At UN, Netanyahu
Cites Review of UN Security
Officer Sullivan Who Praised His
Iran Bomb Cartoon
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Photos here
UNITED NATIONS,
March 8 – When Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
came to the UN on March 7 to
open an exhibition about
Jerusalem, he singled out a
particular UN Security
officer, Matthew Sullivan, and
brought him in front of the
microphone. He said that
Sullivan seeks him out after
each year's General Assembly
speech and reviews it.
Sullivan then called Netanyahu
a great orator, and said the
cartoon chart of Iran and the
bomb with a burning fuse was
his favorite. Somewhere UN
lawyers were flipping through
their apparently little used
copies of the UN Charter,
about the impartiality of UN
personnel. That the
exhibition, and statement,
were controversial is
exemplified by the event not
being listed in the day's
Media Alert as sent out. (An
addition, in red print, was
sent later.) The Under
Secretary General for Global
Communications, Alison Smale,
did not attend the exhibition
opening, when she goes to less
high profile ones. (She
refuses to explain this, or
any content neutral media
access rules the UN may or may
not have). Sullivan, Inner
City Press previously
reported, was on the board of
an organization holding
commercial events in UN
conference rooms, including
for GPS sneaker. When Inner
City Press asked about this,
Sullivan and the UN spokesman
said Inner City Press only
looked into it because
Sullivan had "thrown Inner
City Press out of the UN."
That did happen, for covering
UN corruption, and Haiti
cholera. And, as Inner City
Press was also first to
report, Sullivan was
previously beaten up by
Turkey's Erdogan's guards.
We'll have more on this. In
today's UN, Holocaust
remembrance is politicized,
and the Department of Public
Information which makes
decisions is not transparent,
does not answer Press
questions. On January 25 Inner
City Press went to cover a
Serbia-sponsored event about
the Jasenovac extermination
camp, complete with a long
speech by Serbian Foreign
Minister Ivica Dacic,
Periscope here.
While there was a disclaimer
sign, a representative of
DPI's Holocaust Outreach unit
was there. The event was
listed (as "invitation only")
on DPI's list of events in the
UN Visitors Lobby - but an
Israeli-mission sponsored
event set for January 31
wasn't listed. Questions to
DPI chief Alison Smale, on access
and complaints by
whistleblowers of malfeasance
in DPI, have gone
unanswered. Inner City Press
was required unlike others to
get a UN DPI / Smale "minder"
to even cover the Holocaust
photo op (Inner City Press'
Alamy photos here);
later, US Ambassador Nikki
Haley issued this, on (retaliatory)
Prince Zeid's earlier
statement: "This whole issue
is outside the bounds of the
High Commissioner for Human
Rights office’s mandate and is
a waste of time and resources.
While we note that they wisely
refrained from listing
individual companies, the fact
that the report was issued at
all is yet another reminder of
the Council’s anti-Israel
obsession. The more the Human
Rights Council does this, the
less effective it becomes as
an advocate against the
world’s human rights abusers.
The United States will
continue to aggressively push
back against the anti-Israel
bias, and advance badly needed
reforms of the Council."
Earlier on January 31, even
before 10 am, two
developments: a commemoration
on the third floor balcony of
the General Assembly Hall at
9:20 am (Periscope including
Leningrad and translation here), and
this, from Danny Danon: “On
the day that the UN is marking
International Holocaust
Remembrance Day, the UNHRC has
chosen to publicize this
information about the number
of companies operating in
Israel. This is a
shameful act which will serve
as a stain on the UNHRC
forever. We will
continue to act with our
allies and use all the means
at our disposal to stop the
publication of this
disgraceful blacklist.” We'll
have more on this - and on
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres' meeting with Darfur
genocide
indictee Omar al Bashir,
UNdisclosed until Inner City
Press asked about it at the
January 29 noon briefing, and
still covered up. At the UN's
January 26 noon briefing,
Inner City Press asked, UN video,
transcript here:
Inner City Press: I wanted to
ask you about an event that
took place in the delegates'
entrance last night, sponsored
by the Serbian Mission.
It was about a… a
concentration camp and it's
reported that Croatia wrote
directly to António Guterres
to try to get it cancelled,
given the presentation, and I
wanted to know, what can you
say about that, I guess?
There seems to be a lot of
controversy about it, and I
did notice… note some staff of
the… I guess, the Holocaust
Unit of DPI [Department of
Public Information]
present. What was the
relationship between the UN
and the event? And do
you have any comment on the…
the event? Deputy
Spokesman: I don't have
any comment on the
event. As you know,
different Member States can
use the building to hold
different events, and that is
their right. Inner City Press:
But maybe it's related,
because I guess I want to
understand this.
There's… there's a separate
story about an Israeli singer,
Benayoun, who had sought to…
yeah, who had sought to
come. There was a lot of
controversy. Somebody
wrote to António Guterres to
say, "Don't have him."
