On Gaza
As Israeli PR
Danon Wrote to
UNSC Guterres
Vaguely Called
It Serious to
Al Jazeera Now
Haq
By Matthew
Russell Lee, CJR Letter
PFTracker
UNITED NATIONS
GATE, November 12– On
Gaza, 12 days
after Kuwait's
draft UN
Security Council resolution
was vetoed by
the US, on
June 13 an essentially
identical
draft was
adopted in the UN
General
Assembly with
120 in favor,
eight against
and 45 abstaining.
But what did
it accomplish?
Now on
November
12, this from
the Israeli
Mission: "Israel's
ambassador to
the UN, Danny
Danon,
appealed to
the Security
Council
Tuesday to
condemn the
firing of
hundreds of
rockets at
Israel. In
his letter to
the Council's
members, the
ambassador
noted that 'after
a day of
rocket
barrages,
there is no
room for any
other
definition of
Hamas except
that of
terrorist
organization.
To the world
it presents
its civilians
as victims,
but then uses
them as human
shields.' The
ambassador
added that 'Israel
cooperated
with all
international
bodies,
including the
UN, but the
aggressive
escalation
from Gaza
indicates that
there are
elements
pushing for
another round
of violence
that will
cause
destruction
and losses
within the
Gaza Strip.'" UNSG Antonio
Guterres, just off his
16th junket to
Lisbon was in
Paris for two
speeches.
Al Jazeera
flew its
correspondent
who worked
with
Guterres'
Stephne
Dujarric to
get Inner City Press
roughed up June 22 and
July
3 and
banned
since to Paris,
where he put
out this breaking/broken
news:
Guterres called the
situation in
Gaza "very serious."
Later
the UN issued
this: " The
Secretary-General
is following
closely the
latest
security
developments
in Gaza. He
urges all
parties to
exercise
maximum
restraint. The
United Nations
Special
Coordinator,
Nickolay
Mladenov, is
working
closely with
Egypt and all
concerned
parties to
restore
calm.Farhan
Haq, Deputy
Spokesman for
the
Secretary-General New
York, 12
November
2018." The same
Farhan Haq who
did not answer a
single one of
the six
questions
Inner City
Press submitted in
writing at noon
on November
12 - while his
boss Dujarric
reached out selectively
to Europe to
defends the ban of
Inner City Press... On
August 15
Antonio
Guterres, who had
then banned
Inner City
Press from the
UN for 45
days, converted it
to a lifetime
ban. Now
on September
20, as
Inner City
Press
continues to
cover the
UN and
international
affairs from the
sidewalks
outside the UN - some good
interviews - the below,
forwarded by
Sweden's
Mission to the
UN: "EU
members press
stakeout on
Khan al-Ahmar
– France,
Kingdom of the
Netherlands,
Poland,
Sweden, United
Kingdom,
Belgium,
Germany, Italy
The Israeli
High Court on
5 September
rejected the
petitions by
the residents
of the
Palestinian
village of
Khan al-Ahmar
and allowed
the Israeli
authorities to
proceed with
the plans for
demolition
within seven
days. Any day
now, the
Israeli
authorities
could start
demolishing
this
community,
including its
school, and
evict the
residents from
their homes,
including many
children.
Today, we want
to underline
our position
on the planned
demolition of
Khan al-Ahmar.
We, as member
states of the
European Union
and the
European Union
as such, have
repeatedly
stated our
long-standing
position on
Israel’s
settlement
policy,
illegal under
international
law, as
reconfirmed by
Security
Council
Resolution
2334 (2016),
and actions
taken in that
context,
including the
demolitions of
Palestinian
communities
and possible
forced
transfers of
population.
The community
of Khan
al-Ahmar is
located in a
sensitive
location in
Area C, of
strategic
importance for
preserving the
contiguity of
a future
Palestinian
state.
As repeatedly
stressed, the
consequences
of a
demolition of
this community
and the
displacement
of its
residents,
including
children,
would be very
serious and
would severely
threaten the
viability of
the two-state
solution and
undermine
prospects for
peace.
We therefore
call upon the
Israeli
authorities to
reconsider
their decision
to demolish
Khan al-Ahmar.
We, as member
states of the
European
Union, will
not give up on
a negotiated
two-state
solution with
Jerusalem as
future capital
of both
States.
Continued
engagement on
the ground is
needed, in
support of
building a
viable
Palestinian
state.
