On
Gaza, UN Won't
Tell ICP If a
Ban Board of
Inquiry,
Lobbied in
2009
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 6, more
here -- In
the UN General
Assembly
meeting about
Gaza on August
6, UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon said
"attacks
against UN
premises,
along with
other
suspected
breaches of
international
law, must be
swiftly
investigated."
But
by whom? At
the August 6
UN noon
briefing,
Inner City
Press asked
Ban's deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq if
Ban would at
least set up a
Board of
Inquiry as was
done in 2009.
(Inner City
Press first
published the
cover-letter,
here.)
Haq wouldn't
say if a Board
of Inquiry
would be set
up; he called
the decision
an internal
one. Video
here and
embedded
below. But
Wikileaks
released documents
showing that
Ban allowed
himself to be
lobbied about
the 2009 Board
of Inquiry
report by Ian
Martin,
including on
what should go
in "his" cover
letter. See
here. And
this time?
Update:
UN staff have
written to
Ban, the GA
President and
this month's
Security
Council
president,
Mark Lyall
Grant of the
UK, asking for
accountability.
The letter is here.
We hope to
have more on
this.
In the August
6 UNGA meeting
on Gaza, the
UN's
coordinator on
the Middle
East Peace
Process Robert
Serry this
process “may
also need
action by the
Membership,
including the
Security
Council, at
the
appropriate
time.”
As the meeting
began, a
Permanent
Representative
who has
previously
complained of
General
Assembly
inaction on
Gaza now noted
that no
outcome was
even proposed
to the GA
meeting, "just
talk."
An hour before
the belated
General
Assembly
meeting began,
a closed-door
consultation
was called on
the
Jordan-drafted
proposed
Security
Council
resolution, at
the level
(mostly) of
Permanent
Representative.
The day before
on August 5 it
was said that
this draft is
already "in
blue" --
strange, if it
is still being
negotiated.
But in front
of the General
Assembly on
August 6, an
African
diplomat told
Inner City
Press that the
resolution was
put "in blue"
precisely in
order to block
any General
Assembly
action. When
the Security
Council is
seized of a
matter, he
said, the
General
Assembly
cannot act.
So what is
going on in
this ping-pong
between UN
Security
Council and UN
General
Assembly,
while UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon has
still not
corrected his
August 1
statement that
an Israeli
Defense Forces
solider was
"captive" of
Hamas, now
that the IDF
said he was
killed in
action? Watch
this site.
At 10
pm on August 4
in New York,
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon issued
a statement on
the Gaza
ceasefire set
to begin three
hours later.
But he had yet
to correct his
August 1
statement on
the previous
ceasefire.
Here is the
new statement:
"The
Secretary-General
welcomes the
efforts
leading to a
new ceasefire
as announced
today.
He commends
the parties
for committing
to this
ceasefire of
72 hours, to
begin Tuesday,
5 August, at 8
a.m. local
time, and
calls on them
to abide by
it.
Until the
start of the
ceasefire, the
parties must
exercise the
utmost
restraint.
"The
Secretary-General
urges the
parties to
commence, as
soon as
possible,
talks in Cairo
on a durable
ceasefire and
the underlying
issues. In
this regard,
he welcomes
the proactive
engagement of
the
Palestinian
delegation
under the
leadership of
President
Abbas.
Such talks are
the only way
to sustainably
stop the
violence,
which has cost
far too many
lives, and to
change the
untenable and
tragic status
quo in
Gaza.
The United
Nations stands
ready to lend
its full
support to
these
efforts."
On
August 1 at
noon in New
York, UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon
through his
spokesman said
that an
Israeli
Defense Forces
soldier had
been taken
captive and
that this
called "into
question the
credibility of
Hamas'
assurances to
the United
Nations. The
Secretary-General
demands the
immediate and
unconditional
release of the
captured
soldier."
Later on
August 1, a
range of UN
officials
described to
Inner City
Press the
pressure put
on Ban to rule
that Hamas
broke the
ceasefire and
held captive
an IDF
soldier.
"How does he
know?" one UN
official
demanded.
On August 2,
the IDF said
that the
soldier, Hadar
Goldin, "was
killed in
action."
So on August
4, with no
correction
issued by the
UN, Inner City
Press asked
Ban's
associate
spokesperson
Vannina
Maestracci if
there would be
any
correction,
since Ban's
statement was
used --
Maestracci cut
off the
question, "let
me stop you
right there,"
and said that
the UN tried
to get things
right with
fast moving
events. Video
here, and
embedded
below.
Fine - but
when as here
the UN was
wrong, aren't
they supposed
to correct it?
Maestracci's
colleagues
have
repeatedly
said that they
correct the
record when
necessary. Is
that the case?
What about
this case?
Watch this
site.
