Deadly
Burkina Faso Attack Comes 7
Weeks After UNSC's French
Resolution on G5 Sahel
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Series
UNITED NATIONS,
August 13 – Seven weeks after
France bragged of its
counter-terrorism resolution
passed in the the UN Security
Council, an attack on a
Turkish restaurant in
Ouagadougou in Burkina Faso
has reported killed 17 people.
Will the Security Council hold
a meeting about it on Monday,
August 14? Or just a wan press
statement? Watch this site.
France's stealth diplomacy of
briefing non-critical
reporters about its colonial
plans in Africa, then getting
others to parrot and defend
the plans, has continued. On
June 21, after a watered down
G5 Sahel resolution was
adopted by the Security
Council, Inner City Press
asked the Ambassador of Mali
if the fact that it is not
only Chapter 7 of the UN
Charter means the force could
not pursue terrorist beyond
the borders of the five
countries. He replies that the
joint forces could move around
inside the five; he said
funding by the European Union
is expected. Periscope video here. France passes on
the bill. On June 16 after
questioning Mali's Foreign
Minister, Inner City Press
asked the UN's French
spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: On Mali,
there's been this kind of
roundabout on this held G5
draft where the French
ambassador says repeatedly, it
will be up to the
Secretary-General, if and when
it's passed, to recommend
whether they'll… assessed
contributions should be used
for the… for the force.
Since this seems to be a
holdup in it… and I'm
wondering, has the
Secretary-General had any
communications with either the
five G5 countries or France
about recommending funding for
the force? And what's
his position on it?
Spokesman: We're very
much aware this is… the
resolution itself is being
debated in the Security
Council. We're not going
to get in the middle of
it. We will, as always,
follow the mandate that is
given to us once the Security
Council resolution has been
passed. The
Secretary-General has always
supported a coordinated
approach to this issue by the
G5 countries. He's said
so in the past. The
details of the resolution are
being hammered out by the
Member States. As I
said, we're not going to get
in the middle of the details
of the resolutions. Once
it's passed, we'll, obviously,
follow the mandate.
Inner City Press: Right.
But I mean, the… the… what the
Secretary-General will…
recommends is actually one of
the issues in the
negotiations. So, I'm
just wondering, is he part of
the negotiation?
Spokesman: The
negotiations are being done
within the Security Council.
Ah,
leadership and transparency -
not. On June 8, Inner City
Press publicly asked questions
on the topic, to which
Ambassador Francois Delattre
said that the Secretary
General Antonio Guterres must
make proposals. Video
here. The French
Mission cut the question, and
answer, from its transcript -
even as later derivative
stories noted US push back to
using UN general funds for
France's idea. Whom does
censorship serve? On June 12,
Delattre said this at the
stakeout: "On our draft
resolution with respect to the
G5 Sahel, we have continued
our consultations throughout
the weekend and we believe
that we are getting close to
the end of the negotiations.
We should be soon ready for a
vote. As you know, there has
been an official request from
the African Union and a
recommendation from the
Secretary General that the
Security Council authorize
this force. Here we are. This
is a top priority for us. This
is a top priority for the
region. We believe we need to
move swiftly. And on the fight
against terrorism, we cannot
imagine that the Council
doesn’t bring its full support
behind our draft....I cannot
speak yet for my American
colleagues and friends. Again,
we are getting closer." While
French Ambassador Francois
Delattre did not join his
colleagues from Sweden and UK
- to which Inner City Press on
the record asked about the DR
Congo, another file mismanaged
by France - in UN Television
stakeouts, he privately
briefed his friends about his
supposed caring for Mali,
Chad, Niger, Burkina Faso (of
Michel Kafando) and
Mauritania, as it cut off
relations with Qatar.
UNmentioned in the Reuters and
AFP stories was Cameroon,
where France has propped up
Paul Biya amid his 94 day
Internet cut, and Gabon, where
the Bongos have rules since
1967. This is the FrancAfrique
scam at the UN, by invitation
only. Delattre's spokesman
didn't even acknowledge
receipt of Inner City Press'
written questions on Cameroon
and North Korea. And on Gabon,
we will have more - and on
Delattre's new boss Macron's
insult to Comoros about
Mayotte, sure not to come up
among his hand-picked scribes.
After US President Donald
Trump in the Rose Garden
announced withdrawal from the
Paris Accord on climate
change, at the UN they opened
up the Press Briefing Room.
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres was, again, out of
town. But on June 2, in an
UNdisclosed location, France's
Ambassador to the UN Francois
Delattre held forth to select
scribes that "America is seen
as being on the wrong side of
history." Earlier on June 2,
Delattre had declined
to answer Inner City Press' on
the record question to him at
the UN Security Council
stakeout about Guterres
freezing any new listings on
the UN's Children and Armed
Conflict list of shame.
Was THAT on the right side of
history? Was partying
with Cameroon's Francophone
representative of 34-year
president Paul Biya, who cut
off the Internet on millions
in his country? (Delattre told
Inner City Press he was UNaware
of that). Likewise,
Delattre's spokesman refused
to answer Inner City Press' formal
question for France's
position on the UN World
Intellectual Property
Organization working on a
cyanide patent for North
Korea. The wrong side of
history, to friendly scribes,
in an undisclosed location?
