At
UN, Guterres
"Co-Location" Idea Reveals Waste,
ICP's Told
of Resistance, USGs
Hang On
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Follow Up on
Exclusive
UNITED NATIONS,
January 12 -- While new UN
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres is behind the scenes
planning a number of
structural changes, reported
on exclusively by Inner City
Press, officials from the
discredited Ban Ki-moon era
are trying and in some cases
succeeding in staying on.
First,
some proposed changes: the UN
Department of Political
Affairs, which had essentially
been promised to Russia (in
the person of Dmitry Titov)
will be no more.
It will
become "DPAP" (or as we call
it, D-Papa), the Department of
Political Affairs and
Prevention Activities. And,
contrary to the understanding
reached just before Guterres
got the SG position, it will
NOT be Russian.
Instead,
Titov is slated to either
become head of
Counter-Terrorism, or of a
combined Rule of Law and
Elections unit. Some say,
elections?
Nor will
the Department of Peacekeeping
Operations, where Herve
Ladsous is now ghoulishly
trying to stay on until June,
remain the same. It is to
become DPO, Peace Operations,
and Atul Khare's unit folded
back in under it.
On January
12, Inner City Press asked
holdover UN spokesman Stephane
Dujarric, UN
transcript here:
Inner City
Press: I wanted to ask
you about… about… I guess some
proposals of… of António
Guterres. Is it the…
this idea of a DPAP, instead
of being a DPA, being a
Department of Political
Affairs, and you know,
prevented… prevention
activities. Is this… is
this a done deal in his
mind? Is that what he's
going? And is the rule
of law office going to be
combined with the elections
office currently headed by
Craig Jenness?
Spokesman: I think
you're asking questions at a
level of granularity which I'm
not able to answer. What
I know, what the
Secretary-General has asked
for and what both departments,
DPA… well, DPA, DFS
[Department of Field Support]
and DPKO [Department of
Peacekeeping Operations], are
working on is co-locating
physically offices in units
that deal with the same
countries and the same
areas. And that's what
we're working on.
Inner City Press: Is DFS
going to be eliminated and put
back under DPKO…?
Spokesman: As I said,
this is where our focus is on
and those are the instructions
he gave.
Inner City Press: And
just something very
specific. You'd said a
lot of the contracts run out
in March. And I wanted
to know, I've heard that some
USGs
[Under-Secretaries-General]
are lobbying to stay on until
June. So, just to know…
Like I'd asked you yesterday
about Mr. [Martin]
Kobler. You said you'd
look into it. Does it
run out in March or is it
June? Mr. Ladsous, is it
June…?
Spokesman: As for Mr.
Kobler, I don't have any
update. I think what you
will see is… what we expect to
see for most of the senior
posts, including USGs, is
vacancy announcements.
And I think that will give you
an indication of when posts
become vacant.
Inner City Press: And
just finally, on the Jeff
Sachs question, it's been
about a week. Is it
permissible for a UN official
to…?
Spokesman: I owe you an
answer on that. I don't
have anything.
Still no
answer on Sachs. But on the
"co-locating," Inner City Press
is informed that on Mali, for
example, there is substantial
overlap and waste -- 40 people
-- and so the Departments, as
institutional protection, are
pushing back. Guterres needs
to reform now, or never, some
say.
Inner City
Press on January 11 asked Ban
Ki-moon's holdover spokesman
Stephane Dujarric to confirm
what P5 Ambassadors said, that
the Libya Envoy Martin Kobler
- whom we like, at least
personally, in full disclosure
-- will leave in March.
Dujarric typically refused to
answer or to follow up. But
now we hear Kobler may stay
until June.
Several UN staff, from top to
bottom, expressed frustration
at Guterres keeping on at
least for now such officials
as Cristina Gallach, and for
not yet providing leadership,
rather saying he will listen.
We are about to get slammed,
one told Inner City Press.
It's time for serious
changes. We agree.
When new UN
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres held his first Town
Hall meeting on January 9,
Inner City Press went in early
to stake it out - that is,
stand in front and speak to
attendees -- as it has in
previous years.
But
this year, due to a
retaliatory eviction by former
Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon's head of
communications Cristina
Gallach and Ban's spokesman
Stephane Dujarric, Inner City
Press could not pass through
the turnstile on the UN's
second floor. And there was no
one in Gallach's Media
Accreditation and Liaison Unit
office. Inner City Press and
its coverage were banned.
But the
Town Hall was on the UN's own
external UN Webcast website,
so Inner City Press from in
front of MALU then the focus
booth it has been reduced to
working out of broadcast the
screen by Periscope, with
voiceover.
