On
Darfur,
Australia's
Quinlan Tells
ICP UNSC Will
Take Up
Cover-Up
Report
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
November 11, more
here --
Ten days after
after the UN
issued a
statement on
its internal
investigation
into charges
it covered-up
attacks in
Darfur, its
UNAMID mission
there issued a
statement that
"village
community
leaders
reiterated to
UNAMID that
they coexist
peacefully
with local
military
authorities in
the area" and
that no
evidence of
rape was
found.
Inner City
Press asked UN
Security
Council
president for
November Gary
Quinlan of
Australia
about the
UNAMID press
release, and
if and when
the Security
Council will
act on the
"cover-up"
report,
including
requesting the
full report
from the
Secretariat,
which to date
has provided
only a
summary. Video
here. From
the Australian
transcript:
Inner
City Press:
Sure, thanks a
lot. I wanted
to ask on
Darfur. Thanks
for what you
said about
what Ms
Bangura said.
There’s a
press release
put out by
UNAMID that
has this line
in it:
“Village
community
leaders
reiterated to
UNAMID that
they co-exist
peacefully
with local
military
authorities in
the area.” The
press release
doesn’t
mention at all
the military
presence. So I
wanted to ask
you, one, if
you could
comment, what
do you make of
this press
release by
UNAMID? And
two, does the
report by the
Secretary-General
on allegations
of covers up
by UNAMID of
attacks on
civilians and
on
peacekeepers,
where does it
stand? He said
that the, the
Spokesperson
said that an
executive
summary of the
report went to
the Council.
Is the Council
going to have
a meeting on
it? Are you
going to have
a full
report?
And are you
satisfied with
UNAMID’s press
release on
these
allegations of
rape?
AMBASSADOR
QUINLAN:
Matthew, on
the second
part of the
question.
Members of the
Council are
very concerned
on this whole
question of
UNAMID and
UNAMID
reporting, but
also what
UNAMID is
doing. And one
of the big
issues there
is the denial
of access and
restrictions
that are
imposed
largely by the
Government of
Sudan, with
whom UNAMID
has a formal
arrangement on
access. But
also, of
course, by
armed
opposition
groups and
that is
inherently
more difficult
sometimes to
get the access
that’s needed.
That
report has not
yet been
discussed by
the Council. I
expect that it
will be over
the next
couple of
weeks. A
number of
members of the
Council are
extremely
interested in
it. We want to
be sure that
we’ve lined up
the briefers
from the
Secretariat to
have a proper
discussion of
that report.
Secondly,
in relation to
the UNAMID
press release,
I think the
key is that
they’ve
indicated that
they had
access but it
was the first
time since
November 4,
when they’d
been seeking
access. And
they had
proactively
been seeking
access to be
able to
undertake
investigations.
That’s a long
period to have
access denied,
by the way, in
a circumstance
like rape. You
really do
need, as Ms
Bangura
reminded us,
to have access
straight away,
for obvious
reasons. So
that’s one
point I’d
make. The
second point
is UNAMID has
made it
extremely
clear in its
press release
that it will
conduct
further
follow-up
actions,
including
possible
further
investigations
and patrols
and that they
will do that
in cooperation
with the
Government of
Sudan and
other parties.
We have
confidence
that that will
happen. SRSG
Bangura is
making this a
top priority
for her and so
is the
Secretariat
itself and we
were reassured
about that
this morning
by ASG Mulet.
So I think
that’s
basically it.
We'll continue
to follow this
-- but how can
a peacekeeping
mission
already
accused of
covering up
for the
Sudanese
government
say, today,
that "village
community
leaders
reiterated to
UNAMID that
they coexist
peacefully
with local
military
authorities in
the area"? To
some, this is
shocking - and
indicative of
problems in
today's UN
Peacekeeping.
