On
Haiti Cholera,
ICP Asks UN of
Ban's Half
Apology and
Impunity
Toward
Individuals,
Spin
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 2 --
After the UN
under Ban
Ki-moon killed
more than
10,000 people
in Haiti by
bringing
cholera, Ban
spent years
dodging court
papers and the
issue.
The UN now
says it has a
new approach
to Ban Ki-moon
longstanding
impunity for
bringing
cholera to
Haiti. But on
October 14,
the UN of Ban
and his Under
Secretary
General for
Public
Information
Cristina
Gallach had
Inner City
Press thrown
out of of the
“available”
meeting on the
new approach.
On December 1,
in his last
month as UN
Secretary
General, Ban
Ki-moon is
presenting
this new
approach and
two hours
before his
deputy Jan
Eliasson and
adviser David
Nabarro held
an embargoed
press
conference
about a
just-released
16-page
document.
At 3 pm Ban
Ki-moon
delivered a
non-apology:
“We simply did
not do enough
with regard to
the cholera
outbreak.”
No, the UN
did too much:
it brought
cholera and
killed 10,000
people and
counting.
Inner City
Press: I
wanted to ask
you about
yesterday's…
what Philip
Alston called
a half apology
by the
Secretary-General.
I want to ask
you, I guess,
given that he
was the
Special
Rapporteur on
the case, he
told The Miami
Herald the
following:
He said, "He
apologizes
that the UN
has not done
more to
eradicate
cholera but
not for
causing the
disease in the
first
place.
As a result,
there remains
a good chance
that little to
no money will
be raised and
that the grand
new approach
will remain a
breakthrough
on paper but
one that
brings little
to the victims
and people of
Haiti."
I guess I just
wanted to ask
you, given
that this is
the phrase
that he used,
we didn't do
enough, when,
in fact, some
people are
saying the UN
maybe did too
much in terms
of bringing
it, does this…
Philip Alston
is a longtime
human rights
expert.
What's the
response to
this critique?
Spokesman:
I think
yesterday's
statement by
the
Secretary-General
and, I think,
what we heard
from the
deputy and Dr.
Nabarro, I
think, was a
very important
step
forward.
We clearly
understand
that some
people may not
be pleased or
may not have
heard what
they wanted,
what they
wanted to
hear.
What we hope
they heard is
the
Secretary-General's
words, the
apology, and
also his
sincere
determination,
determination
of the UN
system, to
move forward
on this
two-track
approach.
And I think,
if you heard
from… if you
listened to
the reaction
from the
Member States
that spoke
yesterday
after the
Secretary-General
delivered his
remarks, I
think they
were very
positive.
They were very
encouraging.
Dr. Nabarro is
being tasked
to follow up
with potential
donors to
ensure that we
have the
funding, the
funding that
we need.
Inner City
Press:
In most other
instances
where there's
a mass tort
by… by… of a
kind of
negligence or
not, the
people that
were actually
injured… you
can think of
9/11; you can
think of any
number of
things, where
people that
were injured
were
compensated
rather than
building a
playground.
Spokesman:
Listen, I
think… listen,
I hope both
the Deputy
Secretary-General
and the
Secretary-General
were very
clear.
On track two,
there are two
sub-tracks,
right?
The community
approach and
individual
approach.
It is clear
from what
we've said,
from what the
deputy said,
that initially
we will move
forward on the
community, the
community
approach.
The individual
approach
requires a lot
more steps,
including the
identification
of deceased,
of people who
have been,
who've been
impacted,
further
consideration,
further
consultations
with the
victims'
groups and the
communities.
So no one is
saying no to
the individual
approach.
What we're
saying is, in
the immediate,
we're focusing
on the
community
approach, and
from there, we
will move
forward.
Inner City
Press:
And if Dr.
Nabarro
becomes the
head of WHO,
as he's
running to
become, is
there… I mean,
you were
saying, like,
he's the point
man to raise
money.
Is that…
Spokesman:
I can only
speak to the
situation up
until December
31st at
midnight.
Again, as to
my answer to
[inaudible],
there is a
determination
from the
Secretary-General
to ensure the
transition
goes smoothly.
The incoming
team has been
fully briefed
on all these
files,
including and
especially the
Haiti file.
Since Ban's
approach says
some
unidentified
people the UN
consulted
prefer
payments to
“the
community”
rather than to
the individual
families whose
bread-winners
were killed by
the UN's
cholera, Inner
City Press
asked if the
UN would
praise private
companies like
Coca-Cola if
after mass
torts like in
Bhopal they
bypassed
victims for
“communities.”
Video
here.
Inner City
Press asked
for the UN's
response to
Philip Alston
saying that
Ban followed
the advice and
pressure of
the United
States in
dodging
responsibility
for cholera in
Haiti.
Eliasson said
the legal
position was
adopted before
he took up his
position --
five years
ago.
The 16-page
report says
that the UN
won't consult
communities
until it has
money - but at
the press
conference it
was claimed
that these
consultations
supported not
even trying to
make
individuals
whole. Inner
City Press
raised its
hand to ask
this question,
and another,
but it was not
allowed (while
the media that
moderator
Stephane
Dujarric
seemed most
concerned with
servicing was
allowed a
second
question).
This is UN
spin.
This to: Ban
is not
apologizing
for the UN
bringing
cholera, but
for its
response. And
no apology for
the many years
of lying.
On November
21, Inner City
Press asked
Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, UN transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: I
wanted to, to
ask about
Haiti and
cholera, also
on the
immunity
front.
I'm sure
you've seen
the story in
IRIN where
they're saying
that very
little money
has yet been
contributed
after that
meeting on
October 13th,
but what
jumped out at
me was a quote
by David
Nabarro
saying, it's
hard to have
certainty that
there will be
money without
clarity on
what the
actual
material
assistance
might look
like.
So since he's
part of the
UN's team on
cholera and he
seems to be
saying, like,
the time is
running out,
what is the
time schedule
for the
Secretary-General
to… to lay
forth his
plan?
Does he expect
to vote on it
before he
leaves?
Spokesman:
We expect the
Secretary-General
to present his
plan next week
to the General
Assembly, and
we'd also try
to organise a
briefing for
you, either on
or off the
record, prior
to that, the
day before, so
you get a
little bit of
understanding
and deeper
understanding
of what the
Secretary-General
is going to
propose.
Inner City
Press:
Request that
it be on… on
the record.
Inner City
Press asked
Alston if he
saw Ban
Ki-moon's UN's
impunity for
cholera in
Haiti as
similar to the
lack of
accountability
for rapes,
including of
children, in
the Central
African
Republic.
Alston
distinguished
the two,
saying that
some of the
problems with
peacekeeper
sexual abuse
are up to
member states,
and praising
Ban for firing
Babacar Gaye.