Including in
support of the
essential work
that UNRWA is
doing, and in
support of
projects that
keep the
perspective of
a two-state
solution
alive." On
September
2 from US
State Department
spokesperson
Heather Nauert. Then
on September
2, this: "In
response to
the US
decision to
cut its
funding of the
UN Relief and
Works Agency
(UNRWA),
Israel’s
ambassador to
the UN, Danny
Danon, issued
the following
statement: “We
welcome the
US' decision
as UNRWA has
proven itself
an impediment
to resolving
the conflict
by keeping the
Palestinians
in perpetual
refugee
status. The
Palestinian
attempt to
approach the
UN is another
empty
statement.
It’s about
time that the
Palestinian
leadership
abandoned its
victimhood and
incitement
campaign, and
takes concrete
steps to
improve the
Palestinians
future." Hours
after
the US
statemnt,
a canned
statement by
Guterres' spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric - did
he pre
spoon feed it
to Al Jazeera as he
did on the Human
Rights Council
drop
out on June
19? See here, still
unaddressed.
We don't yet
know, since Dujarric
and Guterres,
using the Global
Censor
Smale, got
Inner City
Press roughed
up and banned.
They are
killing the UN.
Here is
the UN's
canned
statement:
"We regret the
United States’
decision to
provide no
further
funding to
UNRWA, which
provides
essential
services to
Palestine
refugees and
contributes to
stability in
the region.
The US has
traditionally
been the
largest single
contributor to
UNRWA. We
appreciate its
support over
the years.
UNRWA enjoys
the full
confidence of
the
Secretary-General.
Commissioner
General Pierre
Krahenbuhl has
led a rapid,
innovative and
tireless
effort to
overcome the
unexpected
financial
crisis UNRWA
has faced this
year. It has
expanded the
donor base,
raised
considerable
new funding,
and explored
new avenues of
support.
In addition,
UNRWA took
extraordinary
internal
management
measures to
increase
efficiencies
and reduce
costs.
UNRWA has a
strong record
of providing
high-quality
education,
health and
other
essential
services,
often in
extremely
difficult
circumstances,
to Palestine
refugees who
are in great
need.
The
Secretary-General
calls on other
countries to
help fill the
remaining
financial gap,
so that UNRWA
can continue
to provide
this vital
assistance, as
well as a
sense of hope
this
vulnerable
population."
And here the
(much) earlier
US: "The
Administration
has carefully
reviewed the
issue and
determined
that the
United States
will not make
additional
contributions
to
UNRWA.
When we made a
U.S.
contribution
of $60 million
in January, we
made it clear
that the
United States
was no longer
willing to
shoulder the
very
disproportionate
share of the
burden of
UNRWA’s costs
that we had
assumed for
many
years.
Several
countries,
including
Jordan, Egypt,
Sweden, Qatar,
and the UAE
have shown
leadership in
addressing
this problem,
but the
overall
international
response has
not been
sufficient.
Beyond the
budget gap
itself and
failure to
mobilize
adequate and
appropriate
burden
sharing, the
fundamental
business model
and fiscal
practices that
have marked
UNRWA for
years – tied
to UNRWA’s
endlessly and
exponentially
expanding
community of
entitled
beneficiaries
– is simply
unsustainable
and has been
in crisis mode
for many
years.
The United
States will no
longer commit
further
funding to
this
irredeemably
flawed
operation.
We are very
mindful of and
deeply
concerned
regarding the
impact upon
innocent
Palestinians,
especially
school
children, of
the failure of
UNRWA and key
members of the
regional and
international
donor
community to
reform and
reset the
UNRWA way of
doing
business.
These children
are part of
the future of
the Middle
East.
Palestinians,
wherever they
live, deserve
better than an
endlessly
crisis-driven
service
provision
model.
They deserve
to be able to
plan for the
future.
Accordingly,
the United
States will
intensify
dialogue with
the United
Nations, host
governments,
and
international
stakeholders
about new
models and new
approaches,
which may
include direct
bilateral
assistance
from the
United States
and other
partners, that
can provide
today’s
Palestinian
children with
a more durable
and dependable
path towards a
brighter
tomorrow."
Dujarric
is Guterres'
censor -
after making
threats about
Inner City
Press'
criticism of
his
spoonfeeding
of Al Jazeera
on 19 June
2018, on
June 22
Dujarric and
Guterres
had Inner City
Press
ousted from
the UN during
his Eid al Fitr
speech. After
ignoring a
June 25
request for
protection, Guterres'
guard Lt
Dobbins
roughed up
Inner City Press on
July 3 and Guterres
has banned
Inner City
Press for the
18 days since,
going on
vacation
without
answers, no end in
sight. Fox
News story here,
GAP blogs I
and II,
Independent here,
arrogant
July 20 no
answer
here. Now
on July 24, with
Inner City
Press still
baned
from the UN
by Guterres
and thus
prevented from
asking any questions
at the
stakeout
position
outside the day's
UN Security
Council meeting, this
from the IMF:
"An
International
Monetary Fund
(IMF) staff
team led by
Karen Ongley
visited East
Jerusalem and
Ramallah
during July
8–19, 2018, to
assess recent
economic
developments
in the West
Bank and Gaza.
