In
Darfur, After
IDP Camp Is
Razed, UN
Whispers About
Food
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, April
1 -- After an
internally
displaced
person's camp
in Khor Abeche,
Darfur was
burned down
right next to
a UNAMID
peacekeeping
base, what the
UN said about
it was that
they were
bringing food.
On April 1,
Inner City
Press asked
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq:
Inner
City Press: I
wanted to ask
you about
Darfur. There
are
satellite
photographs,
recently
released, that
show, next to
the Khor
Abeche camp,
basically,
that the camp
did shelter
people that
lived
in the
surrounding
IDP
[internally
displaced
persons] camp,
that the
camp was
entirely
destroyed and
burned down
and that the
sheik was
killed by
fire. Some
people say
that it is
Government-supported
rebels. In any
event, it
seemed clear
like a lot of
people were
killed right
next to a UN
camp. So I
wanted to
know, what is
the
response of
UNAMID
[African
Union-United
Nations Hybrid
Operation in
Darfur] to
those who say
it shows that
they are not
really able to
protect
people? And
also, why
hasn’t the UN
itself raised
the red
flag about
this attack in
Khor Abeche?
Deputy
Spokesman
Farhan Haq: I
will check
with our
peacekeeping
colleagues
what
information
that they have
from UNAMID on
that.
Later on April
1, the UN
Spokesperson's
office sent
Inner City
Press an email
pointing to a
previous statement
about food,
and added it
to the transcript:
[The
Deputy
Spokesman
later noted
that a UNAMID
convoy with
relief items
from UN
agencies
arrived in
Khor Abeche on
26 March. The
Mission’s
peacekeepers,
with the
support of
community
leaders,
distributed
food
to thousands
of internally
displaced
persons who
are taking
refuge at
the Mission’s
base there.]
But what about
the burning
down of the
houses? Is
that all that
today's UN say
or does about
it?
Back in July
2013 Ladsous
met with
Sudan's
president Omar
al Bashir,
indicted for
genocide in
Darfur by the
International
Criminal
Court, but has
refused to say
why, despite
critiques from
some human
rights groups,
the Press and
implicitly
Fatou Bensouda, prosecutor of the ICC. This
is Ladsous:
film &
UK.
Back
on February
4, Inner
City Press asked
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's lead
spokesperson
Martin Nesirky
about a
full-on
critique of UN
Peacekeeping's
Darfur mission
by its former
spokesperson,
Aicha Elbasri:
Inner
City
Press: On
Darfur, maybe
you have
something on
the Government
ordering the
ICRC
(International
Committee of
the Red Cross)
to suspend
operations.
And I also
wanted to know
if there’s any
response from
the UN to
former UNAMID
[African
Union-United
Nations Hybrid
Operation in
Darfur]
spokesperson
Aicha Elbasri.
She’s gone
public, saying
basically
that, while
serving as
spokesperson
of UNAMID, she
wasn’t given
information;
that the
Mission
under-reports
abuses of
civilians and
other
developments
in Darfur. I
wanted to
know, what’s
the response
of the UN to
that?
Spokesperson
Nesirky:
I’d have to
check with the
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations on
both of those.
So,
respecting
that, Inner
City Press
waited. The
answers
weren't
directly
provided by
e-mail as the
UN does with
other, but
read out at
the noon
briefing,
apparently to
see if anyone
else might
report more
positively on
them (no one
did)
"we
were asked
about
reporting by
the African
Union–UN
Mission on
developments
in Darfur.
UNAMID notes
that it
reports
verified
information on
the situation
in Darfur to
the United
Nations and to
the African
Union on a
daily basis.
This
information is
then made
public in the
Secretary-General’s
quarterly
reports to the
Security
Council and,
as the
situation
warrants, in
press
statements."
To a
casual or
ill-informed
listener, it
sounded like a
legitimate
answer. But as
the UN and its
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations
under Herve
Ladsous
know, this is
part of Aicha
Elbasri's
critique:
"On
24
April I
resigned from
UNAMID and
wrote my
end-of-mission
report
requesting the
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations to
look into
UNAMID’s
violations of
the UN Public
Information
policy which
calls for
open,
transparent
and honest
information-sharing
with the
media. I
didn't receive
any response.
On past
August, I
requested the
UN Office of
Internal
Oversight
Services to
open an
investigation
into the
matter. The
information I
shared with
them should
have made
anyone who
cares about
the people of
Darfur and the
UN values and
policies jump,
call me and
take a quick
action. What I
received so
far is a
deafening
silence. And I
can no longer
wait, because
every day that
goes by, more
men, women and
children die
in Darfur in
total impunity
and
invisibility.
So today I
will break the
UN code of
conduct and
share with you
some
confidential
photos and
information
that show the
African Union,
the United
Nations and
UNAMID’
conspiracy of
silence."
Surely
Ladsous' DPKO
(and Carman
Lapointe's
OIOS) know
what Aicha
Elbasri
submitted. But
the public
response was
as set forth
above.
Ban
Ki-moon tried
to send his
former
speechwriter
Michael Meyer
to Sudan as
communications
chief of
UNAMID; it
never
happened. Now
Meyer is in
Nairobi, "dean
of the
graduate
school of
media and
communications
at Aga Khan
University."
On the ICRC,
Inner City
Press checked
and has found
that inquiry
was made - by
the ICRC, not
the UN -- with
Sudan's "HAC."
We'll have
more on all
this. Watch
this site.
* * *
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