UN
Says "Its"
Radio Okapi
Calmed DRC
Protesters, Of
Drone Info
Withholding
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 2 --
After two
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo
question were
posed at
Friday's noon
briefing by
Inner City
Press,
one was
answered in
writing by the
MONUSCO
mission less
than three
hours later
(below).
While
appreciated,
this just
further
confirms that
the UN Office
of the
Spokesperson
could and
should have
done the same
on Inner City
Press'
July
31 question of
who got the
drone contract
that UN
Peacekeeping
head Herve
Ladsous
bragged about
signing.
On
that, the UN
Spokesperson's
Office waited
a full 24
hours until
the
August 1 noon
briefing and
then read the
answer out --
Selex ES Falco
-- such that,
for example,
the
stenographers
at Reuters who
didn't
even come to
the briefing
could put the
information
out without
any
background.
When did the
Spokesperson's
Office GET the
answer to
Inner City
Press' July 31
question? Why
did it wait,
unlike here,
until the next
day's noon
briefing to
read it out?
It
has been noted
that the
Spokesperson
used to work
at Reuters.
Also
relevant is Ladsous' refusal to answer Inner
City Press questions --
today's answer
is said to
come "from
MONUSCO." Here
it is:
Subject:
Your
question on
MONUSCO
From: UN
Spokesperson -
Do Not Reply
[at]
un.org
Date: Fri, Aug
2, 2013 at
2:08 PM
To:
Matthew.Lee
[at]
innercitypress.com
Regarding
your
question at
the noon
briefing on
Gama, we have
the following
information
from the UN
Mission,
MONUSCO:
MONUSCO
confirms
that there
were
demonstrations
in Goma today,
with
protesters
calling for
MONUSCO to
extend the
Security Zone
announced
earlier in the
week, by which
the Congolese
Armed Forces
are being
supported by
MONUSCO to
protect
civilians in a
densely
populated area
around Goma
and Sake.
The
Mission
confirms that
the situation
in Goma is now
calm after
talks
with civil
society
groups, as
well as
extensive
outreach
through the
Mission's
radio station,
Radio Okapi,
with the
Governor of
North Kivu
and civil
society
leaders giving
interviews and
reaching out
to the
population.
One
surmises that
this is an
answer that
the UN likes
giving: they
could
cite it if
they start
shooting up
the place in
the north,
saying
that "civil
society" asked
them to do it.
It
is also
noteworthy
that MONUSCO
calmed things
down by using
"Mission's
radio station,
Radio Okapi"
-- so much for
the
(false) claims
of
independence.
But
mostly, for
now, we take
from this that
the UN
Spokesperson's
Office
knows how to
email an
answer to the
media which
asked the
question --
but when the
answer was
important,
news-making,
it didn't do
so for
Inner City
Press, but
rather
services
Reuters and
others.
Reuters
UN bureau
chief Louis
Charbonneau has been
shown to have
leaked to the
UN's top
accreditation
official an
internal
anti-Press
document
of the UN
Correspondents
Association,
three minutes
after
promising he
would not.
This is, in
essence,
spying for the
UN. Story
here, Charbonneau
audio here,
document
here.
Ladsous
made
it clear, only
if Press
coverage of
him was
positive would
he
answer
questions. Now
in what we
call a process
of
Ladsousification,
this is
spreading in
the UN. For
example, OCHA
said nothing
when MSF
complained
that the
Intervention
Brigade would
undermine
humanitarian
independence.
A
big question
now is did
Ladsous' DPKO
tell Ban
Ki-moon (and /
or Mary
Robinson)
before
announcing the
48 hour
ultimatum.
This was
asked, at
Friday's improved
noon briefing,
and we will
have more
on these
questions.
Watch this
site.