Alston made an
analogy to Ban
backing down
to Saudi
Arabia and its
allies and
dropping the
Saudi led
Coalition from
the Children
and Armed
Conflict annex
on Yemen, and
said that the
United States
is similarly
pressuring
Ban.
Inner City
Press while
quite aware of
the U.S. role
asked Alston
if that
explained for
example Ban
dodging legal
papers, having
the press
thrown out and
if in fact the
11th hour
offer of
charity might
just be to
attempt to
clean up his
legacy for a
run for South
Korea's
presidency.
Alston
said he
couldn't speak
to that, but
that he had
two meeting
with Ban, one
in January and
another, just
with Ban and
Ban's deputy.
He said he met
with the US
Mission's
deputy
ambassador.
Inner City
Press asked if
he meant
Isobel
Coleman,
present in the
October 14
“available”
meeting Inner
City Press was
thrown out of
and banned
from covering.
An Alston
staff
clarified it
had been with
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
Michele Sison.
But what has
by the US
Mission's and
U.S. State
Department's
role?
Inner City
Press: I
wanted to ask
some questions
about
Haiti.
One is about
this teenage
girl that was
shot and
killed while
awaiting
aid. I
wanted to know
whether the…
the media
reports say
that the UN
peacekeepers
fired rubber
bullets and
teargas and
that… but
they… they…
they believe
that the girl
was killed by
Haitian
National
Police with
whom the UN
was
working.
What does the
UN know about
this
death?
And… and,
again, it
seems like you
have this
teargas and
rubber bullet
deployment on…
on, in this
case, a
teenager.
I mean, I
guess it
depends on the
age. But
what was the
rationale for
the UN using
teargas and
rubber
bullets?
Spokesman:
My
understanding
from the
update we
received from
the mission is
that, indeed,
one civilian
died; two more
were injured
yesterday
around Dame
Marie.
The harbour
was, indeed,
secured by the
Haitian
National
Police with
the support of
MINUSTAH
[United
Nations
Stabilization
Mission in
Haiti].
The incident
took place as
the
humanitarian
assistance was
being
offloaded from
a ship.
There was a
demonstration.
Uncontrolled
movements by
the crowd upon
the [arrival
of the]
humanitarian
aid led
MINUSTAH and
the Haitian
National
Police to
attempt to
contain the
potentially
dangerous
situation.
MINUSTAH used
crowd control
measures,
including
rubber
bullets.
The Haitian
National
Police also
participated
in crowd
control
separately.
According to
initial
findings, a
woman who was
badly injured
then died in
the
hospital.
Two other
civilians were
slightly
injured.
The
investigation
is now being
launched by
MINUSTAH.
MINUSTAH
extends its
condolences
and sympathy
to victims and
family of the
deceased.
And we, of
course, call
on all to
respect the
delivery of
humanitarian
aid. I
think we all
understand the
frustration of
the people in
Haiti, but
it's important
that people
respect
humanitarian
aid. There's
an
investigation
going
on. If
there is
uncontrolled
movements of
people in a
dangerous
situation,
obviously,
they will use
appropriate
measures
including
teargas,
including
rubber
bullets, if
needed.
I'm not going
to
second-guess
the actions of
those
colleagues on
the ground for
the time
being, but, as
I said,
MINUSTAH has
now launched
an
investigation.
ICP
Question:
And I wanted
to ask you, in
this room
yesterday, as
I'm sure you
know, Philip
Alston, the
Special
Rapporteur,
said that he…
among other
things, he
said that he
believed the
Secretary-General
had given in
to US pressure
on his legal
position on…
on not
acknowledging
that the UN
brought
cholera to
Haiti and not…
and I also
wanted to… in
looking at Mr.
[Jan]
Eliasson's
response,
Alston had
asked him to
respond to
five questions
by 12
October.
And the
letter… that's
why I asked
you yesterday…
it wasn't
clear to me,
because he did
not… there's
certainly no
numbered
bullet points
in his
response.
But what the
questions
were, what are
the political
and policy
issues that…
that make it
impossible for
the UN to
acknowledge or
make some
legal
recognition in
payments?
Will the
illegal [sic]
advice of OLA
[Office of
Legal Affairs]
be
released?
And will the
payments, to
the degree
they're made,
be solely ex
gratia in
order to avoid
any type of
legal
accountability
for the
cholera?
Spokesman:
I think… I'm
not going to
go into the
advice that
the legal
counsel gave
to the
Secretary-General.
That is
privileged, as
any
relationship
between the
legal counsel
and the
Secretary-General.
We've
explained our
position here
over and over
again.
We very much
heard what Mr.
Alston had to
say and what
other Member
States had to
say. The
legal position
does not
prevent us
from putting
forward
effective
steps to stop
cholera and to
bring
assistance to
those who were
impacted by
the cholera
outbreak.
More details
of the
two-track
approach will
be released by
the
Secretary-General,
and hopefully,
that will
answer some of
your
questions.
QICP
Question:
But do… it's
not my
questions.
I'm thinking
about Mr.
Alston's
questions.
Does the
Secretary-General
believe that
Member States,
for example,
that get
letters from
Special
Rapporteurs
with five
questions
should, in
fact, answer
the
questions?
And I'm asking
you because
Ms. [Cristina]
Gallach didn't
answer…[UN
cut off
reference to
SR Kaye,
letter with
questions
here.]
Spokesman:
No, I
understand…
obviously,
there's
dialogue
between Mr.
Alston and the
Secretariat.
That dialogue
will no doubt
continue.
Questions are
asked, and
they're
answered to
the best of
our ability.
On October 24,
Ban Ki-moon
gave a
grotesque
speech about
the rule of
law, without
mentioning his
years of
dodging legal
papers about
Haiti cholera,
and continued
lack of
accountability.
At midnight on
October 24-25,
Inner City
Press reported
UN Special
Rapporteur
Philip
Alston's
October 5
letter
critiquing
Ban's approach
-- that it is
a travesty
that the UN is
unable to
accept
accountability
-- and
Ban's October
5 response -
not even by
himself, but
by his deputy
Jan Eliasson,
embarrassingly,
here.
This is a
repeat of
impunity.
Meanwhile Ban
threw David
Nabarro under
the bus,
having him
deny science
and
accountability
and spoon-feed
quotes to
Reuters and
AP. This is
shameful, and
entirely
designed to
distance Ban
himself from
his
lawlessness
and lack of
responsiveness,
so he can run
for President
for South
Korea. It is
time for
accountability.
Video
here.
Inner City
Press: about
Haiti. I
wanted to ask
you, first,
about this
report of the…
Philip Alston
will be
presenting
tomorrow to
the GA about
the new
approach.
He's quite
critical of
it. He
says, "There's
not yet a
promise of an
apology or
acceptance of
responsibility.
