With
Cyprus Issue
in NY, Downer
Is In London,
Buttenheim
Upbeat
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
January 22 --
With Alexander
Downer's
Cyprus mission
more and more
in question,
he was perhaps
lucky that his
scheduled
briefing of
the UN
Security
Council on
January 22 was
overshadowed
by the
Syria talks in
Montreux.
Outside the
Security
Council, only
two media
tried to cover
the meeting.
One of them,
Inner City
Press, was
interested as
always in how
the UN can
have an envoy
who also works
for business
consultancy, vies
for political
office and
now, it is
said, an
ambassadorship.
Sources link Downer
with the
Australian
Ambassadorship
to the UK (the
US would not
be possible,
they say,
after Downer's
comments
during the
last election
here). This is
of course, denied.
But these
question could
not be put to
Downer himself
at the UN on
January 22,
because Downer
was not here.
Inner City
Press heard,
then asked
this month's
Council
president,
Jordan,
through its
Senior Deputy
Permanent
Representative
Mahmoud
Daifallah
Mahmoud Hmoud
about Downer's
absence.
It was
ascribed to
the weather. Video
here, from
Minute 1:10.
While Special
Representative
Lisa Buttenheim
offered that
the
consultations
on Cyprus had
"done well"
and been
"balanced,"
very little
news came out.
Both sides have
criticized Downer.
Now what?
When a country
complains to
and about the
UN, and a
journalist
asks for the
response to
the criticism,
one would
expect one.
But not at
this UN.
Back on
December 17,
Inner City
Press asked
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-mon's
spokesperson
Martin Nesirky
about
Cyprus'
criticism of
Ban's envoy
Alexander
Downer and his
meeting(s) in
Northern
Cyprus:
President
Nicos
Anastasiades
instructed the
foreign
ministry to
issue the
demarche to
the UN both
here in
Nicosia and at
headquarters
in New York
after it
transpired
that Downer
met with
Turkish
foreign
minister Ahmet
Davutoglu at
the Turkish
‘embassy’ in
the north.
Deputy
permanent
secretary at
the foreign
ministry,
Tasos Tzionis,
yesterday
issued the
demarche to UN
Special
Representative
in Cyprus Lisa
Buttenheim
regarding
Downer’s visit
to the Turkish
‘embassy’.
Anastasiades
also
instructed
Cyprus’
permanent
representative
at the UN in
New York to do
the same at
the UN
Secretariat.
In the
briefing,
Nesirky said
he would
provide Inner
City Press and
others with a
response later
in the day.
And he did:
Subject:
Your
question on
Cyprus
From: UN
Spokesperson -
Do Not Reply
[at] un.org
Date: Tue, Dec
17, 2013 at
4:14 PM
To:
Matthew.Lee
[at]
innercitypress.com
Please
see below in
response to
your question
today
concerning
Cyprus:
During
his visit to
Cyprus last
week,
Alexander
Downer, the
Secretary-General's
Special
Adviser, held
intensive
discussions
with the sides
to move
forward the
conclusion of
a joint
statement that
has been under
negotiation
over the past
weeks. Through
these
discussions
and through
constructive
engagement by
the Greek
Cypriots,
Turkish
Cypriots,
Greece and
Turkey,
important
progress was
achieved on
the joint
statement.
Although this
work has not
yet concluded,
the
Secretary-General
is hopeful
that it will
lead to a
successful
outcome soon.
The problem
is, this is
not responsive
to Cyprus'
criticism, or
to Inner City
Press'
question.
Back in
September when
Cyprus
president
Anastasiades
took questions
at the UN,
Inner City
Press asked
him about his
dispute with
country's
Central Bank
chief, and if
his speech had
been
coordinated in
any way with
Turkey, since
it was so
upbeat. Video
here, from
Minute 6:13.
Anastasiades
said
while he tries
not to speak
about things
in Cyprus when
he is out of
the country,
he respects
its
constitution
and the rules
and
regulations of
the Euro
system and of
the ECB.
On
Cyprus we try
to open new
avenues, he
said, "I have
a vision to
see that my
country is
going to be
reunited... we
are not
ignoring the
rights of
Turkish
Cypriots.
On
Famagusta, he
said we are in
the process of
negotiating:
for the port
to be open,
under EU,
Turkey to open
airports and
ports to ships
and planes
with Cyprus
[flags], then
Cyprus would
raise veto
[threat] on
accession
process of
Turkey.
In
that press
conference,
Inner City
Press got the
first
question, but
instead of
thanking
Anastasiades
on behalf of
the new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
(which it does
when the old
UN
Correspondents
Association
insists on
pretending it
represents all
journalists at
the UN),
thanks was
given for "the
journalists
here."
That's
how it should
and could be
done. But
later that
day, not only
did UNCA's
2013 president
Pamela Falk of
CBS re-appear
for the UNFCCC
-- a person
who'd lost
election for
the UNCA board
again insisted
on getting the
first question
at an ICC
press
conference.
This means:
first
questions for
sale. UNreal.
Since
then, UNCA has
moved to
accept donated
television
equipment from
Samsung
while claiming
no mission was
involved.
(Even the UN
admits the
equipment went
from Samsung
to the South
Korean Mission
to the UN to
UNCA.)
Now, amid
doubts whether
given UNCA
leaders' past
financial
links with and
censorship for
Sri Lankan
government
officials --
click here for
that --
Defense
Secretary Gotabhaya
Rajapaksa
might attend
their $250 a
plate event,
a new question
arises.
Will UNCA, a
grouping of
correspondents,
disclose who
is attending,
and who paid,
and how much?
Watch this
site.
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