Three
hours later, holdover
spokesman Dujarric insisted in
the day's UN noon briefing
that it was only on the UN's
"internal" website, to which
Inner City Press does not have
access. It's simple to check,
but Dujarric didn't.
So here
now, there being no other
way, is the link to the
Periscope.
And to the belated
stakeout in front of the
meeting, and an
explanation afterward.
And here
now some dispatches from the
Town Hall meeting. A UN staff
representative from Nairobi --
where Ban Ki-moon promoted his
own son in law Siddharth
Chatterjee to the top UN job
-- complained of corruption
and a lack of accountability.
Guterres
called the comments "tough"
and pointed out that some say
it is too hard in the UN to
fire people for not working.
It did not seem he meant Under
Secretaries General like
Cristina Gallach and Herve
Ladsous, but rather lower
level UN staff. He spoke about
accountability. We'll see:
those two particularly Gallach
are litmus tests.
A staff
member from the UN Department
of Management said that some
455 electronic questions or
comments had been received. A
speaker from the UN in Beirut
said the online link should
remain open. We agree - and
note that one should be set up
for the impacted public.
Already people are asking
Inner City Press and the Free
UN Coalition For Access how
to reach Guterres, like bkm
[at] un.org.
To a
speaker from South Sudan,
Guterres said that the country
would be one of the topics at
his lunch with members of the
Security Council later in the
day. (One wondered if Yemen
and Burundi, even Western
Sahara, will as well).
UN
Spokesperson Dujarric, who
answers at best 10% of Press
questions, late on Sunday
highlight praise by British
actor Tom Hiddleston at the
Golden Globes award of aid
workers in South Sudan. Fine,
but why didn't the UN protect
them at Terrain in Juba?
As before,
Dujarric seems to relish or
benefit from absurd censorship
threats hanging over the head
of the Press. How long, in an
ostenstibly new UN
administration, will this be
allowed?
Inner City
Press asked Dujarric at the
noon briefing because another
UN official came into the
focus booth to order it to
stop -- which it did -- and
sent this:
"Dear Matthew,
Please note that the SG
townhall meeting is for UN
staff and is not an open
meeting.
Therefore, broadcasting it is
a breach of the guidelines.
With kind regards,
Media Accreditation and
Liaison Unit "
This
is censorship: the meeting was
on the UN's external website.
Not a good start -- Gallach
and Dujarric are leading even
new SG Guterres down the
garden path of censorship, at
the world possible time for
the UN. Watch this site.
The United
Nations at the beginning of
2017 still has no
Freedom of Information Act,
no content neutral standards
for media accreditation and no
right to due process or
appeal for journalists.
This is UNacceptable.
New UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres
should be expected to address
these issues, and to hold at
least monthly sit-down press
conferences. On January 6
holdover spokesman Stephane
Dujarric indicated he would
wait for something to
announce. But Q&A should
not be tied to a particular UN
announcement.
Downgrading to non-resident
correspondent status, and
eviction from UN work-space,
is not a legitimate way to
respond to coverage of UN
irregularities and corruption
such as that alleged in the
ongoing Ng Lap Seng / John
Ashe UN bribery case. It must
be reversed, but also
non-resident correspondents
should not be restricted
to minders or escorts to
cover events on the Conference
Building's second floor.
On January 6,
Dujarric and DPI's Cristina
Gallach led Guterres on a tour
that implied that only those
who pay money to a group which
last month gave an award to
anti-press Ban Ki-moon, and
who are granted (and not
evicted in retaliation from)
UN office space are part of
the UN press corps. Click
here for Inner City
Press' story,
and YouTube
video. This will
ill-serve Guterres, and the
UN.
New SG
Guterres is toured around by Gallach &
Dujarric, Jan 6, 2017, photo by M.R. Lee
Beyond
headquarters, the UN in the
field must become more
responsive to local
journalists. A Free
UN Coalition for Access
member in Hargeisa, Somaliland
complains that the UN in
Mogadishu refuses to answer
simple journalistic questions.
The same has occurred in
Colombia, while the UN's
leadership in Kenya has
informed staff not to speak to
particular media. This is
UNacceptable.
That
former Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon, among his very first
acts upon leaving the UN, took
legal action against reports
of possible corruption during
his tenure reflects badly on
the UN.
FUNCA hopes for a
better 2017, but hope is not
enough. The UN needs a FOIA, a
reversal of recent anti-press
decisions and due process and
content neutral standards, and
at least monthly Secretary
General press conferences, going
forward. We will have more on
this; watch this site.
***
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