At
5:30 pm on
July 31 the UN
announced its
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric would
read out a
statement,
"for the
cameras," in
its briefing
room. Inner
City Press ran
there but
arrived just
as Dujarric
finished
reading the
ceasefire
statement.
But the first
line said,
"the UN
Representative
in Jerusalem,
Special
Coordinator
Robert Serry,
has received
assurances
that all
parties have
agreed to an
unconditional
humanitarian
ceasefire in
Gaza."
With the
ceasefire in
shambles, that
is dubious.
Now
Haaretz has reported
that Serry
"spoke with
Hamas
leadership in
Gaza."
So on
August 1 Inner
City Press put
two questions
to UN
Department of
Political
Affairs chief
Jeffrey
Feltman.
First, would
he confirm
that Serry
spoke with
Hamas in Gaza?
And second, as
a former - and
future? - US
officials,
does Feltman
think the UN
should at
least disclose
when Ban
Ki-moon
accepts "in
kind" / gifts
such as the
Qatari-funded
private jet he
flew on to
Doha, to
mediate on
Gaza.
Dujarric cut
off this
question to
Feltman,
saying that it
was already
answered. But
there is no
routine
disclosure by
the UN. And
the impact on
the UN's
political role
is obvious,
for example
considering
that this was
the ONLY
question asked
of Ban Ki-moon
in Jerusalem
(the UN
censored it),
and it's been
asked at the
UN Security
Council
stakeout.
Dujarric did
not answer
when asked,
shouldn't
there be
disclosure. He
called it "in
kind" - but is
it subtracted
from what
Qatar owes or
pays the UN in
dues?
Then
Feltman
refused to say
if Serry spoke
with Hamas,
saying that he
wasn't with
Serry. So
Feltman
doesn't know?
Or won't say?
It's one
thing for a
diplomat from
a country to
say, that's
secret. But
since the UN
ostensibly
represents,
works for and
is accountable
at least to
all 193
states, if not
to "we the
peoples," on
what logic are
these things
secret? We'll
have more on
this.
Earlier on
July 31
outside the UN
Security
Council,
Israel's
Ambassador Ron
Prosor and
then the State
of Palestine's
Permanent
Observer Riyad
Mansour took
questions from
the Press.
Inner City
Press asked
Prosor about
Krahenbuhl's
call to end
the blockade
of Gaza.
Prosor replied
that Israel
has no
interest in
being in Gaza
-- what, is
there oil
there, he
asked
rhetorically
-- but cited
and showed
charts of
Hamas rocket
fire, and
tunnels (which
he said are
funded by
Qatar).
Inner City
Press asked
Mansour about
the US
Department of
Defense'
confirmation
of new
ammunition
transfers to
Israel (see
below).
Mansour said
that more
weapons are
not needed; he
said that the
killing of
entire
families would
make peace
much more
difficult to
achieve but
that it should
be strived
for, an
independent
state of
Palestine.
In the UN
Security
Council, the
Gaza issue has
essentially
been delegated
to the US. In
the UN
Security
Council on
July 30,
Nigeria
criticized the
Council's
delay in
issuing even a
Presidential
Statement;
Chad called
the Council
"impotent."
At the end of
Rwandan
presidency
reception
later on July
30, Inner
City Press was
told by more
than one
Council member
that it is all
up to the US.
But, one might
ask, how can a
party
transferring
ammunition be
considering an
honest broker?
Couldn't this
transfer had
been at least
delayed? But
that too would
have been a
story, bigger
than this one,
which Inner
City Press was
notified
was broken by
CNN,
leading to
this
statement:
"The
Department of
Defense
received a
letter of
request from
the Israeli
Ministry of
Defense on
July 20 for a
normal Foreign
Military Sales
delivery of
ammunition.
The
appropriate
DoD activities
processed the
request
through normal
inter-agency
processes,
resulting in a
signed Letter
of Offer and
Acceptance on
July 23.
"Two of the
requested
munitions were
available in
the War
Reserve
Stockpile
Ammunition-Israel
(WRSA-I), on
the ground in
Israel, and
were therefore
delivered to
the Israeli
Defense Force
from this
stockpile.
Both munitions
had been in
WRSA-I stock
for a few
years, well
before the
current
crisis.
All stocks in
WRSA-I, as
required by
law, are "in
excess to U.S.
requirements."
Issuing
munitions from
the WRSA-I
stockpile was
strictly a
sourcing
decision and
White House
approval was
not required.
"The
United States
is committed
to the
security of
Israel, and it
is vital to
U.S. national
interests to
assist Israel
to develop and
maintain a
strong and
ready
self-defense
capability.
This defense
sale is
consistent
with those
objectives."
Thus spake the
US Pentagon,
or at least
its
spokesperson
Kirby. But
what will UN
Security
Council
members say,
at their July
31 session?
Watch this
site.
Back
on July 27-28,
the Security
Council
convened to
adopted a
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?
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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