The IMF team
met with
Finance
Minister
Bishara,
Governor
Shawwa, and
other
Palestinian
officials.
At the end of
the visit, Ms.
Ongley issued
the following
statement: “Despite
still solid
growth in the
West Bank, the
sharp decline
in activity in
Gaza weighed
on the
Palestinian
economy. In
the first
quarter of
2018 real
growth in the
West Bank was
close to 5
percent.
However, the 6
percent
decline in
Gaza brought
the overall
growth rate
down to 2
percent. With
economic and
financial
buffers having
been steadily
eroded in
Gaza, its
economy was
more
vulnerable to
the
increasingly
tense
political and
security
situation, and
cuts in donor
support and
transfers from
the
Palestinian
Authority (PA)
budget.
“Continued
consolidation
efforts by the
Ministry of
Finance and
Planning
helped to
manage rising
fiscal
pressures.
Strong growth
in domestic
revenues—particularly
customs, VAT
and income
taxes—helped
to offset weak
clearance
revenues and
the unwinding
of one-off
factors in
2016. Together
with spending
cuts, this
kept the
overall fiscal
deficit in
2017 to around
8 percent of
GDP, broadly
unchanged from
2016. However,
these actions
did not
prevent the PA
from having to
resort to
running
arrears.
“With
pressures on
the economy
continuing to
mount, the
outlook has
become more
fragile and
uncertain. If
things
continue as
they are,
overall growth
in 2018 could
slow further
to 1½ percent,
weighed down
by activity in
Gaza declining
by 4 percent.
More broadly,
Gaza is
unlikely to
register
positive
growth over
the medium
term without a
profound and
lasting change
in
circumstances.
An added
concern is the
substantial
loss of
clearance
revenues posed
by recently
approved
Israeli
legislation,
which would
seriously
compromise
fiscal
sustainability
and act as a
further brake
on growth.
“Given this
mix of
factors,
lifting the
growth
trajectory on
a permanent
basis requires
a
comprehensive
and
coordinated
strategy,
anchored
around four
key elements.
One, a
medium-term
plan to
gradually
reduce the
budget
deficit,
mindful of the
impact on
growth. Two, a
mix of revenue
and
expenditure
measures by
the PA,
supported by
reforms to
strengthen
public
financial
management.
Three, faster
and tangible
progress
toward
reducing
revenue
leakages,
where
transparent
and clearly
understood
mechanisms
that rely on a
regular
exchange of
the necessary
information
are put in
place and
adhered to by
the Israeli
and
Palestinian
authorities.
Four, an
actively
engaged donor
community that
helps bridge
the large
financing gaps
and assists in
building
necessary
institutions,
and abets an
ongoing
dialogue
between the
two sides.
“Maintaining a
healthy
financial
sector will be
instrumental
in supporting
growth,
particularly
given strains
on growth in
Gaza. The
Palestine
Monetary
Authority
(PMA) should
continue to
ensure that
risks are
scrutinized
closely, with
the full use
of the macro-
and
micro-prudential
toolkits and
frequent
on-site
visits.
Continued
cooperation
between the
PMA and Bank
of Israel will
be pivotal in
maintaining
smoothly
functioning of
correspondent
bank
relations." And
from Guterres,
whose
spokespeople
have thus far
refused to say
where Guterres
is going from
July 23 to August 3: "I
am gravely
concerned over
the dangerous
escalation of
violence in
Gaza and
southern
Israel. I
deeply regret
the loss of
life. It is
imperative
that all sides
urgently step
back from the
brink of
another
devastating
conflict. I
call on Hamas
and other
Palestinian
militants to
cease the
launching of
rockets and
incendiary
kites and
provocations
along the
fence. And
Israel must
exercise
restraint to
avoid further
inflaming the
situation. I
encourage all
to engage with
the UN, and
particularly
my Special
Coordinator,
and work to
find a way out
of this
dangerous
situation. Any
further
escalation
will endanger
the lives of
Palestinians
and Israelis
alike, deepen
the
humanitarian
catastrophe in
Gaza and
undermine
current
efforts to
improve
livelihoods
and support
the return of
the
Palestinian
Authority to
Gaza." Back
on June 13
a US amendment
including
Hamas got 62 votes in
favor and 58 against.
