By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 6, more
here -- In
the UN General
Assembly on
the morning of
August 6
Robert Serry,
the UN's
coordinator on
the Middle
East Peace
Process, said
that this Process
“may also need
action by the
Membership,
including the
Security
Council, at
the
appropriate
time.”
But when would
that be?
Throughout the
day's debate,
countries criticized
the Security
Council for
inaction, some
blaming the
Arab Group,
others an
unnamed
Permanent
member of the
Council, some
saying, the
United States.
The word
genocide was
used numerous
times; at the
end, Israel
took issue
with Bolivia
and Cuba for
comparisons to
Hitler,
offering to give
them the email
address of the
UN's Holocaust
Education
Outreach
program.
(In
the hall after
that, another
country's
representative
asked Inner
City Press why
they hadn't been
included with
Bolivia ad
Cuba.)
Some speakers
looked beyond
Gaza. Iraq
compared Israel
to the Islamic
State of Iraq
and the Levant;
Israel had
compared ISIL
and Hamas.
Syria's Bashar
Ja'afari, very
much back in
New York,
mocked the
Security
Council for
limited its
condemnation
of ISIL to
killings in
Iraq but not
Syria. He
invoked former
President of
the General
Assembly
d'Escoto
Brockmann,
recently
re-instated by
the Pope.
South Africa's
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
said
the Security
Council has
done nothing
on Palestine
for more than
five years,
and cited the
US' veto of
the draft resolution
on settlements.
Pakistan's
Masood Khan said,
"Gaza has been
wrecked and
ravaged; this
was no war,
there was no
symmetry."
Bolivia's
Permanent
Representative
Sacha
Llorenti, who
earlier in the
day met with
current
President of
the General
Assemblye John
Ashe and
Argentina's
Foreign
Minister
Hector
Timerman about
holding a GA
session about
sovereign
debt, slammed
the Security Council
for inaction.
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.