Sounds like... another
country. On June 1 first they
said Guterres holdover
spokesman Stephane Dujarric
would read out a statement and
take no questions. (Inner City
Press tweeted it.) Then
Dujarric consented to take one
or two questions. Inner City
Press asked for his or
Guterres' response to Trump
quoting a UN official that
$100 billion is "peanuts," and
another that the real number
will be four times that.
Dujarric declined to answer,
referring Inner City Press to
the Green Climate Fund. Now on
June 2, Dujarric's office has
circulated this, from Guterres
in St Petersburg, Russia:
"[Climate change] is
undeniable. And it is one of
the biggest threats to our
present world and to the
future of our planet. On the
other hand, climate action is
unstoppable. I urge all the
governments around the world
to stay the course, to remain
committed to the
implementation of the Paris
Agreement to the benefit of
all of us. And in
relation to US society, I am
deeply convinced that
states, cities, the business
community, the civil
society, will also remain
engaged, will bet on the green
economy, because the green
economy is the good economy,
it is the economy of the
future. Because this is
not only the right thing to
do, it is the smart thing to
do, and those that will be
betting on the implementation
of the Paris Agreement, on the
green economy, will be the
ones that have a leading role
in the economy of the 21st
century." Back on June 1, US
Ambassador Nikki Haley put out
this statement: "As a
Governor, I always worked to
balance economic growth and
environmental
protection. We can, and
we must do both.
President Trump acted in
America’s best interest,
moving away from a flawed
agreement that placed too
heavy a burden on American
jobs, and opening the door to
a new agreement that reaches
the right balance.
America will remain a leader
in environmental
protection. But we will
not jeopardize our economy in
order to please other counties
that don’t come anywhere near
our environmental standards."
We'll have more on this. On
May 30 Guterres, who rarely
answers questions inside the
UN, went downtown to NYU and
had a Q&A session. The NYU
moderator said to keep them
limited to climate change, but
the final student question
brought up Trump. "We are
engaging with the US
administration," Guterres
said. But how? As Inner City
Press reported,
Guterres met with 11
Democratic Party Congress
members, versus a lone
Republican, Lindsey Graham.
Asked about Ghana and its
debut, Guterres' long answer
did not mention the IMF
program that Inner City Press
last Thursday asked
the IMF about. In the final
round, Guterres took a
question from Citigroup, and
quickly offered them praise.
Predatory lending financial
meltdown? Never heard of it,
apparently. Other UN
officials, including those
responsible for press
restrictions and censorship,
amplified this praise of
Citibank. This is today's UN.
On May 31, Inner City Press
asked Dujarric: Inner City
Press: in the Q&A, there
was a kind of a short question
by a guy… a person from
Citigroup and [António]
Guterres… the
Secretary-General said, that's
great. I wasn't clear… I
want to be… like, was he
praising the… just the idea
that corporations should
somehow become part of the… of
the… of… of the Paris
accord? What… are you…
apparently, you were
there. It seems like…
Spokesman: I was there
in person.
Question: Okay, so what
was he praising…?
Spokesman: I think what
he was referring to was the
fact that the business
community is taking… and the
example that this gentleman
gave and, you know, he had no
more detail than what the
gentleman told him, that the
private sector is taking an
active part in joining the
fight to combat and to
mitigate the impact of climate
change and that the business
sector, just like civil
society, just like
individuals, just like
Governments, all have a role
to play. This is not
something that is to be left
to States alone if we're going
to succeed. That's
exactly what he was
doing. He wasn't giving
a seal of approval to whatever
specific programme was
mentioned. This gentleman
said, we're doing this, and
the SG says, “That's
great.” We think the
business… we know the business
sector should be involved.
Then
Dujarric left unanswered, for
more than a day, another Inner
City Press question about the
UN serving (exploitative)
business. On Saturday Guterres
flew to Taormina, Italy to
give a G7 speech about Africa,
and in it he said
"disseminate new
technologies." But during
Cameroon's 94-day cut off of
the Internet this year,
Guterres said nothing. Sample
(rare) stakeout here.
And his spokesman Stephane
Dujarric, after again
promising Inner City Press an
answer at noon on May 30,
provided none by 5 o'clock. On
April 19 when Guterres did a
question and answer stakeout
with the African Union, Inner
City Press three times asked
about the Internet cut off,
while getting cut off by
Guterres' spokesman Stephane
Dujarric. The questions were
entirely audible, but Guterres
did not answer at all. Video
here. On May 23, his
Deputy Secretary General and
chief of staff were both at
Cameroun's Francophone
"National" Day, as Paul and
Chantal Biya were praised
along with song's about
(French) champagne. Video
here. This is today's
UN. On May Inner City Press
asked Guterres directly,
outside the UN Security
Council, why he hasn't
released his budget speech, or
reform plans, the day after
his spokesman Dujarric refused
to provide the speech to Inner
City Press when it asked.