Alison Smale wrote back and
said, "He's not
invited." Turns out he
is coming, but the event that
he'll be at, which is
sponsored by the Israeli
Mission, is not on the UN's
schedule of Holocaust events,
it says. So what's the
relation… I guess what I'm
meaning is, even if these
events have nothing to do with
the UN, including the ones
that have been held elsewhere
in the GA Lobby, who decides
which… which events get listed
on the… on the list of UN
Holocaust week events and
which are not? Is that a
political decision? Who
decides that? Deputy
Spokesman: Well, the
United Nations itself,
including its Department of
Public Information, has a
programme of Holocaust events,
and those are listed as
such. Of course, Member
States are free to organize
their own events, but many of
them will not be on the UN
program. Those are
events organized by Member
States. Inner City Press: DPI
reviews the events in advance
and says this one will be
listed on our programme, and
this one won't? Deputy
Spokesman: DPI has an
office that deals with the
remembrance of the Holocaust
and they deal specifically
with that. Inner City
Press: So they decided
that the Serbian one was too
controversial? Or how
did it work? Deputy
Spokesman: No, the
Serbian one is organized by
Member States. Meetings
organized by Member States are
separate. You know,
there are meetings that are
part of the Holocaust
commemoration that's organized
by DPI, and then there are
other ones that are organized
by Member States. Inner City
Press: But there's a
sign down in the GA that lists
the week's events, and some of
them are sponsored by
missions. Do you see
what I mean? It's not
like there are UN events and
mission events. Deputy
Spokesman: Those would
have been agreed to
beforehand." So the Serbian
event was "agreed beforehand"
with the UN, since it is
listed, but the Israel event
is not? On January 29, US
Ambassador Nikki Haley is
taking the UN Security Council
members down to Washington,
including to the Holocaust
Museum. We'll have more on
this. When UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres goes
to the PyeongChang Olympics
next month, his real dream is
to get an invite to the north,
to Pyongyang, UN sources
exclusively tell Inner City
Press. Having failed on other
diplomatic initiatives like
Cyprus in his first year atop
the UN, Guterres is
"desperate" for some high
profile drama, the sources
say. The UN's acceptance of a
"Junior Professional Officer"
who is the son of a high
official of Kim John Un's
Workers Party -- whom Inner
City Press in October
exclusively identified as Kim
Joo Song, here
-- was meant to built the
connections to get Guterres
into the country. But isn't it
the US that Kim Jong Un wants
to negotiate with? We'll have
more on this. When the UN's
Committee on Relations with
the Host Country met on
January 17, the representative
of the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea read a
three-page statement
condemning the US for issuing
his Mission to the UN's
tax-exempt card in the name
"North Korea" and not
Democratic People's Republic
of Korea. He said, "We
presumed it would be only a
kind of technical mistake by
the U.S. side, and returned
the card back to the U.S.
mission, while requesting them
to correct that serious
mistake." The statement, which
Inner City Press has
exclusively obtained
immediately after the meeting
(photos here,
full PDF of letter via
Patreon, here)
continued that the U.S.
mission replied, "It seems to
be a glitch in our database,
we'll reach out to our office
in DC." That was on December
13, the statement said,
continuing: "on 14th December
there was an explanation from
the U.S. mission informing
that, quoted as 'Our DC office
has indicated that all country
/ mission names on OFM
credentials for Democratic
People's Republic of Korea
indicate North Korea which is
the conventional short
abbreviation. The short name
for the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea is North
Korea, so the tax card will
remain the same." The
statement concluded by
condemning "such reckless
political hostile policy" and
demanded an apology. Watch
this site. Throughout 2016 New
Zealand documentary maker
Gaylene Preston and her crew
staked out the UN Security
Council along with Inner City
Press, awaiting the results of
the straw polls to elected Ban
Ki-moon's sucessor as UN
Secretary General. Preston's
focus was Helen Clark, the
former New Zealand prime
minister then in her second
term as Administrator of the
UN Development Program.
Preston would ask Inner City
Press after each poll, What
about Helen Clark's chances?
Suffice it to say Clark never
caught fire as a candidate.
Inner City Press told Preston,
as did many other interviewees
in her documentary “My Year
with Helen,” that it might be
sexism. But it might be power
too - including Samantha
Power, the US Ambassador who
spoke publicly about gender
equality and then in secret
cast a ballot Discouraging
Helen Clark, and praised
Antonio Guterres for his
energy (yet to be seen).
Samantha Power's hypocrisy is
called out in Preston's film,
in which New Zealand's
Ambassador complains that
fully four members of the
Council claimed to be the
single “No Opinion” vote that
Clark received. There was a
private screening of My Year
With Helen on December 4 at
NYU's King Juan Carlos Center,
attended by a range of UN
staff, a New Zealand designer
of a website for the country's
proposal new flag, and Ban
Ki-moon's archivist, among
others. After the screening
there was a short Q&A
session. Inner City Press used
that to point out that
Guterres has yet to criticize
any of the Permanent Five
members of the Council who did
not block him as the US,
France and China blocked
Clark, with Russia casting a
“No Opinion.” And that
Guterres picked a male from
among France's three
candidates to head UN
Peacekeeping which they own,
and accepted males from the UK
and Russia for “their” top
positions. Then over New
Zealand wine the talk turned
to the new corruption at the
UN, which is extensive, and
the upcoming dubious Wall
Street fundraiser of the UN
Correspondents Association,
for which some in attendance
had been shaken down, as one
put it, for $1200. The
UN needed and needs to be
shaken up, and hasn't been.
But the film is good, and
should be screened not in the
UN Censorship Alliance but
directly in the UN Security
Council, on the roll-down
movie screen on which failed
envoys like Ismail Ould Cheikh
Ahmed are projected. “My Year
With Helen” is well worth
seeing.
***
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