By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, June
17, 2014 --
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.
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
studies. We'll
be waiting.
So France, which
has appointed
the last four
heads of UN
Peacekeeping
in a row, did
not directly
join in the
call for an
investigation
made by such
Security
Council
members as
Argentina and
Luxembourg,
Chile and
Australia.
Then again, what
did France say
when Ladsous
met with
Sudan's Omar
al Bashir,
indicted for
genocide by
the
International
Criminal
court, the
subject of the
June 17
session of the
Council?
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.