New
UN Spox Has
Two Years of
Censorship
Under His
Belt, Qs
UNanswered
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
February 24 --
In two weeks,
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon is
slated to have
a new
spokesperson,
Stephane
Dujarric. Two
years ago
Dujarric was
re-introduced
to UN
journalist as
the chief of
the News &
Media
Division, in a
reception in
what the UN
called
"UNCA Square."
And then the
censorship
attempts
began.
A
journalist for
Iranian TV,
found to have
a rubber gun
which was a
prop in an
independent
film he was
working on, had his UN
accreditation
revoked,
permanently.
Dujarric was
in charge of
Media
Accreditation,
and Inner City
Press asked
him for a
justification
of
this "one
strike and
you're out
policy." No
answer was
ever
provided by
Dujarric.
Also
in his Media
Accreditation
role, Dujarric
chastised
Inner City
Press
for daring to
go stand
outside and
try to cover a
meeting of
Ban's
Senior
Advisory Group
on
Peacekeeping
Operations,
which included
controversial
Sri Lankan
military
figure
Shavendra
Silva. After
the
Sri Lankan
government
directed a
complaint
letter to the
aforementioned
UNCA, Inner
City Press was
told
it could not
cover the
meetings.
Inner
City Press,
then on the
board of UNCA,
was not
notified when
the
organization's
then president
agreed to
screen a Sri
Lankan
government
film denying
war crimes.
After it
published an
article
noting that
the UNCA
president had
in the past
rented one of
his
apartments to
Palitha
Kohona, Sri
Lanka's
Permanent
Representative
to
the UN,
demands were
made that
Inner City
Press remove
the article
from the
Internet.
UNCA
took to
sending copies
of
correspondence
to Dujarric,
about articles
Inner City
Press had
written about
officials and
diplomats of
Dujarric's
native France.
Finally, UNCA
first vice
president
Louis
Charbonneau of
Reuters sent a
complaint
against Inner
City Press to
Dujarric,
calling it
"for the
record."
More
recently,
Charbonneau
has gotten one
of his
complaints to
Dujarric
banned
from Google's
Search, using
a filing
under the
Digital
Millennium
Copyright Act
-- straight up
censorship.
What does
Dujarric say?
In
fact, Dujarric
solicited
complaints
against Inner
City Press
from
other big-media
UNCA
board
members,
through a
private,
including
through non-UN
email
address. Freedom
of Information
Act responses
show that UNCA
board
members met
with "the UN"
to request
that Inner
City Press
be thrown out.
Once Inner
City Press
published some
of these,
Dujarric on
June 29, 2012
asked to meet
Inner City
Press.
Dujarric
told
Inner City
Press not to
refer to Ban
Ki-moon as
"Wan
Ki-moon" and
not to refer
to Herve
Ladsous,
the fourth
Frenchman
in a row atop
UN
Peacekeeping,
as The Drone
despite
Ladsous
proposing
the UN's first
use of drones
and refusing
to answer
Press
questions
about it.
This and a
specious
criticism for
having signed
Nobel Peace
Prize Winner
Tawakul Karman
of Yemen into
the UN,
where she
dared
speak on the
UN microphone
after a
Security
Council
meeting on
Yemen,
were linked by
Dujarric to
re-accreditation
he controlled.
Criticism of
stories,
coverage and
even tweets is
fine -- but
when done by
an official in
charge of
accreditation,
and even tied
to
accreditation,
we call it
what it is:
censorship.
Disgusted,
Inner
City Press and
another long
time
correspondent
from Brazil
founded the Free UN Coalition for Access as an
alternative to
the
insider UNCA,
which did not
for example
offer any
defense to the
cameraman
thrown out for
the rubber
gun. (Reuters'
Charbonneau,
in
fact, wrote a
story playing
up the Iranian
angle.)
But
Dujarric
became the
interlocutor
for FUNCA. He
said only UNCA
was
needed. After
convening a
meeting
between FUNCA
and UNCA, at
which
Inner City
Press openly
said "this is
on the record"
and
UNCA president
Pamela Falk of
CBS said,
"He's going to
write
about this,"
Dujarric sent
Inner City
Press a letter
which claimed
the meeting
was off the
record and
said FUNCA was
not a DPI
interlocutor
for reform.
There
have been no
reforms since,
quite the
opposite.
Dujarric, who
earlier
refused a New
York Civil
Liberties
Union request
that the UN
provide
due process to
journalists,
continued the
Kafka-esque
atmosphere in
March 2013
when Reuters
and Agence
France-Presse
filed stealth
complaints
leading
with how Inner
City Press
asked a
question to
Herve
Ladsous.
When
Dujarric's
Accreditation
Unit led a
raid on Inner
City Press'
office, photos
from which
quickly
appeared on
BuzzFeed,
Dujarric
denied any
role in giving
out the
photos. But
the published
photos are
identical to
the ones his
unit took that
day.
Since the
letter with
the false "off
the record"
claim, the
raid and
photos and
attempt to
censor tweets,
there has been
very little
contact
(though there
was an attempt
to essentially
ban FUNCA,
another limitation
on freedom of
association,
speech and
press). FUNCA
has continued,
working with
UN-focused
journalists
not only in
New
York but as
far afield as
Somaliland and
Colombia.