But UN
President of
the General
Assembly
Miroslav
Lajcak ruled
that a two
thirds vote
was required
on the
US amendment.
The US' Nikki
Haley appealed
and that was
put to the vote.
The appeal
failed, with
66 in favor of
the appeal,
73 against
and 26
abstaining.
What will the
US - or
Washington -
say about the
two thirds
requirement on
amendments?
And where
was UN
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres? As
usual, some
say, conveniently
absent. On
June 8 Palestine's
Ambassador
Mansour told
the press that
President of
the General
Assembly Miroslav
Lajcak would
soon be
announcing a
General
Assembly
meeting on the
topic and on
this draft,
here. That
meeting and
vote has been
set for the afternoon
of June
13 - and now
the US has sent
around an amendment
that it wants
voted on first,
condemning
Hamas for firing
rockets and
inciting
violence.
In the
Security
Council the US
vote came
second. The
number that
will be
compared to on
June was the vote on
condemning
the US moving
its Israel
embassy to
Jerusalem,
which drew 128
yes,
9 no, with 35
abstentions
and the rest
not voting
(like Cameroon
did on
the June 12
"GUAM"
resolution.)
We'll have
more on this.
At
noon on June 8
Inner
City Press asked
about the
meeting with the
President of
the General
Assembly, which
included
Sabri
Boukadoum of
Algeria; Fode
Seck of
Senegal, Feridun
Hadi
Sinirlioglu of
Turkey and
the
Ambassadors of
the Arab
League and
Bangladesh.
Afterward Inner
City Press
asked Mansour
about
Palestine
having joined
UNIDO and UNCTAD, if
the US had
cut funding to
the latter.
Mansour replies
that Palestine
is joining seven more
agencies but
is holding off
joining FAO
and WHO, so
that poor
countries are
not hurt (by US
funding cuts.)
Periscope
video here.
On
June 1
on Kuwait's
draft in the
Security Council
four countries
abstained.
Three were
European: UK,
Poland and Netherlands.
And one was
from Africa:
Ethiopia,
whose
Ambassador had
a long
discussion
with the
US' Nikki
Haley in the
run up to the
vote, visible in
Inner City
Press' Periscope
video from the
UNTV video booth over the
Council, here.
Tweeted 2:20
video here.
A
similar
discussion took
place with
Equatorial Guinea,
but they voted
Yes on
Kuwait's
draft. But
later in the
afternoon,
Equatorial
Guinea was
among the 11
abstainers on
the US draft,
which had the
US in favor
and three
against: a
first. Before
the votes,
Inner City
Press asked
Israel's Danny
Danon how much
abstentions he
expected. He
replied that
the US would
not stand
alone. Did he know
about
Ethiopia? We'll
have more on
this.
On
May 31 there
was talk of
the US invoking
the so-called 24
hour rule
under which a
draft must be
finalized -
"in blue" -
for 24 hours
before a vote.
But as UK
Ambassador
Karen Pierce
told the
press, that rule is
not always
followed. Periscope
video here.
After 4 pm,
Kuwait's
Ambassador cam
and told the
press that the
US said it
would be
proposing amendments,
so Kuwait was
putting the
vote back to 3 pm on
June 1, the
first day of
Russia's Security
Council
presidency. Now,
US Ambassador
Nikki
Haley has said
the US will
veto Kuwait's
draft, to
which the US
is pitching an
alternative
it wants voted
on first.