The regret and
moral
responsibility
don't do it
and set a
terrible"…
they say…
"this will be
the ultimate
ongoing
travesty of
justice."
So I wanted to
know, one,
what… in
advance, what
the response
of the
Secretariat is
to this
critique, two,
why Mr.
Alston's press
release in
this room
that's set for
tomorrow at 1
p.m. wasn't in
The Week Ahead
and everything
else is.
Spokesman:
I don't… for
some reason, I
don't have it
on my
calendar.
If he is
booked for
this room at 1
p.m., I'm sure
somebody will
bring me a
note, but I
don't have him
on here.
ICP
Question:
What do you
make of the
critique…?
Spokesman:
I… first of
all, I think
we're
obviously all
looking
forward to his
briefing in
the Third
Committee
tomorrow.
We will take a
look at
that.
We're not
going to
engage in a
tit for
tat. Mr.
Alston, as all
Special
Rapporteurs,
plays an
important role
in speaking
out freely and
independently.
The
Secretary-General
expressed his
deep regret
and his
personal
commitment
when he was in
Haiti at doing
whatever he
can for the UN
system to help
the people of
Haiti deal
with the
cholera
outbreak.
Deputy
Secretary-General
and others
have outlined
this two-track
approach.
The full
details of it
will be
announced
before the end
of the
Secretary-General's
term.
ICP
Question:
What I wanted
to… I guess…
you're saying
that you don't
want to
prejudge it,
but I've seen
this interview
by the
Secretary-General
or a response
by him to
Deutsche Welle
about…
[brief
interruption]
Spokesman:
Is that
Margaret
Thatcher?
[laughter]
Correspondent:
[inaudible].
Spokesman:
And in
Sherwin's
phone.
Yes,
exactly.
Yeah, yeah,
yeah.
Sounds like
one of my old
English
teachers.
Scared me
there for a
second.
[laughter]
Go
ahead.
Sorry.
ICP
Question:
Sure. I
wanted to ask,
I guess,
you're saying
not to
prejudge, but
one of the
things that
he's most
critical of is
the
Secretary-General's
repeated
assistance
that he
doesn't know
who brought
it. And,
just recently,
I don't know
when this
answer was
given, but
published, I
think, today
by Deutsche
Welle is a
quote by Ban
Ki-moon where
he says, "On
Haiti, we
should have
done more
irrespective
of judicial
immunity or
who caused the
epidemic."
And Alston is
saying these
comments are…
are… create an
ongoing
judicial
travesty when
it's entirely
clear who
caused it.
Spokesman:
I… I think
people are
allowed to
disagree.
We appreciate
Mr. Alston's
work.
The
Secretary-General
has made his
position… has
made his
position
clear.
The legal
position
notwithstanding,
he is focused
until the end
of his term on
trying to get
as much help
to the people
of Haiti to
deal with the
issue of
cholera on the
island.
And tellingly,
while Special
Rapporteur
Philip Alston
this week will
report on the
new approach
to the General
Assembly's
Third
Committee and
will hold a
press
conference in
the UN Press
Briefing Room
- Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric
omitted this
from even his
“revised” Week
Ahead. Like
Dujarric said
when asked why he threw
Inner City
Press out,
he thinks it's
HIS room, to
do with as he
pleases. For
how much
longer?
Alston's
report says,
among other
things, “there
is not yet a
promise of an
apology or an
acceptance of
responsibility.
The repetition
of previous
expressions of
“deep regret”
and “moral
responsibility”
is nothing
new. The
“legal
position of
the
Organization”,
which is to
deny all legal
responsibility,
is
comprehensively
reaffirmed.
The obligation
to provide an
appropriate
remedy is thus
rejected.”
On October 20,
Inner City
Press asked
Ban Ki-moon's
outgoing
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, UN
transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: there
are, in fact,
800 new cases
of cholera
since
Hurricane
Matthew.
And I wanted
to know, given
the UN's role
in having
brought
cholera to
Haiti,
the outcomes
of that
meeting on
Friday, have
any pledges
been
made?
And what does
the
Secretary-General
himself,
personally
feel about…
it's one thing
to say
sanitation
causes its
spread, but if
the UN caused
the
introduction
of the strain
of cholera…
what's his
response?
Spokesman:
I would refer
you back to
what the
Secretary-General
himself said
in
Haiti.
You can look
it up. I
think it was,
it was very
personal and
very
heartfelt, and
that
stands.
We're very
well aware of
the increased
cases of
cholera.
I think Dr.
Nabarro, who
was down there
earlier this
week, even
said they were
probably
underreported.
I think all of
that, it just
underscores
the need to
deal with the
outbreak, both
quickly in
terms of
sending out
chlorine and
water
purification
tablets and
other medical
supplies.
And as we've
said, we're
working on
this two-track
approach, and
more details
will be
unveiled very
soon.
ICP
Question:
I'd asked or
begun asking
about teargas
last time. And
I wanted to
just know what
your response
is. It
seems like it
was reported
that teargas
was used on
“looters”, but
there's
footage of
people taking
infant
children on
motorcycles to
get the
teargas used
by MINUSTAH
had washed off
them.
So, what is…
what's the
protocol for
MINUSTAH and
UN
peacekeepers
to use
teargas…?
Spokesman:
It is very
important for
MINUSTAH to be
able to
protect the
humanitarian
convoys.
They're doing
their
best. If
there are any
issues that
need to be
investigated,
they will.
When?
On October 13
Ban's outgoing
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric said
speeches by
three UN
officials the
next afternoon
would be
available.
Inner City
Press went on
October 14 to
cover it, and
began
Periscoping
the largely
empty
Conference
Room 2. See
video here. Will
Ban use this
as his new
excuse to
leave victims
without
recourse, just
as he is
trying to use
Hurricane
Matthew as a
reason to not
move forward
with his
belated
promise?
During the
speech of
envoy Sandra
Honore, the
second of the
three UN
speakers,
Inner City
Press was told
to leave the
media booth
and the
meeting. When
Inner City
Press said,
check the noon
briefing, it
was ignored.
Upstairs,
Dujarric who
it is appears
is being
replaced
stayed staring
at his desktop
computer and
said, that's
how it is. He
previously got
Inner City
Press thrown
out of an
event in the
UN Press
Briefing Room,
see here
and here.
On October 17,
Inner City
Press asked
Dujarric, UN
transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: as you
may have seen,
Mario Joseph
of the Bureau
des Avocats
Internationaux,
while he was
there, said it
was out…
quote, it is
outrageous for
the
Secretary-General
to come to
Haiti… and
I'll simplify
it to say… to
not directly
address the
UN's
culpability
for having
brought
cholera.
So I wanted to
get your
response to
that.
Also, in terms
of media
coverage, I
did want to
ask you why,
during the
meeting in
Conference
Room 2 on
Friday on this
very topic,
the press was
ejected while
Sandra Honoré
was
speaking.
