As
UN's Ban
Starts Tour,
OIC Says Gaza's
the Key Stop
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
July 19, more
here -- On
the day UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon is to
"travel to the
region" of
Israel and
Palestine, the
following call
issued from
Jeddah:
"The
Secretary
General of the
Organization
of Islamic
Cooperation
(OIC), Iyad
Ameen Madani,
asked the
Secretary
General of the
United
Nations, Ban
Ki-moon to
visit the Gaza
Strip during
his current
tour of the
region in
order to
observe first
hand the
severe damage
to innocent
human lives,
the
destructions
of homes and
infrastructure
caused by the
unrelenting
Israeli raids
on Gaza, that
have also
claimed the
lives of
hundreds of
mostly
defenseless
Palestinian
elderly and
children."
So will Ban go
to Gaza?
On July 18 after
the Gaza
meeting of the
UN Security Council,
the Press was
sent "the
revised draft
resolution
that will be
put before the
Members of the
Security
Council by the
Hashemite
Kingdom of
Jordan, in its
capacity as
the Arab
representative
on the
Security
Council."
Inner City
Press put
the document
online, here,
explicitly comparing
it to Resolution
1860 (2009),
which passed
because the US
abstained but
did not veto,
as it would
later do on
settlements.
We will stay
on this.
Earlier on
July 18 In his
briefing to
the Security
Council, Under
Secretary
General
Jeffrey
Feltman droned
on for five
pages until he
said Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon “will
leave for the
region
tomorrow, to
express
solidarity
with Israelis
and
Palestinians
and to help
them, in
coordination
with regional
and
international
actors, end
the violence
and find a way
forward.”
At that
very moment,
Ban was
upstairs
meeting with
an Italian
official.
Downstairs,
former US
official
Feltman said
that the the
UN Relief and
Works Agency,
UNRWA, “is
stretched to
the limit,
raising fears
that further
civilians
warned of IDF
operations
could not be
accommodated.”
Feltman left
until the end
of his speech
to the Council
Ban's plan to
travel to the
region,
starting on
Saturday.
But will Ban
be going to
Gaza?
Meanwhile the
French
government has
banned a
demonstration
planned for
July 19 about
the situation
of
Palestinians
in Gaza.
Inner City
Press asked UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq for
the UN's
position. Haq
said "our
general point
of view on
this is that
people have a
right to
peaceful
protest....
We'd have to
see how this
proceeds,
you're talking
about
something to
happen in the
future."
But the ban is
already in
place.
While the French
government
predicts that
Saturday's
demonstration
would be
violent,
that's akin to
prior
restraint or
profiling.
There are have
peaceful
protests about
Palestine in
France, for
example on
July 16.
But from Niger
--
appropriately
-- Francois
Hollande said
“we cannot
allow the
conflict to be
imported into
France."
Is
Ban's UN
criticizing
France? Is a
man biting a chien?
Whether a
formal
statement
comes out may
be the test.
So how is
a statement of
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon
produced? The
question was
raised by
those, both in
the real /
outside world
and even
inside the UN
who were
surprised by
this Ban
statement of
July 13:
“The
Secretary-General,
abhorring the
images of
Israeli
families
hovering in
shelters in
fear for their
children's
safety,
repeats his
condemnation
of Palestinian
rockets fired
from Gaza and
demands an
immediate
cessation of
these indecent
attacks. The
Secretary-General
is also deeply
worried about
the impact on
Palestinian
families of
Israeli
military
action.”
Several UN
officials
expressed
surprise or
even
"disgust... at
putting Israel
first despite
no deaths
versus 180 in
Palestine,
abhorring the
first but only
'deeply
worried' about
Gazans."
And so based
on complaints
and reporting,
Inner City
Press can say
that such
statements are
said to
originate with
a desk officer
in UN
Department of
Political
Affairs, run
by former US
diplomat
Jeffrey
Feltman.
Then
they are
reviewed, on
the Middle
East, by
Antonella
Caruso, then
Feltman, then
in Ban's
office one
Andrew
Gilmour.
That's how
this statement
was issued,
Inner City
Press is
informed.
On July 12 at
noon the UN
Security
Council issued
a press
statement on
Gaza, after
several rounds
of back and
forth. After
that, nothing
stopped --
nothing at
all.
Just past noon
in New York
Inner City
Press asked
the State of
Palestine's
Observer Riyad
Mansour of the
status of the
(stronger)
draft
resolution,
and if he
expects US
Secretary of
State John
Kerry to
mediate or
facilitate.
Mansour said
if Israel does
not stop,
other steps
will be taken
including in
the Security
Council.
Hours
later, the Israel
Defense Force
itself
confirmed to Ha'aretz
and others that
"Israel Navy's
Shayetet 13
(Flotilla 13)
commando unit
raided a
target in the
Gaza Strip."
Now what?
A Gulf
media demanded
an explanation
of the three
hour delay,
then asked
another
question to
Mansour and
the Saudi
Ambassador
beside him.
Tellingly,
hours later
that same
Gulf media posted
online a
story about
the UN
Security
Council press
statement quoting
Reuters,
not present
at the stakeout,
about the statement.
Meanwhile,
Reuters
claimed a (compensated)
"exclusive"
about Jordan
and the US on
Syria --
without even
mentioning the
two countries'
negotiations
about the
Gaza output(s)
of the
UN Security
Council.
On July 11
after Inner
City Press specified
the timing
-- and the
stated theory
that the US
gave in after
an emergency
session of the
Arab Group at
the UN moved
toward a
resolution
that the US
would have to
veto --
something
changed.
Informed
sources told
Inner City
Press that
while the US,
or
"Washington,"
initially said
they would
accept no
Security
Council action
at this point,
once an
emergency
meeting of the
Arab Group
moved for a
draft
resolution,
the US changed
tack.
"The US
doesn't want
to have to
veto, so they
can continue
to point the
finger at
Russia and
China on
Syria," as one
source put
it. So
the US agreed
- or was said
to agree -- to
a press
statement
calling for a
ceasefire.
The
source went on
"If Israel
disregards it
and continues,
what will the
Council do?"
What, indeed.
.
Inside
the Security
Council on
July 10,
Israel's Ron
Prosor told
BanKi-moon
that while he
had given his
speech, five
rockets had
been fired at
Israel (Prosor
played a
rocket warning
siren on his
phone, to make
his point.) At
the stakeout,
on-camera,
Prosor raised
the number of
rockets to
six.
While
Palestine's
Riyad Mansour
spoke on
camera, the
stakeout was
nearly full
with
journalists.
But when
Prosor spoke
there were far
fewer -- one
of whom told
Inner City
Press, “This
is a question
for FUNCA,”
the Free
UN Coalition
for Access.
Again Prosor
played the
rocket siren
warning, and
used the line
“From Abuja to
Falluja.”
Inner
City Press
asked Prosor
about those
who say Hamas
is not
formally part
of the unity
government; he
replied,
“Hamas is
Hamas.”
On
Palestine
joining or
complaining to
the
International
Criminal
Court, Inner
City Press' question
which Ban
Ki-moon dodged
on July 9,
Prosor did not
answer. Yet.
Watch
this site.
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