Guterres paused then said it
should be public, seeming to
believe that Dujarric had, in
fact, released it. Video
here. But he had not and
has not. And on May 26
Dujarric's deputy Farhan Haq
again refused,
video here,
saying that the UN responds to
member states (not We the
Peoples). It was Dujarric who
evicted Inner City Press, and
has kept it restricted in its
movements in the UN for the
144 days so far of Guterres'
tenure. On May 25, Inner City
Press asked Dujarric again, video here
On May 26, Inner City Press
asked Dujarric's deputy Farhan
Haq, video here,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: Jeffrey
Feltman said that the proposal
for the new office has been, I
guess, approved by the
Advisory Committee on
Administrative and Budgetary
Questions. And since
yesterday in this room, the
idea was that's all
confidential, I wanted to just
know, first, is it true, did
Mr. Feltman say that? Is
it true that ACABQ has signed
off on it? And if it's
true that the UN can speak
about ACABQ, can we get a copy
of the Secretary-General's
speech to ACABQ given earlier
this week?
Deputy Spokesman:
No. The, the speech was
basically about the budget
proposals which are available
as a document, as Stéphane
pointed out earlier this week.
Inner
City Press:
I, I searched it, and it said
document not available on the
UN document site. I’d
like the speech.
Deputy Spokesman: You
know, you can deal with my
colleagues with the document,
but there's no remarks to
share for the public.
Regarding the particular
proposal, there's a proposal
that's going to go before the
General Assembly, and you'll
be able to see what happens
once they consider it.
Inner
City Press:
Right, but I guess it goes
back to [inaudible]
question. In most
Governments in the world, an
executive like the
Secretary-General, the
executive branch, will
announce publicly what its
proposals are. Just the
fact that to only announce it
after it's been approved by
the Member States doesn't seem
to make sense if you're
pronouncing reforms and if
there's public interest in how
the UN works. What's the
problem with releasing the
speech?
Deputy Spokesman: This
is not a Government.
This is an organization
bringing together
Governments. And what we
try to do is engage in
dialogue with governments in
order to flesh out these
proposals. Ultimately,
it's not finalized until the
various governments agree on
this. You simply can't
argue that something's not
transparent if it goes to 193
Governments. That's a
lot of people. It's not
a secret process by any
means. All of them are
involved in this discussion.
Inner City Press: But, I've
heard the Secretary-General
say he wants to open up the UN
to civil society and the
public and we the people, so I
guess I'm just wondering, is
there something in that ACABQ
speech that's so confidential
that it can't, as I took him
to understand on the steps,
just be released and made
public?
Deputy Spokesman:
No. It's not
confidential, but it's part of
a dialogue with Member
States. And we try to
engage the Member States
directly in that
dialogue.
So, public
be damned? UN May 25
transcript here:
Inner City Press: I just
now asked the
Secretary-General about what I
had asked you yesterday, about
whether his speech at ACABQ
can be released and whether
his reform proposals will be
released. He seemed to,
maybe I misunderstood and you
can look at the video, but he
seemed to think that it had
been released so I wanted to
ask you, can it be
released? Also… Go
ahead.
Spokesman: The budget
documents for the proposed
reform are public documents
and those are available and
that is basically what he
presented, the outline of
which he presented to the
ACABQ yesterday.
Inner
City Press: Two
questions: Is there a problem
with releasing, I'm sure there
was a written and about it was
off-the-cuff what he said to
ACABQ; and, secondly, I've
seen and published a document
called safety and security
pillar model A regarding three
ASGs, a mixture of political
affairs and peacebuilding, a
variety of delegations, and
maybe there wasn't time to
explain the whole thing,
basically the idea is if he is
proposing reforms, why aren't
these proposals public as they
are in most countries…?
Spokesman: Well, I
think, first of all, these
reforms, especially ones that
have to involve, that involve
budgetary issues, first have
to be approved by the Member
States and there is an ongoing
discussion on the peace and
security architecture, and
once things are formally
proposed, I'm sure they will
be shared. All the
budget documents I think are
under, I was told, A/72/6, and
those are all available in
detail.
Question: This chart, I
guess what I'm saying, having
seen the chart…
Spokesman: I haven't
seen the chart, so I…
Inner
City
Press: There
was a meeting yesterday, so
maybe you can ask them.
There seemed to have been a
meeting that went to 6:10
yesterday upstairs.
Everybody was in it, Mr.
Lacroix, Mr. Feltman, you
know, the whole team was
there, and my understanding is
this chart was discussed, so
I'm asking you…
Spokesman: What I'm
telling you is that whatever
meetings may have occurred
upstairs on reform between the
Secretary-General and his top
aides, those are informal
meetings and I have no
documents to share from those.
Inner
City
Press: Can
you just look at the tape of
what he said there?
Spokesman: I did look at
the tape. I did, it
feels consistent to me.
Inner City Press: Well…
Spokesman: Ali?
Inner City
Press saying "double talk" was
not transcribed by the (double
standards) UN. Later on May
25, an NGO representative who
corresponded
"secretly" with Dujarric to
get Inner City Press evicted
and restricted was allowed
onto the UN's second floor
without the UN minders imposed
on Inner City Press. This is
today's UN.
***
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