Was there some
miscommunication?
And I have
other
questions.
Spokesman:
On the second
part, what I
said both on
Thursday and
Friday is that
the meeting
would be open
to
webcast.
I never said
the meeting
was open.
ICP
Question:
What's the
difference?
If a meeting
can be seen on
television,
why can't the
press be
there…?
Spokesman:
Matthew,
that's just
the way it is.
ICP
Question:
The room was
empty and I
think…
Spokesman:
Everybody… the
room was… it
was attended
by key Member
States, and I
think we were
very pleased
with the
meeting.
ICP
Question:
Then why not
let the press
go?
Spokesman:
And you were
able to follow
the issues on
the
webcast.
On your first
part,
obviously,
everyone is
entitled to
their
opinion.
I think the
Secretary-General
did address,
head on, the
issue of
cholera and,
again,
expressed his…
his regret and
his compassion
and
underscored
that the UN
would be… is
currently
working on a
plan… on a
two-track plan
to address the
issue of
cholera in
Haiti, as the
Deputy
Secretary-General
and others did
on Friday, and
he will go
back to the
General
Assembly soon
with a great…
with more
details.
ICP
Question:
I want to ask
about the use
of tear gas in
Haiti.
Spokesman:
I'll come back
to you.
It has yet to
be answered.
As Ban Ki-moon
nears the end
of his term as
UN Secretary
General, with
his eye on
running for
president of
South Korea,
he or his
advisers have
adopted a new
strategy: do
nothing, but
tell eager
media they are
doing
something, or
will do
something.
That was the
case again on
September 29,
when UN
official David
Nabarro,
already
running to
head WHO,
spoke to a
single media
outlet about
Ban's twice
announced, yet
to be
implemented
about-face on
Haiti cholera.
Beyond
the Vine video
here; UN transcript
here: and
below.
On October 13,
with Ban on
his way to
Haiti, Inner
City Press
asked his
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
the World Bank
and Ban's role
in helping a
South Korean
garment firm
get a sweet
deal in Haiti.
From the UN
transcript:
Inner City
Press: I
wanted to ask
you about
Haiti, and
disaster risk
reduction,
which I saw a
statement by
the
Secretary-General
on
today.
There's a
World
Bank-managed
fund called
the Haiti
Reconstruction
Fund, which
redirected $14
million that
had been
earmarked as
natural
disaster
mitigation.
He… they
earmarked it…
redirected it
to energy
projects.
And people are
pointing to
this as
saying, like,
is there some
coordination
between what
the UN says
and what the
World Bank
does?
And also, I'd
been meaning
for some time
to ask you
about a
report… maybe
you'll deny
this… that for
the for the
Caracol
Industrial
Park in Haiti,
"With the help
of UN
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon, a
former South
Korean trade
minister, the
organizers
recruited
Sae-A Trading
Co., a South
Korean-based
global garment
giant that
supplies many
of the clothes
you buy at
Target,
Wal-Mart, Gap,
Old Navy and
stores…”
Spokesman:
I'm not aware.
ICP
Question:
Are you aware
of that?
Can you ask
him whether,
in fact, he
played a role
in…?
Spokesman:
I'm not aware
of the
report.
On your first
question, I
think it's a
question for
the World
Bank.
On October 10
Ban Ki-moon
held a
two-question
stakeout and
spoke about
Haiti and
Hurricane
Matthew and
even cholera,
but made no
mention of
reparations.
As he walked
away, Inner
City Press
audibly asked,
what about
reparations. Vine here. There was no
answer, nor
when Ban came
out of an
untelevised
meeting on
“financial
solutions”
later in the
day. Financial
solutions for
whom?
There was a
meeting all
afternoon
about Haiti,
but no
stakeout
afterward, a
trend in the
UN of Ban
Ki-moon and
his
peacekeeping
boss Herve
Ladsous. The
UN early in
the day said
only 900 were
killed by its
cholera; it
was changed,
after
complaints it
seems, to
9000.
On October 11,
Inner City
Press asked
Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, UN
transcript:
Inner City
Press: at the
stakeout
yesterday,
when the
Secretary-General
was speaking
about Haiti,
he didn’t
mention the…
the second
part of what
Dr. [David]
Nabarro had
talked about,
which is a…
seemed to be
$181 million
to improve
water, water
and sanitation
and an amount
equal or
greater than
that to
somehow try to
make whole
people that
were… or try
to, that were
the victims
who had family
members die
from
cholera.
Is that… was
it just an
omission on
his part, or
do you think…?
Spokesman:
No, I think
the plan as
outlined in
greater detail
by Dr. Nabarro
stands, and we
hope to be
able to
announce
something by
the
Secretary-General
soonish.
ICP
Question:
And can… I
understand the
formal
announcement
is coming, but
given that Dr.
Nabarro said
these things
in an
interview… it
wasn’t a leak
or anything
else, what is
the
Secretary-General’s
plan, to meet
with Member
States and ask
for money for
each of these
two
baskets…?
[inaudible]
Spokesman:
He will come
back to the
General
Assembly with
a more formal
proposal and,
obviously, a
need for those
proposals to
be generously
funded.
On October 7
in the deadly
aftermath of
Hurricane
Matthew, Inner
City Press
asked UN
spokesman
Farhan Haq, UN
Transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: Even
though the
guest from
Haiti didn't
come, I just
wanted to ask
one question
about that,
which is I've
seen… I guess
Dr. [David]
Nabarro is
down… he's
tweeted that
he's down in
Washington.
He's meeting
with the US
and others
about the
possibility of
the spread of
Cholera in the
wake of this
hurricane.
So I wanted to
know, is what
he had
described to
AFP of $181
million and an
equally-sized
or larger fund
for
reparations
for victims of
the Cholera
that was
apparently
brought by the
UN, is what
he's
discussing
down in
Washington
separate from
that or part
of that?
Deputy
Spokesman:
He's
discussing the
situation in
Haiti
including, as
the
circumstances
now have
dictated, the
current
situation,
which is the
hurricane and
its
impact.
But of course,
there are
concerns,
including the
issue of
Cholera, and I
do believe
that in the
coming weeks,
the
Secretary-General
will also have
more to
present to the
Member States
on this.
September 29
transcript:
Inner City
Press: On
Haiti, I've
seen this
interview by
David Nabarro,
I guess with
AFP (Agence
France-Presse).
It's mostly in
French, and it
seems to be
saying that…
previewing the
plan and
saying some
$181 million
in renewed
funding and at
least that
amount in
reparation to
victims to be
announced by
late
October.
So since he
said it and he
works for the
Secretary-General,
is that the
current
thinking?
Is that a
solid
commitment of
$181 million
for…?
Spokesman:
I think what
we're talking
about is
really a
minimum.
There really…
I think the
Secretary-General
was very
clear.