Inner
City Press on
November 7
asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
the challenges
to the UN's
statement it
couldn't and
didn't access
the site of
mass rapes in
Tabit in
Darfur. Video
here; transcript:
Inner
City Press:
there are
witnesses in
Darfur who
actually say
that the
UNAMID
investigators,
rather than
being stopped
outside Tabit
went inside
and
interviewed
four people
and after that
they were
spoken to by
Sudanese
military
intelligence.
And so these
are credible
people that
have been
reporting on
Darfur for
some time and
see the
reports being
issued by
UNAMID
although as a
reaction to
the quote
“cover up
report” as not
being
accurate.
And I wanted
to know, can
you check with
them to be
sure that the
UNAMID
investigators
didn't in fact
enter Tabit
Tuesday at 5
am and whether
they were
spoken to by
Sudanese
intelligence
and decided to
say that they
hadn't been
able to enter
the town?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I'm not going
to judge the
credibility or
lack of
credibility of
people who
have been
reporting on
Darfur.
I mean, they
report.
What I can
tell you is
the Mission
clearly stands
by its
reporting.
They've sent
us a bit more
detail, said
the
verification
patrol
comprising of
military
police and
civilian
personnel on
Tuesday, 4
November, that
it was sent on
Tuesday, 4
November, from
Shangil Tobaya
to Tabit to
14:50
hours, I
assume local
time.
The patrol was
denied access
at the
outskirts of
the town at a
Sudanese
military
checkpoint.
Attempts to
negotiate
access to
Tabit were
unfruitful and
the team
returned to
the base in
Shangil
Tobaya.
We've
repeated… the
Mission's
leadership has
repeated its
call to the
Government to
grant the UN,
to grant
UNAMID
unfettered
access to the
whole of
Darfur and
obviously
especially in
areas where
we're trying
to investigate
horrendous
reports of
mass
rape. So
that's a
longer, a long
way of saying
that the
Mission stands
by its
reporting.
But if UNAMID
and UN
Peacekeeping
was just outed
for
under-reporting
attacks, how
it is now
automatically
credible? On
November 6,
Inner City
Press asked
Dujarric about
similar
cover-ups in
Central
African
Republic,
exposed by an
Amnesty
International
report about
that country.
From
the UN's
transcript:
Inner
City Press:
I'm sure the
Secretary-General
has seen the
Amnesty
International's
report today
about the
peacekeeping
mission in
Central
African
Republic.
They
basically, I
mean, they say
a number of
things.
Maybe you have
some kind of
response to
it. But,
I wanted to
especially ask
you about the
reporting
aspect of it
they describe
a number of
killings and
attacks that
have taken
place in
Dekoa, Bambari
and elsewhere
in [the
Central
African
Republic]
about, which,
at least being
here every
day, I've
heard nothing
from this
podium.
So, I wanted
to know both
substantively
what's the
response of UN
peacekeeping
to not
protecting
civilians and
in terms of
communications
and
transparency
the response
to what
appears to be
an
underreporting
similar to
that analogous
to that in
Darfur?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
Sure.
Obviously, a
big part of
the Missions'
mandate is the
protection of
civilians.
The Mission,
its
peacekeeping
forces, its
formed police
units, are
doing that to
the best of
their
ability.
Obviously,
it's a very
challenging
situation.
It's a
challenging
terrain in
which they
work.
And there is,
obviously… one
could always
use more
troops and
more
police.
I'm not sure
they're up to
their mandated
force as of
yet. As
far as
reporting
goes, you know
we report from
here whatever
we receive
from the
Mission.
Inner City
Press: Because
of the Darfur
thing, I
wanted to
ask:
Their report
is very
detailed.
The report, it
says names of
places, number
of people
killed.
Maybe, first
of all, does
the Mission
send it to
[the
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations] in
New York and
they're
supposed to
give it to
your
office?
At what point
has this
information in
the Amnesty
report, has it
reached New
York before or
is it a
surprise to
UN?
Spokesman:
I can only
speak to what
I receive from
the Mission
Back
on October 29,
Inner City
Press asked if
the full
Darfur report
will be
released, at
least to the
Security
Council, and
about
under-reporting
of attacks in
the Central
African
Republic. Video here.