There was talk
of a 7 pm vote, then
of 8:30 pm -
until the UN
Spokesperson's
Office called
the end of day
"lid" at 7:45
pm. And so,
June 1. Here
is Kuwait's
"blue" draft,
as obtained
by Inner City
Press: 31
May 2018 –
Draft – Rev 3
The Security
Council,
Recalling all
of its
relevant
resolutions,
including,
inter alia,
resolutions
242 (1967),
338 (1973),
605 (1987),
904 (1994),
1397 (2002),
1544 (2004),
1515 (2003),
1850 (2008),
1860 (2009),
and 2334
(2016),
Recalling also
its
Presidential
Statement
2014/13 of 28
July 2014,
Bearing in
mind the
letter
(S/2015/809)
of 21 October
2015 by the
Secretary-General,
Recalling also
its
resolutions on
the protection
of civilians
in armed
conflict,
including its
resolutions on
children and
armed
conflict,
including,
inter alia,
resolutions
1894 (2009)
and 2225
(2015), as
well as its
relevant
presidential
statements,
and its
resolutions on
the protection
of medical and
humanitarian
personnel and
on the
protection of
journalists,
media
professionals
and associated
personnel in
armed
conflicts,
including,
inter alia,
resolutions
2286 (2016)
and 2222
(2015), as
well as its
other relevant
resolutions
and
presidential
statements,
Reaffirming
the obligation
to respect and
ensure respect
for
international
humanitarian
law in all
circumstances
in accordance
with Article 1
of the Geneva
Conventions,
Expressing its
grave concern
at the
escalation of
violence and
tensions and
the
deterioration
of the
situation in
the Occupied
Palestinian
Territory,
including East
Jerusalem, in
particular
since 30 March
2018, and its
deep alarm at
the loss of
civilian lives
and the high
number of
casualties
among
Palestinian
civilians,
particularly
in the Gaza
Strip,
including
casualties
among
children,
caused by the
Israeli
forces,
Condemning all
acts of
violence
against
civilians,
including acts
of terror, as
well as all
acts of
provocation,
incitement and
destruction,
Reaffirming
the right to
peaceful
assembly and
protest,
freedom of
expression and
of
association,
Emphasizing
the need to
pursue
measures of
accountability,
stressing in
this regard
the importance
of ensuring
independent
and
transparent
investigations
in accordance
with
international
standards,
Alarmed at the
exacerbation
of the dire
humanitarian
crisis in the
Gaza Strip,
and stressing
the need to
achieve a
sustainable
solution to
this crisis in
line with
international
law,
Stressing the
particular
impact that
armed conflict
has on women
and children,
including as
refugees and
displaced
persons, as
well as on
other
civilians who
may have
specific
vulnerabilities,
including
persons with
disabilities
and older
persons, and
stressing the
need for the
Security
Council and
Member States
to strengthen
further the
protection of
civilians,
Recalling that
a lasting
solution to
the
Israeli-Palestinian
conflict can
only be
achieved by
peaceful means
in accordance
with
international
law and the
relevant
United Nations
resolutions
and through
credible and
direct
negotiations,
Stressing that
the Gaza Strip
constitutes an
integral part
of the
Palestinian
territory
occupied in
1967,
Reaffirming
the right of
all States in
the region to
live in peace
within secure
and
internationally
recognized
borders,
1. Calls for
full respect
by all parties
for
international
human rights
law and
international
humanitarian
law, including
in regards to
the protection
of the
civilian
population,
and reiterates
the need to
take
appropriate
steps to
ensure the
safety and
well-being of
civilians and
ensure their
protection, as
well as to
ensure
accountability
for all
violations;
2. Deplores
the use of any
excessive,
disproportionate
and
indiscriminate
force by the
Israeli forces
against
Palestinian
civilians in
the Occupied
Palestinian
Territory,
including East
Jerusalem, and
particularly
in the Gaza
Strip,
including the
use of live
ammunition
against
civilian
protesters,
including
children, as
well as
medical
personnel and
journalists,
and expresses
its grave
concern at the
loss of
innocent
lives;
3. Demands
that Israel,
the occupying
Power,
refrain from
such actions
and fully
abide by its
legal
obligations
and
responsibilities
under the
Fourth Geneva
Convention
relative to
the Protection
of Civilian
Persons in
Time of War of
12 August 1949
;
4. Deplores
any actions
that could
provoke
violence and
endanger
civilian lives
and calls on
all actors to
ensure that
protests
remain
peaceful;
5. Deplores
the firing of
rockets from
the Gaza Strip
against
Israeli
civilian
areas;
6. Calls for
urgent steps
to ensure an
immediate,
durable and
fully
respected
ceasefire;
7. Calls for
the exercise
of maximum
restraint and
calm by all
parties and
the need for
immediate and
significant
steps to
stabilize the
situation and
to reverse
negative
trends on the
ground;
8. Reaffirms
its
willingness to
respond to
situations of
armed conflict
where
civilians are
being targeted
or
humanitarian
assistance to
civilians is
being
deliberately
obstructed,
including
through the
