhile
when
UNFPA's
Representative
in Sudan was
thrown out on
April 7, the
UN tried to
say nothing.
Inner City
Press wrote
about it, went
to the noon
briefing and
asked, and
only after
that got a
(non)
statement from
UNFPA. What's
next?
While as
increasingly
often in the
UN there was
little media
coverage,
Inner City
Press and
another
reporter were
told they
could not
enter
Conference
Room 1 through
its front
door. The Free UN Coalition for Access objected;
access was
gained.
During
the lull
several
Ambassadors
came to
speaking about
"the
Burundi
cable," here.
Some predicted
that the SRSG
might be
tossed out
even before
the UN's
mandate
expires at the
end of the
year.
Down
on the floor
of Conference
Room 1, a
delegate noted
that now CPD47
had surpassed
"last year
when we ended
at 13 minutes
after
midnight."
And after a
long and murky
night in the
basement of
the UN, a text
was in fact
adopted
followed by a
slew of mostly
angry speeches
from 6 to 7
am.
Argentina's
Permanent
Representative
regretted that
language about
unilateral
sanctions,
debt was not
retained. She
was followed
by speakers
from Jordan
and Australia,
all Security
Council
members this
year. There
are not a lot
of 6 am
Security
Council
meetings. But
this is
another part
of the UN.
Iran, set for
a big role in
CPD 48, joined
with Egypt and
Oman in
slamming the
deletion of
language about
"foreign
occupation."
South Africa
pointed out
paragraphs on
which it
negotiated in
it national
capacity, NOT
as part of the
African Group.
The US speech
was
surprisingly
upbeat, glad
for citations
to sexual and
reproductive
health, eager
for the ICPD
session in
General
Assembly.
Hungary said
it does not
take
"reproductive
rights" to
include
abortion. The
Holy See took
this further.
The European
Union's deputy
said that
principles
agreed to in
Cairo 20 years
ago are being
re-litigated
now. Yes, it's
Culture
Wars.
Then UNFPA
head Babatunde
Osotimehin
gave a wrap-up
speech with
empty bottle
of big-name
soda in front
of him.
Caffeine,
okay. But
ads?
Then the UN
Population
Division. But
as Inner City
Press and the
Free
UN Coalition
for Access
have asked
before,
what of
Myanmar's
anti-Royhinga
census and
reproduction
policies?
Speaking of
reproductive
issues?
There were
fast
announcement
of the next
session, CPD
48, with
Belgium
chairing and
some other
news soon to
follow. Watch
this site.
* * *
These
reports
are
usually also available through Google
News and on Lexis-Nexis.
Click here
for Sept 26, 2011 New Yorker on Inner City
Press at UN
Click
for
BloggingHeads.tv re Libya, Sri Lanka, UN
Corruption
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
UN Office: S-303,
UN, NY 10017 USA
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 2006-2014 Inner City Press,
Inc. To request reprint or other permission,
e-contact Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
|