Dujarric said
that even
before the
summary was
given to the
Security
Council
members -- so
that is
apparently all
that has been
given to them
-- UN missions
were told to
be sure to
report
attacks. He
said he reads
out what the
missions sent
him.
So has the UN
mission in
CAR, MINUSCA,
simply not
send in
reports about
killings in
Bambari and
elsewhere? We'll
see.
Despite
a request from
Inner City
Press and the
Free
UN Coalition
for Access
the UN will
not release
the report.
Back on
October 29, Inner
City Press
asked, given
that even the
sanitized
statement says
information on
attacks was
withheld from
the media and
UN
Headquarters -
at its
request? - who
is
responsible? Video here.
Back on
September 12,
eight days
after Inner
City Press
exclusively
reported
that the head
of the Darfur
peacekeeping
mission
Mohamed ibn
Chambas was
being given
the UN Office
in West Africa
post in Dakar,
and asked
about it,
the UN
confirmed the
move.
Inner City
Press has
asked on
September 5,
and did again
on September
12, if this
move didn't
undercut or
pre-judge the
UN's
investigation
into charges
that the
Darfur mission
under Chambas
under-reported
attacks on
civilians.
On September
12, UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric
insisted he
didn't want to
"pre-judge"
the
inquiry.
But by giving
the new post,
this has
already been
done. Now this
sanitized
statement,
with the
report still
withheld:
A
review,
initiated by
the
Secretary-General,
was conducted
into recent
allegations
that the
African
Union-United
Nations Hybrid
Operation in
Darfur
(UNAMID)
intentionally
sought to
cover up
crimes against
civilians and
peacekeepers.
The Review
Team examined
all the
material
related to 16
incidents,
which were the
basis of these
allegations.
It also
interviewed
former and
current staff
in UNAMID and
at UN
Headquarters.
The Review
Team did not
find any
evidence to
support these
allegations.
However, it
did find a
tendency to
under-report
unless
absolutely
certain of the
facts. In five
of the cases
examined, the
Mission did
not provide UN
Headquarters
with full
reports on the
circumstances
surrounding
these
incidents,
which involved
possible
wrongdoing by
Government or
pro-Government
forces. The
Review Team
also found
that the
Mission took
an unduly
conservative
approach to
the media,
maintaining
silence when
it could have
developed a
press line,
even in the
absence of all
the facts.
The
Secretary-General
is deeply
troubled by
these
findings. He
recognizes
that UNAMID
faces unique
challenges
owing to its
complex
mandate and
operating
environment.
Nevertheless,
keeping silent
or
under-reporting
on incidents
involving
human rights
violations and
threats or
attacks on UN
peacekeepers
cannot be
condoned under
any
circumstances.
The
Secretary-General
will take all
necessary
steps to
ensure full
and accurate
reporting by
UNAMID. Every
effort will be
made to ensure
that sensitive
information is
systematically
brought to the
attention of
UN
Headquarters
and the
Security
Council in a
timely
fashion.
UNAMID’s media
policy will be
re-examined to
ensure greater
openness and
transparency.
The Mission
will be
expected to
follow up
formally and
report on
Government
investigations
into incidents
where
peacekeepers
have been
killed or
injured.
Ensuring that
the UN speaks
out
consistently
against abuses
and identifies
the
perpetrators
is a key goal
of the
Secretary-General’s
Human Rights
up Front
initiative.
The
Secretary-General
will ensure
that all
missions are
provided with
clear guidance
on the
fulfilment of
their
reporting
obligations,
particularly
with regard to
human rights
and the
protection of
civilians. He
looks forward
to the
upcoming
review of UN
peace
operations as
an opportunity
to
comprehensively
address this
issue, which
is a core
element of his
Human Rights
up Front
initiative.
On August 22,
Inner City
Press asked:
Inner
City Press: in
Darfur, it
seems that Mr.