consideration
of appropriate
measures that
the Security
Council
may take in
accordance
with the
Charter of the
United
Nations;
9. Calls for
the
consideration
of measures to
guarantee the
safety and
protection of
the
Palestinian
civilian
population in
the Occupied
Palestinian
Territory,
including in
the Gaza
Strip;
10. Calls also
for immediate
steps towards
ending the
closure and
the
restrictions
imposed by
Israel on
movement and
access into
and out of the
Gaza Strip,
including
through the
sustained
opening of the
crossing
points of the
Gaza Strip for
the flow of
humanitarian
aid,
commercial
goods and
persons in
accordance
with
international
law, including
as it pertains
to legitimate
security
requirements;
11. Demands
that all
parties
cooperate with
medical and
humanitarian
personnel to
allow and
facilitate
unimpeded
access to the
civilian
population,
and calls for
the cessation
of all forms
of violence
and
intimidation
directed
against
medical and
humanitarian
personnel;
12. Urges the
provision of
immediate and
unimpeded
humanitarian
assistance to
the
Palestinian
civilian
population in
the Gaza
Strip, bearing
in mind
critical
medical, food,
water and fuel
needs, and
urges
increased
support to the
United Nations
Relief and
Works Agency
for Palestine
Refugees in
the Near East,
recognizing
the vital role
of the Agency,
alongside
other UN
agencies and
humanitarian
organizations,
in providing
humanitarian
and emergency
assistance,
notably in the
Gaza Strip;
13. Encourages
tangible steps
towards
intra-Palestinian
reconciliation,
including in
support of the
mediation
efforts of
Egypt, and
concrete steps
to reunite the
Gaza Strip and
the West Bank
under the
legitimate
Palestinian
government and
ensure its
effective
functioning in
the Gaza
Strip;
14. Welcomes
and urges
further
engagement by
the
Secretary-General
and the United
Nations
Special
Coordinator
for the Middle
East Peace
Process to
assist, in
cooperation
with concerned
partners, in
the efforts to
immediately
de-escalate
the situation
and address
urgent
infrastructure,
humanitarian,
and economic
development
needs,
including
through the
implementation
of projects
endorsed by
the Ad Hoc
Liaison
Committee;
15. Requests
the
Secretary-General
to examine the
present
situation and
to submit a
written
report, as
soon as
possible, but
not later than
60 days from
the adoption
of the present
resolution,
containing,
inter alia,
his proposals
on ways and
means for
ensuring the
safety,
protection and
well-being of
the
Palestinian
civilian
population
under Israeli
occupation,
including,
inter alia,
recommendations
regarding an
international
protection
mechanism;
16. Calls for
renewed and
urgent efforts
to create the
conditions
necessary to
launch
credible
negotiations
on all final
status issues
to achieve,
without delay,
an end to the
Israeli
occupation
that began in
1967 and a
comprehensive,
just and
lasting
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, on
the basis of
the relevant
United Nations
resolutions,
the Madrid
terms of
reference,
including the
principle of
land for
peace, the
Arab Peace
Initiative and
the Quartet
Roadmap, as
called for in
resolution
2334 (2016)
and its other
relevant
resolutions;
17. Decides to
remain seized
of the
matter." Meanwhile
down hall,
increasingly marginal
UN Secretary
General
Antonio "Deep
Concern"
Guterres was
claiming
victory on a
reform for
which he provided
no pricetag;
his spokesman
ran off the podium
when Inner
City Press
asked how much
it would cost.
Then Guterres
refused to
answer Inner
City Press,
video here.
We'll have
more about all
this. Inner
City Press
back on May 14
asked the
Ambassadors to
the UN of
Palestine and
Kuwait if the
emergency UN
Security
Council
meeting they
were requested
about Israeli
sniper
fire into Gaza
would
occur on May
14, or the
next day, May
15. Video here. They replied it would be
on the morning
of May 15
(Alamy photos
here),
and that a
draft Security
Council Press
Statement had
been
distributed,
with a silence
procedure
until 6 pm. On
that, silence
was broken by
the US, which
just after 3
pm on May 29 announced,
with
the Kuwaiti introduced
resolution still
not put to the
vote, that
"This
afternoon, the
United States
called for an
emergency
meeting of the
UN Security
Council to
discuss the
latest attacks
on Israel out
of the Gaza
Strip by Hamas
and other
militants. We
expect the
meeting to
take place
tomorrow
afternoon. 'The
recent attacks
out of Gaza
are the
largest we
have seen
since 2014.
Mortars fired
by Palestinian
militants hit
civilian
infrastructure,
including a
kindergarten.
The Security
Council should
be outraged
and respond to
this latest
bout of
violence
directed at
innocent
Israeli
civilians, and
the
Palestinian
leadership
needs to be
held
accountable
for what
they’re
allowing to
happen in
Gaza,' said
Ambassador
Haley."
Tomorrow would
be May 30,
which
coincides with
a "sold
out" Israeli
Mission event,
"'Israel
at 70: Global
Impact Through
Innovation.'