He said he
would come
back to the
General
Assembly.
He has talked
about the
moral
responsibility
that the UN
has towards
the victims of
the cholera
epidemic and
also helping
Haiti overcome
the structural
issues it has
in fighting
waterborne
diseases.
There really
are two tracks
to this new
approach that
the
Secretary-General
will announce
in more
details
later.
One would be
to intensify
support to the
country for
cholera
control and
response and
address the
sanitation
issues.
And the second
one would be
to provide
material
assistance and
support to
those Haitians
who have been
most directly
affected by
cholera.
Now, both of
those will
require
generous and
active
participation
of
donors.
There has
been… you
know, I think,
for the
two-track
approach, it
will be more
than $185
million, as I
think… I think
Mr. Nabarro
was really
talking about
a minimum for
one of the
tracks.
We've had some
initial
contacts with
donors, and
we'll continue
to do
so. And,
as I said, the
Secretary-General
will present a
more detailed
plan soon to
the General
Assembly.
ICP
Question:
And what's his
goal… I mean,
I'd heard some
reference to
the… I mean,
is it tied in
any way to
the… to the
budget
committee
here, or is it
something he
aims to
raise?
Does he aim to
raise this
money or get
the
commitments
before he
leaves office,
or is he
announcing it
in October
with… what's
the…
Spokesman:
No, I think
the
Secretary-General
aims to get
this well
underway
before he
leaves
office.
Obviously,
this will not
come out of
the regular
budget.
It will have
to be funded
by donors, but
it is
something he
does… he wants
to leave on a
solid footing
by December.
On
Auugst 18
after years of
harming
families in
Haiti after
bringing
cholera there,
Ban's deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq --
who accused
Inner City
Press of
“bullying” him
for actually
asking follow
up questions
-- with a
single email
casts Ban
Ki-moon as
reformed on
accountability.
Has Ban done
anything? No.
He dodged
legal papers.
Likewise after
dropping Saudi
Arabia from
the Children
and Armed
Conflict annex
on Yemen, and
issuing
surreal
statements
equating Saudi
airstrikes to
low-tech
firing across
the border, a
Ban defender
quoted unanmed
Ban officials
that Ban is
about to do
something.
Inner City
Press: to deal
with the
Haitians
impacted, and
these
obviously
include
families who
lost a… a
family member
or breadwinner
who died due
to the
cholera.
So, I guess
what I'm
wondering is,
there are
headlines all
over the world
saying Ban
Ki-moon is
acknowledging
his
responsibility
and putting it
in a very
positive
light.
What… what
exactly… I
mean, what
would you say
to a theory
that says that
these… this
combined with
the Yemen
announcement
that Ban
Ki-moon may or
may not write
to the Saudis
and reiterate
his list is
sort of an
attempt to
make… the
Secretary-General
is taking
action on
these two
controversial
topics without
actually doing
anything.
What has he
actually
done? Is
he going to
write a letter
to Saudi
Arabia?
They're two
issues.
I'm mixing
them because I
see…
Deputy
Spokesman:
You're kind of
mixing two
topics.
If you’re…
ICP
Question:
They came out
on the same
day, and
they're both
quoting
unnamed UN
officials, and
the other one
quotes
you. So,
what is
actually being
done on these
two topics?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Indeed, I'm a
named UN
official.
And what I can
say about
Yemen, on the
question of a
letter…
ultimately,
what I can say
is that
there's an
ongoing review
of measures
that the
Saudi-led
Coalition is
taking to stop
and prevent
violations
against
children and
other
civilians in
Yemen.
That review is
continuing.
And, as you
would expect,
as part of
that review,
there will be
communications
back and
forth.
ICP
Question:
Right, but,
so, it… unless
that story is
inaccurate,
there are
senior Ban
Ki-moon
officials
saying that
this letter's
going
out. And
so, stories
come out
saying Ban
Ki-moon's
getting tough
with the
Saudis.
Is this… given
that the
statement
yesterday sort
of equated a
relatively
unprofessional
attack across
the board onto
Saudi Arabia
with
airstrikes
from the air
that have been
ongoing for
days, what is…
what's the
timeframe for
him to take
action on
Saudi
Arabia?
Two months, as
well?
Deputy
Spokesman:
I don't think
that there's
an
equation.
I think, if
you've
noticed, in
the last four
days, there
have been
three
statements
about
Yemen.
Each of them
say fairly
tough things,
and each of
them apply
across the
board to the
need to
protect
civilians and
particularly
children in
Yemen.
That's one of
his
priorities.
ICP
Question:
Does he now
think it was a
bad idea to
take them off
the list, that
this may have
emboldened
them to take
these
airstrikes?
Deputy
Spokesman:
What we have
said
repeatedly is
that they
continue to be
under
review.
That review is
ongoing.
When Inner
City Press
asked about
this and how
many OTHER
board Han is
on that do
business with
the UN, Ban's
spokesman
Farhan Haq cut
off the
questions and
claimed Inner
City Press was
“bullying”
him. Video
here; UN Transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: Mr. Han
Seung-soo is
also on the
board of
Standard
Chartered
Bank, which
was awarded,
according to
the… the most
recent report
of the… on the
Chief
Executive
Board's
proceedings,
Standard
Chartered Bank
was awarded
the UN's
master
servicing
banking
contract.
So I wanted to
know… I mean,
this is why I
think I was
asking for
kind of a more
comprehensive
response from
the Ethics
Office in
terms of what
restrictions
they've placed
on Mr. Han
Seung-soo,
because if, as
is reflected
by the bank's
website, he's
on the board
of a bank
that, in fact,
has this major
contract with
the UN, can
you please
describe to me
what possible
restrictions
deal with
this?
Deputy
Spokesman:
I've described
to you how the
Ethics
Office's
guidelines
work and that
those
guidelines
apply to Mr.
Han
Seung-soo.
He has engaged
and informed
them of a
number of his
business
dealings, and
they have
taken those
into account.
ICP
Question:
How can you be
on the board
of a… of a… of
a bank that
has a con… you
just made a
point of
pointing out
that Doosan,
although it's
listed in
procurement
contract…
procurement
database,
didn't have
contracts
during this
particular
period of
time.
But if… I'm…
I'm informing
you that the
Chief
Executive
Board's report
said that
Standard
Chartered Bank
has this
contract with
the UN, and
he's on their
board.
So is he still
on their
board, or is
he somehow
half on their
board?
Deputy
Spokesman:
I've described
to you what
the series of
procedures
are, and those
are what
applies to him
as well as to
other special
advisers.
ICP
Question:
So how is…
Deputy
Spokesman:
We're not
going to
interfere with
their own
outside-of-UN
lives by going
into all of
their details
at great
length, but
the Ethics
Office has
been dealing
with this, and
they have a
series of
guidelines,
and he's aware
of them and is
in compliance…
ICP
Question:
How can you be
on a board of
a
corporation…?
