On UN
Eviction of
News Agency of
Nigeria, NAN
Says UN Never
Told It
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, June
9 -- The UN,
which since
its founding
has assigned
office space
to media to
cover it,
threw out the
News Agency of
Nigeria. Its
official say
they were
never
contacted, see
below. Its
name was
simply cut off
the door to
what had been
its office
space. Photo
here, by
FUNCA member
Luiz
Rampelotto.
The old UN
Correspondents
Association
did nothing
about it, just
as they have "dragged
their feet"
when French
Ambassador
Gerard Araud
told one of
their members,
"You are not a
journalist,
you are an
agent," here.
The new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
opposed and
has continued
to oppose and
look into
these move,
particularly
since other privileged
media have
been allowed
to leave their
assigned
offices empty
and unused for
long periods
- the
rationale used
by the UN.
Inner City
Press on
behalf of
FUNCA asked UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
it at the June
4 noon
briefing, video here, and embedded below.
FUNCA also put
questions to
the UN in
writing. The
UN responded
to FUNCA that
"if a new
correspondent
is accredited
to the UN, the
Agency will
have a space
in the
building."
That
correspondent,
FUNCA is
informed, has
already been
named. But the
News Agency of
Nigeria's
Managing
Director says
"nobody from
the UN Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit (MALU)
had
communicated
to the news
agency on the
shutdown of
the office
space
allocated to
NAN."
FUNCA has put
this question
to MALU and
above and will
publish the answer.
A flier
FUNCA posted
was torn down,
but the UN
says it didn't
remove it. So
who did? The UN's
Censorship
Alliance,
whose president
puff-tweeted
an event in
the UN on June
9 which banned
the press?
UNCA said
nothing about
NAN's
eviction,
instead concerned
with demanding
first
questions
they do not
report upon,
and
celebrating
the large
space the UN
gives them as
actual media
are thrown
out.
That space
will be
subject to a
scan
re-opening which
the UN is
deputizing.
If the reason
for throwing
out the News
Agency of
Nigeria is
lack of space,
there is a
growing call
that the large
space
mis-allocated
to UNCA, which
does not
represent all
correspondents
resident at
the UN, far
front it,
should be subdivided
and given to
real journalists
to actually
use for work.
From the June
4 UN's
transcript:
Inner
City Press: it
seems that in
the Central
African
Republic,
where there is
a UN Mission,
there has been
a ban on SMS
or text
messages
directed at
seeming a
non-violent
organization
of a protest,
so does the UN
have any
comment or
reaction to
that? And
also, this is
in-house, but
I wanted to
ask if you can
explain the
loss by the
news agency of
Nigeria of its
office and
workspace at
the UN given
that it’s a
major country,
they’re on the
Security
Council. Was
there sort of
notice given?
What’s the
process?
What’s the
reasoning?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I don’t know.
The process
for offices
and
accreditation
is clear, it’s
on the
website. And
you know, you
can ask MALU
[Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit]. I’m
happy to ask
for you.
Inner
City Press: I
know there’s
been previous
request of
sort of due
process. Do
you believe
that that’s
been provided
in this case?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I don’t know
the specifics
of this case
but I have
full trust in
MALU that due
process is
followed.
Inner
City Press:
[UN says
“inaudible,”
but what was
asked was
“double
standards?”]
Spokesman
Dujarric:
What is your
question
Matthew?
Inner
City Press:
Okay, I guess
my question is
that it seems
that without
--
Spokesman
Dujarric:
No, I think
I’ve answered
the Nigeria
question. If
you have
another one,
I’m happy to…
Inner
City Press:
The CAR
question. Do
you have any
comment on…
Spokesman
Dujarric:
No, I’ll check
with the
Mission. I’ll
see if they
have said
anything on
this.
Nine
hours later,
despite
Dujarric's
statement that
he was happy
to "ask MALU"
-- which he
previously
supervised --
no explanation
had received.
So FUNCA
submitted the
question to
MALU / DPI -
and the
response above
was received.
Since
the old UN
Correspondents
Association
board, rather
than defend
media, have
shown a
willingness to
try to get
other media
thrown out,
FUNCA soon
after its
founding asked
the UN to at
least be more
transparent in
its decisions
that impact
media,
including not
only
accreditation
but loss of
work space.
The New
York Civil
Liberties
Union asked
the UN to
publicly
implement due
process rights
for the
journalists
which cover it
-- but the UN
has yet to do
so.