Mohamed ibn
Chambas went
to Kalma Camp
and met with
residents who
expressed a
variety of
complaints,
but he was
quoted as
saying there
that UNAMID
[African
Union-United
Nations Hybrid
Operation in
Darfur] cannot
stop
Government
forces from
entering camps
for the
displaced, and
it has left
many people
confused
whether, what
is UNAMID’s
role in terms
of protection
of civilians
given these
[inaudible]
entrances in
the camp and
people lying
on the ground?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I will… we
will check
with the
Mission to
verify the
quotes and see
what actually
they have been
doing.
Two weeks, no
answer. Now
this.
UN
Peacekeeping
and its
mission in
Darfur
continue take
a selective
and lax
approach to
protecting
civilians.
This example
concerns the
UN's evolving
statements on
the Al-Salam
camp.
After
whistleblower
Aicha Elbasri
further
exposed UN
Peacekeeping
under Herve
Ladsous as
covering up
attacks in
Darfur, on
June 17
several
Security
Council
members joined
International
Criminal Court
prosecutor
Fatou Bensouda
in calling for
an
investigation.
On August 7,
Inner City
Press asked
the Joint
Special
Representative
of the African
Union-United
Nations
Mission in
Darfur,
Mohamed Ibn
Chambas, about
the status of
the probe.
Chambas told
Inner City
Press he had
met earlier in
the day with
the
commission,
whose members
will be on
their say to
Darfur.
Inner
City Press
asked if the
report will be
public.
Chambas only
said his staff
will
cooperate.
Apparently it
will be up to
Ban Ki-moon,
or even Herve
Ladsous, to
decide to
release or
withhold the
report.
Back
in Khartoum on
August 11,
Chambas said
this:
"And
on the attack
on Alsalam
camp, let me
state that we
have
information
about this. We
have always
stated that
the
responsibility
for
maintaining
law and order
in Sudan lays
with the
Government.
This is a
sovereign
country, it
has law
enforcement
obligations,
it has its
justice system
and the AU,
the UN is only
here to
facilitate and
ensure that
law and order
and justice
are maintained
and are
enforced
according to
due process of
law. So, we
want to say
that we will
continue to
engage with
the Government
of Sudan in
accordance
with its own
protection of
civilian
mandate and to
ensure that
the activities
on law
enforcement
agencies are
carried out
without
infringement
of the rights
of innocent
civilians
specially
vulnerable
communities in
IDP camps. We
hope that on
the other hand
residents of
IDP camps can
understand and
do understand
that
possession of
weapons,
carrying of
weapons is not
allowed in IDP
camps under
international
humanitarian
law.
"It’s also
imperative,
and it’s a
responsibility
of the leaders
of IDP camps
to ensure that
no one is
using these
camps to keep
weapons or to
hide weapons,
because this
is against
international
humanitarian
law. These are
the issues
involved there
and we as
UNAMID we will
continue to
work with both
sides, with
IDP leaders to
educate them
what is
permissible in
these camps
and what is
not, and at
the same time
working
with
Government to
enforce
legitimately
law and order
but to do that
respecting the
civic and
human rights
of the
citizens and
also
respecting due
process of
law. Thank
you."
Since this
seemed to
defer to
Sudan's Abu
Tira, and even
to blame the
victims, Inner
City Press on
August 13
asked:
Inner
City Press: I
wanted to ask
about Darfur,
Missouri and
Afghanistan.
On Darfur,
photos have
come out of
the Sudanese
uniformed Abu
Tira forces
going through
a refugee camp
or [internally
displaced
persons] camp
in El Salam
and making the
residents lie
on the
ground.
And Mr.
Chambas was
asked about it
and said that
this was
entirely up to
the Sudanese
and it just
seems sort of
strange. I
mean, I know
there is a
Human Rights
component to
these
peacekeeping
missions.
Does the UN,
does UNAMID
[United
Nations Hybrid
Operation in
Darfur] or
does anyone in
the
Secretariat,
are they aware
of these
photographs?
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric:
I will check.