Deputy
Spokesman:
You keep
interrupting
me.
ICP
Question:
All
right.
I'm asking
because I see
you already
looking away,
and I want…
this is a very
simple
question.
Deputy
Spokesman:
I'm looking at
someone else
who is raising
a hand.
But, please,
behave
yourself.
You need to
understand
that when
someone is
asking a
question, you
allow them to
answer.
I've actually
lost my train
of
thought.
So I'll have
to gain it…
ICP
Question:
I'm asking…
I'm willing to
because I have
a follow-up
question…
Deputy
Spokesman:
Because the
continued
interruptions…
you're doing
it again…
actually break
people's train
of
thought.
He has been in
touch with the
Ethics
Office.
And, like I
said, they
have a series
of remedies
for the steps
which I've
detailed.
Beyond that,
this is what
we have.
ICP
Question:
What other
boards is he
on?
That's my
follow-up
question.
Deputy
Spokesman:
Matthew,
Matthew…
ICP
Question:
It's
simple.
It's simple,
because he's
on the board
of a bank that
does business
with the UN…
I'm finishing
my
question.
You're cutting
me off.
Deputy
Spokesman:
No…
ICP
Question:
My question
is, how many
corporate
boards that do
business with
the UN…
Deputy
Spokesman:
Matthew, when
I start to say
something in
reply to your
question and
then you cut
me off, then
don't accuse
me of cutting
you off.
ICP
Question:
Right, you
tried to call
on someone
else, and I
was asking
another
question.
How many
boards is Han
Seung-soo on
that do
business with
the UN?
Deputy
Spokesman:
At this stage,
you're
actually just
trying to
bully
me. To
be honest,
I've given you
a wealth of
information
about this,
including
details about
how the Ethics
Office goes
about
it.
That's what
we've
got.
Yes.
Carole?
“Early in
2016, the
master banking
services
agreement
between the
Secretariat
and Standard
Chartered Bank
will be the
first such
global
contract to be
signed,
enabling
United Nations
system
entities to
access banking
and treasury
services in 28
countries from
Standard
Chartered Bank
and its
subsidiaries.”
(undocs.org/E/2016/56)
So Ban Ki-moon
and his Ethics
Office let
Ban's mentor
and adviser
Han Seung-soo
serve as UN
Special
Adviser for
Water and
Disaster Risk
Reduction and
give speeches
in that
capacity while
Doosan, on
whose board
Han sits,
sells water
desalinization
equipment to
the same
countries he
speaks to for
the UN.
Han is on the
board of
Standard
Charter bank,
awarded the
UN's master
banking
services
contract. This
is Ban's UN.
On August 9
Inner City
Press asked
Ban's
spokesman
Farhan Haq
directly about
Han Seung-soo
giving
speeches at UN
special
adviser on
water while
Doosan, which
he directs,
makes sales
including but
not limited to
water
desalinization
equipment in
the same
places. This
is a blatant
(mis) use of
the UN, by Ban
Ki-moon's
mentor.
The UN left
Ban Ki-moon's
webpage down
for August 9,
and as of 9 am
on August 10
has still not
put the August
9 transcript
online. Haq
read out some
generic
advocacy
points from
Ban's Ethics
Office, that
restrictions
are
custom-designed
for particular
conflicts of
interest, but
would not
disclose a
single
restriction on
Han Seung-soo.
Anyway, the
public record
speaks for
itself. Watch
this site.
After Inner
City Press
asked, on
August 8 Ban
Ki-moon's
Deputy
Spokesman
Farhan Haq
said, "I was
asked last
week about
Special
Adviser Han
Seung-soo and
his dealings
with a company
named Doosan
Infracore. Mr.
Han disclosed
this outside
interest to
the
Organization,
and the Ethics
Office
provided
advice on the
matter.
Mr. Han was
informed of
the
restrictions
on his
involvement
with the
company in the
context of the
nature of his
contract with
the
Organization,
under which he
serves on a
"when actually
employed"
basis.
The measures
put in place
serve to
ensure that
the UN staff
rules and
regulations
are adhered
to, that there
is no conflict
of interest,
and that the
Organization's
interests are
fully
protected."
Inner City
Press: I want
to ask, given…
you said that
there's some…
advice was
given to him
about how to
operate to
comply with
the
rules. I
wanted sort
of… sort of
throw in a new
fact, which is
that Doosan
also does
business and
has large
contracts
with, for
example, Saudi
Arabia.
So I'm
wondering, can
you provide a
little more
detail on what
the safeguards
are for… for a
UN Special
Adviser to be
on the board
of a
for-profit
corporation
that deals
not… not only
does business
with the UN
but which does
business with…
with countries
with… the
Secretary-General
himself had
said, like,
Saudi
financial
threats caused
him to change
policy
essentially.
So I'm
wondering…
Deputy
Spokesman:
That's… those
are two very
separate
issues.
ICP
Question:
So you
say. I'm
simply asking
you, can you
describe what
the safeguards
are?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Like I said,
there are
safeguards put
in
place.
He brought
this to the
attention of
the UN
organization
in 2015, last
year, at a
time, by the
way, when
Doosan did not
have business
dealings with
the United
Nations.
Over that
period, since
then,
guidelines
have been
prepared to
make sure that
there is no
conflict of
interest and
that the
organization's
interests are
protected.
But, like I
said, this is
part of the
way the
process works
in terms of
dealing with
officials,
including
those, like
Mr. Han
Seung-soo, who
are on a
when-actually-employed
basis and are
not full-time
employees.
ICP
Question:
Okay. Is
it possible to
know what
these
guidelines
are?
Deputy
Spokesman:
These are the
details I've
gotten.
I just got
them over the
past hour.
After
publishing
these links,
Inner City
Press on
August 4 asked
Ban Ki-moon's
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq
about it, and
about Jane
Holl Lute for
the second
time -- this
time, answered
unlike the
five days of
questions
about UN
Security
Inspector
Matthew
Sullivan being
on an outside
board of a
corporation
which has held
events for,
among other
things,
sneakers in
the UN.
So does the UN
only answer
when it can
say that Yes,
Ban Ki-moon
approved? On
August 5,
Inner City
Press asked
again, video
here,UN transcript
here:
Inner City
Press:
Yesterday I'd
asked about
Han Seung-soo
and whether
he's the
Special
Adviser.
Deputy
Spokesman:
Yes, yes, he
remains
Special
Adviser.
I've put in a
request to the
Ethics Office
to see whether
he's made any
notifications
of different
business
dealings.
I believe he
may have done
some, but I'm
trying to get
it from the
Ethics
Office.
Alas, at this
time of
summer, there
are some
offices that
are… will be
harder to get
replies back
from so I'll
let you know
once I have
it.
