On
Gaza Ban
Quotes His Own
Statements,
First Q Softball
Set Aside
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, July
28 -- On Gaza
it was seven
hours after
the UN
Security
Council's
midnight
meeting when
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon issued
a statement,
stressing that
the Council
had supported
his call for a
ceasefire.
Then Ban did a
four-question
stakeout,
reciting his
statements and
saying that his
earlier call
for a 12 hour
ceasefire had
been
respected.
There are many
claims of causation.
In Jerusalem,
Ban was asked
-- but did not
answer --
about accepting
a Qatar-funded
private jet
to travel to
the region. It
seemed clear
Ban should be
asked what was
the UN's role
in the
"Framework for
a Sustainable
Ceasefire"
rejected by
the Israeli
cabinet, then
leaked
in different
versions by Israel
and Qatar, to
Haaretz and Al
Jazeera, see
Inner City
Press critique,
here.
But back
inside the UN,
Ban's deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq
controlled the
question, setting
aside the
first one for
the head of
the old UN
Correspondents
Association, a
pure softball
question that
invited Ban to
repeat what he
had just said.
At the end,
Haq gestured
to the UN
Television boom
microphone
operator, no
more
questions.
Seven hours earlier
after the
Council's midnight
meeting, an
UNCA executive
committee member
tried for both
stakeouts to
get the UNTV
boom mic
operator to
set aside
first
questions as
well. This is
how it is
working, or
not, at the UN.
The new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
will have more
on this.
Just
after midnight
on July 27-28,
the UN
Security
Council
convened to
adopted the
Presidential
Statement
below.
Afterward,
Inner City
Press asked
Jordan's
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
why no vote
had been
called the draft
resolution,
if there was
one or more
vetoes or abstaining
votes that
would block
it.
He said things
haven't reached
that stage;
rather it was
a matter of
seeing when
the members of
the Council
thought a
resolution
would be
useful to support
of ceasefire.
Some ask: so
is that the UN
Security Council's
only function?
Inner City Press
asked Israel's
Ron Prosor
about the different
drafts leaked
to Haaretz and
Al Jazeera
(which Inner
City Press noted,
here). Prosor
went wider
scope with his
answer. A
ceasefire did
not sound
closer.
Prosor was
also asked
about Ban
Ki-moon flying
around in a
Qatar-funded
private jet
- a question
on which Inner
City Press first
reported eight
days ago,
and on which
Ban himself
should answer.
Palestine's
Riyad Mansour
cited as a
precedent a
1994 Security
Council
resolution
providing
protecting in
Hebron, by
Norwegians in
white shirts,
he said. He
said he wished
the
Presidential
Statement had
called for
Israel to pull
out of Gaza,
and that he
wished for a
resolution. We
will continue
on this.
Inner City
Press immediately
inquired and
was informed
it was to
adopt a
Presidential
Statement; the
version below
was provided.
But why not a
resolution? Why
proceeding so
cautiously, compared
most recently
with the July
21 resolution
on MH17 in
Ukraine?
As to the
UNSC, here's
the PRST as
provided - and
adopted:
UNSC
Presidential
Statement
The
Security
Council
expresses
grave concern
regarding the
deterioration
in the
situation
as a result of
the crisis
related to
Gaza and the
loss of
civilian lives
and
casualties.
The Security
Council calls
for full
respect of
international
humanitarian
law, including
the protection
of civilian
population,
and reiterates
the need to
take
appropriate
steps to
ensure the
safety and
well-being of
civilians and
their
protection.
The Security
Council
expresses
strong support
for the call
by
international
partners and
the
Secretary-General
of the United
Nations for an
immediate and
unconditional
humanitarian
ceasefire,
allowing for
the delivery
of urgently
needed
assistance,
and they urged
all parties to
accept and
fully
implement the
humanitarian
ceasefire into
the Eid period
and beyond.
The Security
Council
commends the
efforts of the
Secretary-General
of the United
Nations and
the U.S.
Secretary of
State John
Kerry for
their efforts
in this
regard.
The Security
Council also
calls on
parties to
engage in
efforts to
achieve a
durable and
fully
respected
ceasefire,
based on the
Egyptian
initiative. In
this regard,
the Security
Council
welcomes the
efforts of
international
partners and
the convening
of the
international
meeting to
support the
ceasefire held
in Paris on
July 26, 2014
and urges all
concerned
regional and
international
parties to
vigorously
support
efforts to
consolidate an
agreement
between the
parties.
The Security
Council
emphasizes
that civilian
and
humanitarian
facilities,
including
those of the
UN, must be
respected and
protected, and
called on all
parties to act
consistently
with this
principle.
The Security
Council calls
for the full
implementation
of resolution
1860 (2009)
and stressed
the need for
immediate
provision of
humanitarian
assistance to
the
Palestinian
civilian
population in
the Gaza
Strip,
including
through urgent
additional
contribution
to UNRWA. The
Security
Council
recognizes and
commends the
vital role
played by the
Agency, along
with other
United Nations
agencies and
humanitarian
organizations,
in addressing
the critical
humanitarian
needs in Gaza.
The Security
Council urges
the parties
and the
international
community to
achieve a
comprehensive
peace based on
the vision of
a region where
two democratic
states, Israel
and Palestine,
live side by
side in peace
with secure
and recognized
borders as
envisioned
in Security
Council
resolution
1850 (2008).
Earlier, with
even the
“humanitarian
pause” over in
Gaza, the
draft
"framework"
agreement
rejected by
the Israeli
cabinet on
July 25 was
leaked from
both sides.
But the
versions
leaked by each
side were
different.
On Al
Jazeera a one-page
document
was waved
around, which
had Qatar in
the first
paragraph as
one of the
signatories
making
commitments,
which provided
for the
opening of
“border and
non-border”
crossings and
specified
fishing rights
up to 12
nautical
miles, and a
$47 million
commitment by
the US.
In the
“5
pm
Confidential
Draft”
published by
Ha'aretz,
Qatar is the
last paragraph
(without
Egypt),
fishing rights
and the $47
million from
the US are not
specified, nor
are
“non-border”
crossing being
opened.
At
least, the two
sides leaked
different
stages or
versions of
the draft. Or
is there more
to this, in
the spin war
that this
stage of the
Gaza war has
become?
(The drafts
are different;
Al Jazeera is
saying
Ha'aretz stole
its scoop.
There may be
more to this.)
Meanwhile,
silence
at the UN with
the draft
Security
Council
resolution of
Jordan and the
Arab League
not scheduled
for a vote,
and canned
statements
from Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon, who
after taking a
Qatar-funded
private jet
from New York
to Doha
refused
through his
spokespeople
to answer
Inner City
Press' follow-up
questions on
who paid for
the rest of
his travel.
Watch this
site.
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