By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
July 27, more
here -- With
even the
"humanitarian
pause" over in
Gaza, now what
will be done
at the UN?
What has been
done in the
last week?
As the death
count in Gaza
rose after the
UN Security
Council's emergency
meeting on Sunday,
July 20, what
was the
response at
the UN?
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon flew
around the region,
first on a
Qatar-funded
private jet,
then a Saudi
jet -- then
his
spokespeople
stopped
answering
Inner City
Press on whose
jet or dime
Ban was
flying.
At the
Security Council,
there was talk
about the
Jordan or Arab
Group draft
resolution.
But on July 24
on his last
day in the
Council,
French
Ambassador
Gerard Araud
said that no
vote had been
scheduled on
the draft.
When UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon
finally spoke
in Cairo on
July 25, it
was about a
mere 12 hour
humanitarian
pause.
And
before any
press
questions, it
was said "Mr.
United Nations
Secretary-General
has to leave."
But where to?
On whose
plane? Because
the UN has
stonewalled,
the questions
have to be
asked and
pursued.
US Secretary
John Kerry, to
whom nearly
all of the
media
questions were
directed,
denied that
Israel's
cabinet had
voted down the
larger
proposal;
Kerry headed
to Paris to
meet with the
foreign
ministers
including
those of
Turkey and
Qatar.
But there, no
deal was
announced. Al
Jazeera put
online a draft
they said
Israel had
rejected; an
Israeli columnist
criticized
what he called
the draft
Kerry
submitted and
was
criticized.
One
issue was
whether a
ceasefire or
humanitarian
pause should
involved Israel
pulling its forces
out of Gaza.
But Ban,
flying on
undisclosed
aircraft,
issued canned
statements
that did not
address the
issue.
Intentions for
peace are not
enough.
On the most
basic
transparency,
at the July 25
noon briefing
Ban's deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq
refused to
tell Inner
City Press on
what kind of
plane, paid by
whom, Ban
traveled to
Cairo.
After
belatedly
telling Inner
City Press Ban
took a
Qatar-funded
private jet to
Doha, and
later a Saudi
plane, now the
UN won't
answer basic
questions
about Ban's
most recent
outside-funded
trips.
Ban's
announcement
was a shift
down from
remarks the UN
had sent out,
then
retracted. At
7:22 AM
Eastern Time
in the US,
Ban's Office
of the
Spokesperson
emailed out
Ban's
remarks.
Seven minutes
later at 7:29
AM they
e-mailed
again: "PLEASE
RETRACT -
Secretary-General's
remarks to
press in Cairo
have not been
delivered."
While not
required,
Inner City
Press decided
to hold off
reporting any
of this,
expecting Ban
to speak with
US Secretary
of State John
Kerry soon
thereafter.
Two hours
later, the
Wall Street
Journal's Jay
Solomon published
a story quoting
what Ban was
"expected to
say" --