Question:
Sure. I
guess I want
to
understand.
There's a rule
that says a
person needs
approval from
the
Secretary-General
for
outside.
Does that
apply here, or
is it just a
matter of
saying that
you're doing
it?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well, first I
need to check,
again, whether
the Ethics
Office has had
any
notifications
of any other
activities.
Three days
later, no
answer from
the UN - even
as Doosan's
Saudi business
is exposed:
Doosan, "a
South Korea
power
equipment
maker, said
today that it
signed a 1.1
trillion won
($1.2 billion)
contract to
build a power
and
desalination
plant in Saudi
Arabia." This
is Ban
Ki-moon's UN
see new
film here.
Inner City
Press: I
thought you
might have
it.
Yesterday, I'd
asked
Stéphane, and
he'd said it
was not an
unfair
question,
whether the
Secretary-General
approved the
service of
Jane Holl Lute
on the Union
Pacific's
Board.
Deputy
Spokesman:
Oh, yes.
Yes, we
checked, and
the answer is
yes, she did
seek approval
and did
receive it.
ICP
Question:
And what I
wanted to ask
as a second
question,
which is that
the special…
is Mr. Han
Seung-soo
still the
Special
Adviser on
Water and Risk
Reduction?
Deputy
Spokesman:
I believe he
was appointed
that some time
ago.
Whether he
still has that
portfolio or
not, I would
need to check.
ICP
Question:
Because what I
want to know
is that he's
also on the
board of
directors of a
South Korean
firm, Doosan
Infracore,
which is
listed in the
UN procurement
database as
doing business
with the
UN. So,
I wanted to
know if maybe
you can get
like… actually
send me the
answer,
whether, in
fact, if these
two services
are
concurrent,
whether it's
been approved
by the
Secretary-General
and whether…
whether
there's some
special kind
of safeguards
that he recuse
himself from
business
involving the
UN or whether
it's possible
to be a UN
Special
Adviser on the
board of a
company that
does business
with the UN.
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well, first
and foremost,
I'll need to
check what his
status is,
whether he's
an adviser or
not.
Have a good
afternoon,
everyone.
The UN was set
to play host
on August 2 to
a for-profit
event led
by a
group on
which UN
Security
official
Matthew
Sullivan is on
the board of
directors,
apparently
with the
approval of UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon, who
has yet to
address his
and his Under
Secretaries
General's role
in the Ng Lap
Seng / John
Ashe bribery
scandal which
resulted on
July 29 in a
20 month
prison
sentence for Sheri
Yan's, whose
father's
one-man show
Ban attended
in the UN
Secretariat
lobby.
Now Ban's lead
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric,
having retured
from two weeks
away, has flat
out refused to
say whether,
as UN rules
require, Ban
Ki-moon
approved UN
Security
Inspector
Matthew
Sullivan's
presence on an
outside board
of directors.
Video
here.
On August 3,
after
publishing the
above, Inner
City Press
asked Ban's
spokesman
Dujarric about
it. Video
here,UN transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: I'm
going to go at
this a
different
way. On
this… the
issue that
there is a
rule saying
that the UN… I
mean, I can
quote from it,
but saying you
should receive
permission for
outside
engagements.
Rather than
ask about the
one you've
refused to
answer on, I
want to ask
you
this.
Jane Holl Lute
apparently was
hired in
February 2016
for this post
or put into
the post of
sexual abuse,
bring it under
control.
In April of
2016, she was
named to the
board of
directors of
Union Pacific,
which seems to
pay $250,000 a
year.
So, on this…
in this case,
can you say
whether this
outside
engagement was
approved by
the
Secretary-General?
Spokesman:
I can check if
that outside
engagement
exists and see
what I can
say.
Inner City
Press:
There was a
press release
by…
Spokesman:
I
understand.
I have not
seen the press
release.
Inner City
Press:
Do you
acknowledge
it's a fair
question to
ask whether…?
Spokesman:
I'm not saying
it's not a
fair question.
Inner City
Press:
When you
answer that
one, maybe you
can answer the
other one.
If
Ban's Office
answers, as it
should, in
this case, why
has it refused
in the case of
UN Security
Inspector
Matthew
Sullivan and
the for profit
event? Watch
this site.
On
August 1, when
Inner City
Press asked
about Jack
Brewer listing
himself as a
"UN Ambassador
for Peace and
Sport," Ban's
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq
said that the
event is
"canceled,"
there will be
no answers on
the three
prior events
or Sullivan
being on the
board or Jack
Brewer listing
himself as a
UN Ambassador
for Peace and
Sport.
"the decision
has been made
to POSTPONE
this Tuesday’s
(August 2)
Peace Summit
at the United
Nations... Our
team is
scheduling a
new date –
tentatively
during the
week of August
15, 2016. The
plan is to
select and
announce the
new date
within the
next few
days."
This is a
cover-up. This
is impunity.
This is Ban's
UN.
Last
week Ban's
deputy
spokesman Haq,
rather than
answer this or
which member
state or UN
Department is
the sponsor of
the August 2
event, accused
Inner City
Press of
“unethical”
Googling,
implying that
because Ban
and his USG
Cristina
Gallach
evicted
Inner City
Press as it
investigated
their links to
the Ng Lap
Seng scandal
-- see, for
example, this
OIOS
audit at
Paragraphs
37-40 and
20(b) --
Inner City
Press is now
precluded from
investigating
that or other
corruption in
Ban's UN.
As the
UN bribery
scandal
gathered force
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon called
for an audit
by the UN
Office of
Internal
Oversight
Services of
the Global
Sustainability
Foundation
(GSF), David
Ng Lap Seng's
Sun Kian Ip
Group and its
affiliates
including the
"World Harmony
Foundation"
and
pleaded-guilty
Francis
Lorenzo's
South South
News, among
others.
While as of
July 27 Ban
and his Under
Secretary
General
Cristina
Gallach still
have this last
"bribery
conduit" in a
UN office
after evicting
Inner City
Press for
investigating
it, and them,
more dubious
events are
scheduled for
Ban's UN. (Gallach, who appeared with Lorenzo,
spoke in the
GA Hall on
July 29 -
given her
retaliatory
evition of
Inner City
Press, it
would only
half cover the
event with one
of Ban's
minders.)
Rather
than answer
this simple
question, Haq
said he is not
aware of any
problem with
the
individual.
Does that mean
that Ban
Ki-moon has
given up even
pretending to
enforce UN
ethics rules?
Or that Ban
Ki-moon has
approved this
UN Inspector's
moonlighting
with entities
linked with
the UN's
Lorenzo / John
Ashe (RIP) /
Ng Lap Seng
bribery
scandal?
Even the
simple
question of
who sponsored
the use of the
UN on August
2, a mission
or a UN
department,
was
stonewalled by
Ban's Haq. He
said, ask the
group holding
the event.