Twenty three
hours later,
Dujarric sent
nothing to
Inner City
Press. But
UNAMID issued
a belated
statement,
which seems to
contradict or
attempt to
rehabilitate
Chambas'
dismissive
August 11
comments:
"Following
a security
raid conducted
on Al Salam
IDP camp on 5
August when
individuals
were arrested
for alleged
possession of
illegal drugs,
weapons and
ammunition,
UNAMID
monitored the
trials of
those arrested
during the
operation;
most of whom
have since
been released.
UNAMID has
been engaging
relevant state
authorities on
the conditions
of those still
being
detained.
"Other
security raids
have been
conducted in
Otash and
Dereig camps
and are part
of a wider
campaign by
the South
Darfur
authorities to
address the
high level of
criminality in
the State,
especially
around Nyala.
"The security
raids have
generated
alarm and
anxiety
amongst IDPs
in Kalma camp,
who are
anticipating a
similar
operation at
their camp and
have expressed
their concerns
to UNAMID."
We'll
continue on
this.
Inner City
Press asked UN
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq if
an independent
investigation
of Ladsous' UN
Peacekeeping
will be done,
and if not,
why not? Video
here.
Haq claimed
that UN
Peacekeeping
is already
acting on
Elbasri's
complaints,
and that it
had been
telling the
press about
it. Inner City
Press asked,
where have
these updates
been provided.
Haq
cited a
read-out given
in March,
largely
generic; then
he said the
requests made
on June 17
would be
studied.
Now
on July 2,
Ban's
spokesman
Dujarric - in
the midst of a
controversy
about a
non-factual
response on
June 27, not
corrected when
asked June 30
and July 1,
about Ladsous'
mission in the
DRC flying
sanctioned
FDLR leaders
around,
released this:
"The
Secretary-General
is concerned
about the
recent serious
allegations
against the
African
Union-United
Nations
Mission in
Darfur
(UNAMID).
These
allegations
cover a wide
range of
issues,
including
inaccurate
reporting of
the facts on
the ground in
Darfur,
specific
instances of
failure to
protect
civilians and
accusations of
mismanagement
of UNAMID.
"UNAMID has
undergone
several
investigations
and reviews
over the last
two years,
which have
sought to
address both
strategic
issues and
specific
incidents
related to the
Mission's
performance.
The
Secretary-General’s
Special Report
of 25 February
2014 provides
an overview of
the strategic
and managerial
challenges
faced by the
Mission and
the work being
done at United
Nations
Headquarters
and in UNAMID
to address
them.
"The
Secretary-General
remains
committed to
improving
UNAMID's
performance
and is
determined to
take all
necessary
steps to
correct any
wrongdoing. He
has instructed
the
Secretariat to
review the
reports of all
investigations
and inquiries
undertaken
since mid-2012
to ensure that
their
recommendations
have been
implemented
and that any
relevant
issues have
been fully
addressed.
This review,
to be
completed
within one
month, will
enable the
Secretary-General
to determine
what has
already been
done and, if
recommendations
are
outstanding,
what
corrective
action needs
to be taken."
On
DRC, Dujarric
said "you can
pick up the
phone" - after
siting next to
Ladsous while
he refused to
answer Press
questions on
DRC.
As recently as
May 29,
Ladsous
refused Press
questions, video here, compilation
here.
Back on April
24 when Darfur
as such was
the topic of
the UN
Security
Council, three
major Darfur
rebel groups
wrote to the
Council to
investigate
"all reports
of the Peace
Keeping
Mission,
including
reports
presented to
the UNSC by
[Under]
Secretary
General for
Peace Keeping
Mr. Ladous and
the
reliability of
the sources he
had relied
on."
But unlike his
abortive
stakeout on
the evening of
April 23 about
South Sudan, video here, Ladsous did not come
out to answer
any questions.
And at the
April 24 UN
noon briefing,
when Inner
City Press
asked
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq for
a response to
the request
for an
investigation
of Ladsous and
his reports,
there was
none: not one
modified or
corrected
report was
cited.