FUNCA
continues to
push for this,
and for
example for
the UN to
belatedly take
some action on
French
Ambassador Gerard
Araud, in the
middle of a UN
press
conference in
the UN Press
Briefing Room,
telling a
correspondent,
“You are not a
journalist,
you are an
agent.”
But the UN
would not
convey, even
in its
typically wan
fashion, the
stated
position that
correspondents
should be
treated with
respect to
Araud or the
French Mission
to the UN. And
UNCA, the UN's
Censorship
Alliance,
"dragged its
feet,"
according to
the
correspondent
to whom Araud
said, "You are
not a
journalist,
you are an
agent."
Nigeria
is
a member of
the Security
Council; its
Permanent
Representative
Joy
Ogwu
held ten
question and
answer
stakeouts during
her presidency
of the
Security
Council in
April. (South
Korea held
only three
stakeouts
during its May
presidency,
by contrast.)
So why is the
News Agency of
Nigeria having
its UN work
space taken
away?
News
Agency of
Nigeria cut
off UN office
sign, photo by
FUNCA's Luiz
Rampelotto of
Europa
Newswire
Here
is a flier the
Free
UN Coalition
for Access
put
out, soon
after its
founding,
about double
standards
(it referred
to a previous
configuration
of offices,
over the UN's
Dag
Hammarskjold
Library)
FUNCA
Asks a
Question:
Double
Standards
Much?
The
New York Times
has an office
inside of UN
Headquarters.
But its door
has been
closed,
without
opening, for
months. A
thick pile of
fliers, months
old, clogs the
doorway.
There’s dust
everywhere.
But
the UN is
doing nothing,
because it
won’t apply
its rules
equally to
all.
In
fact,
reporters who
want to cover
the UN are
being denied
access to UN
Headquarters –
on the grounds
that there’s
just not
enough space
to go around.
And Big Media
gets handed
big offices
that some of
them never
even use.
The
UN’s media
guidelines say
that reporters
need to come
in the UNHQ
three times a
week in order
to keep their
office space.
It’s a
catch-22: if
you don’t have
an office, you
also can’t get
the right kind
of press pass
that lets you
move freely in
and out of
Headquarters.
And
plenty of
small
newspapers
have lost
their desks
because they
couldn’t keep
up with the
attendance
requirement.
But of course,
these
standards
aren’t applied
across the
board: the New
York Times
hasn’t even
opened the
door to their
space since
October.
What
kinds of
conditions are
these? Is it
any wonder
that we see
less and less
reporting on
international
affairs, or
that
newspapers
increasingly
rely on wire
services for
their news?
What other
options are
open to small
media?
UN
correspondents
have launched
the Free
United Nations
Coalition for
Access, a
group
dedicated to
guaranteeing
equal access
for all
reporters
looking to
cover the UN.
We
formed FUNCA
after a small
group of big
media – the UN
reporters from
Reuters,
AFP,
and Voice
of America
— banded
together to
try and
dis-accredit
Inner City
Press, an
independent
news site that
produces
tough,
watchdog
reporting on
the UN.
Then
the head of
the UN’s
Peacekeeping
Department,
Herve Ladsous,
announced that
he was no
longer taking
questions
from Inner
City Press – a
policy which
he has
bizarrely,
blithely kept
going for
months. This
means he
hasn’t had to
answer
questions
about, say,
the UN’s role
in allowing
rapes in the
Congo, or
working with
the rapists,
or in bringing
cholera to
Haiti. Far
from putting
pressure on
him, most of
the UN press
corps has sat
by silently
and let Mr.
Ladsous turn a
deaf ear to
all the tough
questions.
FUNCA
wants to fill
the press
freedom
vacuum. Right
now, we’re
advocating
along other
things for the
rights of
freelancers
who have been
denied UN
credentials
(even as other
freelancers
have
credentials
and big
offices).
We’re pushing
more UN
officials to
give on the
record
briefings to
the press
corps. And we
now work with
journalists
around the
world, from
Somaliland to
Colombia to
Burundi - and
Nigeria.
Note
that despite a
commitment
that while
UNCA maintains
a glassed in
bulletin board
in front of
the large
office the UN
gives it --
while News
Agency of
Nigeria is
thrown out --
FUNCA can post
fliers on a
separate
board, not
glassed in,
recently these
have been torn
down,
including one
about the need
for the UN to
take action
after French
Ambassador
Araud told a
correspondent,
“You are not a
journalist,
your are an
agent.”
We are
inquiring into
these flier
tear-down,
just another
form of
censorship at
the UN.
Watch this
site.
* * *
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