The reception
will be held
in the United
Nations
visitors lobby
followed by
the event in
Trusteeship
Council
Chamber.
Due to
security
reasons,
please respond
to this email
confirming
your
attendance by
1:00 pm [May
29.]" High
security all
around. US
President
Donald J.
Trump on May
18 met UN
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres,
listing in advance
Syria and
North Korea on
the agenda,
not Gaza. On May 15
Inner City
Press asked
Guterres'
spokesman
Farhan Haq
about Friday's
meeting - the
UN does not
anticipate any
Q&A - and why
Guterres has
not set up a
UN
investigation.
From the UN transcript:
Inner City
Press: the
White House
has put out a,
I guess, a
preview of the
Secretary-General's
meeting with
President
Trump on
Friday and
said, listing
two countries,
not the Middle
East,
Palestine or
Israel, but
listing Syria
and North
Korea as
topics of
mutual
concern.
Does the
Secretary-General…
also reform an
efficiency,
but does the
Secretary-General
intend to
raise this
topic during
his meeting
Friday?
Because it
seems from the
listing that
maybe the
administration
doesn't view
the UN as… its
role as useful
on this topic
as it does,
apparently, on
Syria and
North Korea?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well, we will
bring up a
range of
topics of
mutual
concern.
We will
provide those
details
following the
meeting on
Friday.
Question:
Is it your
understanding
if there will
be a Q-and-A
session of the
President and
António
Guterres?
Deputy
Spokesman:
I'm not aware
of that at
this stage,
but if there
is one, we
will provide
the details...
Inner City
Press: there
have been
various calls
in the Council
for
transparent
and
independent
investigation
of killings in
Gaza.
You were
saying that
the
Secretary-General,
you know, is
calling for
such an
investigation;
but as many
have pointed
out, he has
the power to
set up such an
investigation.
Can you
explain his
reasoning, at
least thus
far, in not
doing
so? And
also, there
had been a
request that
he provide a
report on the
implementation
of the
resolution in
December 2016
on
settlements,
and is he
aware of that
and when will
he do
that?
Those are two
separate
questions,
investigation
and
implementation.
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well, first of
all, regarding
the question
of
investigations,
we made clear
repeatedly now
that we want
there to be
credible
investigations.
Ultimately,
what we are
doing at this
stage is
pressing for
the
authorities,
the
authorities
responsible,
in other
words, in
Israel, in
Gaza and
elsewhere to
mount credible
independent
investigations.
We will have
to evaluate
whether that
happens and
whether the
results are
satisfactory.
Question:
When you say
elsewhere,
what do you
mean — when
you are
calling on an
investigation
by Israel,
Gaza and
elsewhere?
Deputy
Spokesman:
And also the
Palestinian
Authority,
which is
present also,
as you know,
in the West
Bank and East
Jerusalem.
Question:
But, what is
his reasoning
not doing it
himself, I
guess, is what
I'm
saying?
There are many
Council
members that
have said that
he has it
within his
power to do
it. Is
there some
legal
reason?
Is it a
political
judgment?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well, you're
aware of the
process by
which UN
investigative
bodies get
mandates, and
that is
something that
we would need
to be
appraised of
if that were a
consideration
down the
line.
But, at this
stage, our
focus is
seeing what
the
authorities
themselves can
do." Also
on May 15,
Kuwait said
it will
circulate a draft
resolution
on protection
of civilians,
modeled after
a Norwegian
one. France's
Ambassador
Francois
Delattre spoke
too, without
taking
questions.
(His ambassador in
Burundi
Laurent
Delahousse, meanwhile,
replied
to news of
corpses in the
river with one
word:
"Hippos?")
Inner City Press
was delayed since
it is required
by the UN of
Antonio
Guterres and
his Global
Communicator
Alison Smale to
only enter,
unlike
other UN correspondents
many of whom
rarely come
in, rarely ask
question and publish
little, through
the UN's
Tourists
Entrance,
which was
jammed and mis-managed
on May 15. Periscope
video -
required to be
turned
off during the
mis-management
- here.
We'll have
more on this.
Inner City
Press asked,
if as expected
the US breaks
silence, that
they return to
the Council
stakeout. Kuwait,
Sweden,
France,
Bolivia,
Netherlands,
Peru,
Kazakhstan,
Equatorial
Guinea, Cote
d'Ivoire and
China have
requested from
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres,
traveling in
Austria before
meeting US
President
Donald Trump
on May 17,
that Guterres
prepare and
submit a
report on
implementation
of UNSC
Resolution
2334 of
December 2016,
on which the
US (previous
administration)
abstained.