Instead, from
the "holy
seat" of
the UN
Correspondents
Association a
long time
scribe
followed up to
say that it is
not all
Ladsous'
fault, and to
cast blame on
the
government.
(This same
dynamic was
repeated at
the June 17
noon
briefing.)
This
reflexively
shifting of
blame from the
UN to the
government,
whose new
Permanent
Representative
spoke in the
Council on
April 24, is
in this case
particularly
absurd: how
can the
government be
responsible
for the UN's
own reports
being
inaccurate?
Those
requesting
this
investigation
of DPKO and
Ladsous are
not the
government of
Omar
al Bashir,
which whom
Ladsous met in
July 2013
without any
readout,
but rebels
Abdel Wahid
Mohamed Ahmed
Nur,
Chairperson,
Sudan
Liberation
Army/Movement
(SLA/M-A/Wahid),
Gibriel
Ibrahim
Mohamed,
Chairperson of
Justice &
Equality
Movement Sudan
(JEM) and
Minni Arko
Minnawi,
Chairperson
Sudan
Liberation
Army/Movement
(SLA/M-MM).
Pending UN
answers, again
we ask: how
can one write
about the
corruption of
a UN
Peacekeeping
mission, at
length,
without naming
the person in
charge? Why
would one
airbrush that
person, in
this case
Herve Ladsous
the UN Under
Secretary for
Peacekeeping
Operations,
out?
The former
spokesperson
of the UNAMID
mission in
Darfur quit,
spoke out and
finally leaked
documents.
Radio Dabanga
as well as
Foreign Policy
began
publishing
them on April
7 (FP did not
mention Dabanga,
and called its
back
to back
Ladsous-less
pieces an
exclusive
investigation).
The last piece
focused on the
US role, all
to the good,
but not only
doesn't
mention that
the UN's
Ladsous met
with
International
Criminal Court
indictee Omar
al Bashir in
July, without
providing any
read-out,
but also omits
France's
hosting of
Darfur rebels,
for example.
Back
on March
25, 2013,
Inner City
Press asked
the UN
Spokesperson
about how the
UN
Peacekeeping
in Darfur
could have let
a group of
Internally
Displaced
People be
kidnapped
while they
were
ostensibly
protected:
Inner
City Press:
there is this
incident where
IDPs were
taken hostage
or kidnapped
by people that
were in
Government
army uniforms,
and somehow
UNAMID is
saying that
they opposed
it and they
denounced the
kidnapping,
but some
people are
wondering how
armed UN
peacekeepers
could have
IDPs under
their care and
they could all
be kidnapped.
Can you
clarify how it
took place and
how it is
consistent
with
protection of
civilians?
Spokesperson:
Well, I have
asked the
Mission for
more details
on that, and I
think if you
were listening
carefully you
will have
heard me read
out precisely
what you just
said to me.
Inner
City Press:
But what I am
asking about
specifically
about how it
could take
place?
Spokesperson:
I heard what
you said, and
I’ve said that
I’ll see if I
can find out
more, which is
what I have
already asked
the Mission
and
Peacekeeping
Operations.
Now
Radio Dabanga
has published
a memo by UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous, from
April 10, 2013,
still saying
he didn't know
how it
happened.
What is
Ladsous doing?
Then, and
apparently
now, he
refuses Press
questions
about topics
ranging from
Sudan -- why
did he meet
with
International
Criminal Court
indictee Omar
al Bashir in
July 2013? --
to rapes
in the DR
Congo by UN
Peacekeeping's
partners in
the Congolese
Army.
Dabanga
to
its credit says it is reporting the
memos along
with FP.
The FP
story,
at least the
first one,
does not
mention
Dabanga,
nor Ladsous'
meeting
with Bashir.
Previously an
explanation
was provided
for not
reporting on
Ladsous'
extraordinary
and public
"non-answering,"
noted
from the UK by
the New
Statesman,
here.
We'll
be following
this. 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
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Other, earlier Inner City Press are
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