By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Follow up on
Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 19, more
here --
What would it
take for an
army to be
deemed to fail
the supposed Human
Rights Due Diligence
Policy of UN
Peacekeeping
under Herve
Ladsous?
The question
is raised by
the impending
inclusion of
units from the
army of the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo, a
country with a
large UN
Peacekeeping
mission, in
the UN
Peacekeeping
mission in
Central
African Republic,
MINUSCA. On
its face, it
strikes some
as absurd.
But the DRC
army is also
on the UN's
list of child
soldier
recruiters.
Shouldn't that
by itself --
leaving aside
the near total
impunity for
that army's
130 rapes in
Minova in
November 2012
- disqualify
them from
MINUSMA?
UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous
refused Press
questions for
months about
the Minova
rapes, video
here. On
the issue of
the DRC Army
being on the
child soldier
recruitment
list, Inner
City Press has
been informed
of concern in
the Security
Council, including
from the chair
of the
Children and
Armed Conflict
Committee.
But when Inner
City Press asked
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
Peter Wilson
of the UK, the
Council's president
for August,
about the
issue, he said
that UN envoy
-- and former
UN force
commander in
the DRC --
Babacar Gaye
had spoken
about training
for all troops
joining
MINUSMA.
Transcript
below.
To Gaye himself,
Inner City
Press asked
about the
child soldier
recruitment
list. Gaye
added the
issue, also
raised in the
Council, of
DRC hosting
publicly-funded
peacekeepers while
sending its
own soldiers
to CAR. But,
Gaye said, it
is an
"opportunity,"
they will
"initially" be
included.
Gaye, ever
genial, also
answered a
Press question
about the
territorial
integrity of
CAR.
Tellingly, he
concluded by saying
that "our
boss, Mr.
Ladsous" wants
helicopters
flying on
September 15.
Beyond the
obvious joke
about drones,
it reflects
that Ladsous,
as boss, is responsible
once again for
failing to
implement or
explain the
supposed UN
Human Rights
Due Diligence
Policy.
What will NGOs
which have also
raised this
issue say? About
Ladsous's
tenure at UN
Peacekeeping,
about those
who put him
there? We'll
have more on
this.
Ladsous'
extraordinary
refusal to
answer Inner
City Press
questions, noted
as far away as
the UK's New
Statesman,
here, and
evidenced
on CAR as
well, here,
is intended to
make more
difficult
Press
reporting on
UN
Peacekeeping -
and it does.
Not
impossible,
however. This
reporting will
continue.
Inner
City Press
asked Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman Stephane
Dujarric about
the human
rights due
diligence
policy again
on August 19 -
and he said
that MINUSCA
chief Babacar
Gaye will be
expecting the
question from
the Press at 5
pm. Video here.