Also,
"Kuwait has
requested an
open meeting
of the
Security
Council under
the agenda
item: The
Situation in
the Middle
East,
including the
Palestinian
question, in
light of the
developments
on the ground
and the
killing of
innocent
civilians,
with reports
putting the
number of
Palestinians
killed at over
50.
Kuwait has
requested for
the meeting to
be convened
tomorrow
morning,
Tuesday May
15." Also
on Gaza, UN
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres on
April 5 said
in a
statement, "I
reiterate my
call on all
concerned to
refrain from
any act that
could lead to
further
violence or
place
civilians in
harm's way,
especially
children."
Then he
prepared to
leave for six
days in China,
just as the
previous
Friday he was
an another
UNannounced
trip to his
home in
Lisbon. Now he
is in Vienna.
On April 20, after
Palestine's
Riyad Mansour,
flanked by the
Ambassadors of
Tunisia,
Kuwait and of
the Arab
League,
conducted his
Friday
stakeout,
Inner City
Press asked if
there has been
any progress
on requesting
an inquiry by
the UN Human
Rights
Council, and
if Mansour had
any comment on
Mike Pompeo's
upcoming trip
to Jerusalem.
Periscope video
here.
Mansour
said he was
not the right
person to ask
about Pence,
and that some
process is
underway in
Geneva. We'll
see. On
April 13,
after
Palestine's
Riyad Mansour,
flanked by the
Ambassadors of
Kuwait and of
the Arab
League,
responded to
Inner City
Press'
question about
why Guterres
hadn't
followed his
own advice and
set up an
inquiry, Inner
City Press put
the question
to Guterres
himself. He
dismissed it
with a wave of
his hand. Vine
video here.
On April 20,
after
Guterres'
spokesman
refused to
answer Inner
City Press on
who Guterres
was taking
with him to
the UN
Security
Council
retreat in
Sweden (other
than Izumi
Nakamitsu,
which Inner
City Press on
its own
reported, on
Syria and
perhaps North
Korea), Inner
City Press
asked Mansour
if he knew if
Guterres took
envoy Mladenov
to Sweden.
Mansour
replied that
Mladenov would
brief the open
Council
meeting on
April 26 - and
that Palestine
is now going
forward in the
UN Human
Rights Council
in Geneva.
We'll have
more on this.
Inner City
Press Photos
on Alamy. On
Sunday, April
8, with
Guterres
issuing
statements praising
China but
little to nothing on
any other topic, the
International
Criminal Court
Prosecutor
Fatou Bensouda
issued this:
"It is with
grave concern
that I note
the violence
and
deteriorating
situation in
the Gaza Strip
in the context
of recent mass
demonstrations.
Since 30 March
2018, at least
27
Palestinians
have been
reportedly
killed by the
Israeli
Defence
Forces, with
over a
thousand more
injured, many,
as a result of
shootings
using live
ammunition and
rubber-bullets.
Violence
against
civilians - in
a situation
such as the
one prevailing
in Gaza –
could
constitute
crimes under
the Rome
Statute of the
International
Criminal Court
(“ICC” or “the
Court”), as
could the use
of civilian
presence for
the purpose of
shielding
military
activities. I
remind all
parties that
the situation
in Palestine
is under
preliminary
examination by
my Office.
While a
preliminary
examination is
not an
investigation,
any new
alleged crime
committed in
the context of
the situation
in Palestine
may be
subjected to
my Office’s
scrutiny. This
applies to the
events of the
past weeks and
to any future
incident. I
am aware that
the
demonstrations
in the Gaza
Strip are
planned to
continue
further. My
Office will
continue to
closely watch
the situation
and will
record any
instance of
incitement or
resort to
unlawful
force. I urge
all those
concerned to
refrain from
further
escalating
this tragic
situation. Any
person who
incites or
engages in
acts of
violence
including by
ordering,
requesting,
encouraging or
contributing
in any other
manner to the
commission of
crimes within
ICC's
jurisdiction
is liable to
prosecution
before the
Court, with
full respect
for the
principle of
complementarity.
The resort to
violence must
stop." At
6 pm on April
6 Mansour
returned with
Tunisia's
Ambassador and
said the US
had broken
silence and
blocked the
statement. 12
Minute Video here.
***
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
UN Office: S-303,
UN, NY 10017 USA
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other,
earlier Inner City Press are listed here, and some are available in
the ProQuest service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright
2006-2015 Inner City Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
for
|