On
Gaza,
Europeans
Speak Without
Taking
Questions,
Palestine
Cites Nakba
Concert
By Matthew
Russell Lee, 14/5
Video, Scope
UNITED NATIONS,
May 15 – On
Gaza, Inner
City Press on
May 14 asked
the
Ambassadors to
the UN of
Palestine and
Kuwait if the
emergency UN
Security
Council
meeting they
were requested
would occur on
May 14, or the
next day, May
15. Video here. They replied it would be
on the morning
of May 15
(Alamy photos
here),
and that a
draft Security
Council Press
Statement had
been
distributed,
with a silence
procedure
until 6 pm. On
that, silence
was broken by
the US. On
May 15,
Kuwait said
it will
circulate a draft
resolution
on protection
of civilians,
modeled after
a Norwegian
one. After the
Security
Council's open
meeting, two
stakeouts took
place: Palestine,
Kuwait, Saudi
Arabia and a
group including
Suden and
Morocco, among
others, and
then the present
and future Europeans
on the
Council.
Photos here.
The first session
ended with Palestine's
Mansour inviting
all present to
the evening's
Nakba concert
in the UN
General
Assembly Hall. France's
Ambassador
Francois
Delattre spoke
last then
ushered the
group away
from the
microphone
without taking
questions.
Inner City
Press asked,
as it had at
the UN noon
briefing, why
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres doesn't
just set
up an
investigation,
before or
after his May
18 visit with
US President
Trump. (Delattre's
fellow
French ambassador in
Burundi
Laurent
Delahousse, meanwhile,
replied
to news of
corpses in the
river with one
word:
"Hippos?")
Inner City Press
was delayed since
it is required
by the UN of
Antonio
Guterres and
his Global
Communicator
Alison Smale to
only enter,
unlike
other UN correspondents
many of whom
rarely come
in, rarely ask
question and publish
little, through
the UN's
Tourists
Entrance,
which was
jammed and mis-managed
on May 15. Periscope
video -
required to be
turned
off during the
mis-management
- here.
We'll have
more on this.
Inner City
Press asked,
if as expected
the US breaks
silence, that
they return to
the Council
stakeout. Kuwait,
Sweden,
France,
Bolivia,
Netherlands,
Peru,
Kazakhstan,
Equatorial
Guinea, Cote
d'Ivoire and
China have
requested from
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres,
traveling in
Austria before
meeting US
President
Donald Trump
on May 17,
that Guterres
prepare and
submit a
report on
implementation
of UNSC
Resolution
2334 of
December 2016,
on which the
US (previous
administration)
abstained.
Also,
"Kuwait has
requested an
open meeting
of the
Security
Council under
the agenda
item: The
Situation in
the Middle
East,
including the
Palestinian
question, in
light of the
developments
on the ground
and the
killing of
innocent
civilians,
with reports
putting the
number of
Palestinians
killed at over
50.
Kuwait has
requested for
the meeting to
be convened
tomorrow
morning,
Tuesday May
15." Also
on Gaza, UN
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres on
April 5 said
in a
statement, "I
reiterate my
call on all
concerned to
refrain from
any act that
could lead to
further
violence or
place
civilians in
harm's way,
especially
children."
Then he
prepared to
leave for six
days in China,
just as the
previous
Friday he was
an another
UNannounced
trip to his
home in
Lisbon. Now he
is in Vienna.
On April 20, after
Palestine's
Riyad Mansour,
flanked by the
Ambassadors of
Tunisia,
Kuwait and of
the Arab
League,
conducted his
Friday
stakeout,
Inner City
Press asked if
there has been
any progress
on requesting
an inquiry by
the UN Human
Rights
Council, and
if Mansour had
any comment on
Mike Pompeo's
upcoming trip
to Jerusalem.
Periscope video
here.
Mansour
said he was
not the right
person to ask
about Pence,
and that some
process is
underway in
Geneva. We'll
see. On
April 13,
after
Palestine's
Riyad Mansour,
flanked by the
Ambassadors of
Kuwait and of
the Arab
League,
responded to
Inner City
Press'
question about
why Guterres
hadn't
followed his
own advice and
set up an
inquiry, Inner
City Press put
the question
to Guterres
himself. He
dismissed it
with a wave of
his hand. Vine
video here.
On April 20,
after
Guterres'
spokesman
refused to
answer Inner
City Press on
who Guterres
was taking
with him to
the UN
Security
Council
retreat in
Sweden (other
than Izumi
Nakamitsu,
which Inner
City Press on
its own
reported, on
Syria and
perhaps North
Korea), Inner
City Press
asked Mansour
if he knew if
Guterres took
envoy Mladenov
to Sweden.
Mansour
replied that
Mladenov would
brief the open
Council
meeting on
April 26 - and
that Palestine
is now going
forward in the
UN Human
Rights Council
in Geneva.
We'll have
more on this.
Inner City
Press Photos
on Alamy. On
Sunday, April
8, with
Guterres
issuing
statements praising
China but
little to nothing on
any other topic, the
International
Criminal Court
Prosecutor
Fatou Bensouda
issued this:
"It is with
grave concern
that I note
the violence
and
deteriorating
situation in
the Gaza Strip
in the context
of recent mass
demonstrations.
Since 30 March
2018, at least
27
Palestinians
have been
reportedly
killed by the
Israeli
Defence
Forces, with
over a
thousand more
injured, many,
as a result of
shootings
using live
ammunition and
rubber-bullets.
Violence
against
civilians - in
a situation
such as the
one prevailing
in Gaza –
could
constitute
crimes under
the Rome
Statute of the
International
Criminal Court
(“ICC” or “the
Court”), as
could the use
of civilian
presence for
the purpose of
shielding
military
activities. I
remind all
parties that
the situation
in Palestine
is under
preliminary
examination by
my Office.
While a
preliminary
examination is
not an
investigation,
any new
alleged crime
committed in
the context of
the situation
in Palestine
may be
subjected to
my Office’s
scrutiny. This
applies to the
events of the
past weeks and
to any future
incident. I
am aware that
the
demonstrations
in the Gaza
Strip are
planned to
continue
further. My
Office will
continue to
closely watch
the situation
and will
record any
instance of
incitement or
resort to
unlawful
force. I urge
all those
concerned to
refrain from
further
escalating
this tragic
situation. Any
person who
incites or
engages in
acts of
violence
including by
ordering,
requesting,
encouraging or
contributing
in any other
manner to the
commission of
crimes within
ICC's
jurisdiction
is liable to
prosecution
before the
Court, with
full respect
for the
principle of
complementarity.
The resort to
violence must
stop." At
6 pm on April
6 Mansour
returned with
Tunisia's
Ambassador and
said the US
had broken
silence and
blocked the
statement. 12
Minute Video here.
***
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