Well, no. The
UN premises
are being
used, and this
requires a
sponsor.
So l'affaire
Matthew
Sullivan,
which Ban's
spokesman is
trying to stop
investigation
of by calling
even Googling
unethical, is
connected to
the Francis
Lorenzo UN
bribery
scandal.
Perhaps this
explains Ban's
spokesmen
stonewalling.
Lead spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric
stonewalled
Inner City
Press'
previous questions
about
Montessori
Model UN.
On July 28
when Inner
City Press for
the second
time asked Ban
Ki-moon's
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq
about the
specifics of
for-profit
events in the
UN and
Sullivan's
presence on
the board of
directors of
the events'
sponsor,
rather than
answer Haq
tried to call
Inner City
Press'
research and
reporting
“unethical,”
going so far
as to ask if
it had started
research AFTER
it was Banned
from covering
UN meeting on
Haiti and
South Sudan.
In fact, Inner
City Press
reported on
the
“concussions”
event long
before Ban and
Cristina
Gallach ousted
it on February
19, and
Sullivan on
February 22
told Inner
City Press it
was Banned
from UN
premises
worldwide.
Haq's boss
Stephane
Dujarric
claimed that
day that
Sullivan had
gone beyond
the ouster
ordered by
Gallach. If
so, why did
Sullivan do
it?
Ban's
UN has become
a place where
officials at
all levels
think they can
sell access to
the UN, since
Ng Lap Seng so
easily bought
it. The
scandal, as
Inner City
Press will
shortly
report, are
connected.
Ban's UN's
response to
reporting is
to evict the
Press, then to
question
whether
Googling is
somehow
unethical. Vines here and here
and here
and
here. Then
video
here.
From
the UN
Transcript:
Inner City
Press:
yesterday I
asked you
about this
event that is
scheduled for
2 August and
you told me to
speak to the
group and Mr.
Sullivan
didn't know he
was on the
list, and
wouldn't speak
at it.
Since then
I've seen
there are at
least three
other events
at which he
did speak by
the same
group,
involving the
same group and
that he is on
board of
directors of
the sponsor of
the 2 August
thing, that
Jackie Brewer
Foundation.
So I guess
what I wanted
to know is,
one, to me it
seems strange
that he didn't
know that he
was listed by
them if he is
on the board
of
directors.
But I also
wanted to ask,
I've seen the
Secretary-General
orders called
outside
activities
that say staff
members should
not engage in
outside these
activities
without the
approval of
the
Secretary-General.
So I wanted to
know, since
this is a
private,
for-profit
company that
has had its
stock pitched
based on the
involvement of
UN DSS
(Department of
Safety and
Security),
whether the
Secretary-General
has, in fact,
approved this
or not?
And, if not,
what happens
next?
Deputy
Spokesman:
As I told you,
he is not
appearing at
their
function.
He was not
aware of this.
ICP
Question:
Did you look
into it?
He is on the
board of
directors of
the group, so
I'm asking.
Deputy
Spokesman:
This person
who, by the
way, has
informed me
that you
apparently
have taken
some sort of
gripe with him
because he
tried to talk
to you at a
stakeout.
I'm aware…
ICP
Question:
It's not a
gripe.
I'm asking you
about an
official DSS
official on
the
board.
You are
cutting me
off. I
thought that
was
unprofessional.
I'm asking a
question, how
does this
regulation
apply?
Deputy
Spokesman:
I was actually
in the process
of answering
you, and then
you can
talk.
This is how
conversations
go: I talk and
you talk and
so forth.
ICP
Question:
Just that you
walk away, so
that is why
I'm making
sure I want to
ask, there are
number of
other
questions on
this.
Deputy
Spokesman:
Matthew, that
is not
fair. I
take a huge
amount of
questions from
you, as every
transcript and
every video
will
show.
Now, I have no
problem with
you asking
questions.
I do not think
that you
should try to
use the
briefing in
terms of
personal
vendettas
against
people.
If that is
what you are
doing, it's
unethical and
I would have a
problem with
that.
ICP
Question:
You can say
whatever you
want.
Okay, what I'm
asking, a
senior UN DSS
official is,
this is all
online, these
are all… you
could have
found them
yourselves
with ten
minutes of
Googling.
He is on the
board of
directors of a
group that you
said didn't
know put him
on the list
and there have
been three
separate
events, one
about
sneakers, one
about
concussions in
the NFL
(National
Football
League), and
these have all
taken place in
the ECOSOC
(Economic and
Social
Council)
Trusteeship
Chamber.
So my question
is for the
service of
this
individual on
the board of
directors of a
for-profit
company for a
for-profit
event, has the
Secretary-General
given
permission?
And, if not,
is this
reflective of
a lack of due
diligence as
in the Ng Lap
Seng case,
"Yes" or "No"?
Deputy
Spokesman:
First of all,
to the extent
that DSS ever
gives
briefings at
these, there
are briefings
about security
conditions.
Those are
standard;
outside of
those, I'm not
aware…
ICP
Question:
I urge you to
look at the
press
releases.
Deputy
Spokesman:
I'm not aware
of anything
that is not a
standard
briefing.
Second of all,
did you do any
of this
Googling
before you had
your
conversation
in the
corridors with
him?
ICP
Question:
Yes, I
have.
I've been
actually
following… I
wrote about
the concussion
event because
it's a joke
these events
take place in
the UN that
are raising
money, so I'm
now I'm asking
you about
these events
because you
said he didn't
know and it's
not
credible.
He has done
three
events.
Look at them
and see
whether there
were safety
concerns.
Deputy
Spokesman:
Like I said, I
have talked to
this person
and this is
what he said.
When after
publishing a
story exposing
the notice and
Sullivan's
listed
involvement
Inner City
Press asked
Bna's deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq
about it, Haq
said he had
spoken with
Sullvian who
said he had
not been aware
he was listed,
and is not
involved. Haq
refused ot
answer more
about the
event, and cut
off Inner City
Press'
questions. Video here.
This is not
credible. In
fact, Matthew
Sullivan is on
the board of
directors
of the group
holding the
event, which
is either a
violation of
UN rules or
was approved
by Ban "Fast
and Loose"
Ki-moon. The
applicable
rule:
"ST/AI/2000/13
Outside
activities
Section
2 Staff
members
engaging in
outside
activities
authorized
under the
present
instruction
shall make
clear to the
organizers and
participants
in such
activities,
including any
employers,
that they act
in their
personal
capacity and
not as
representatives
of the United
Nations.
Section 3
3.1
Under staff
regulation 1.2
(o), a staff
member shall
not engage in
any outside
occupation or
employment,
whether
remunerated or
not, without
the approval
of the
Secretary-General.
For the
purposes of
the present
instruction,
the expression
'occupation'
shall include
the exercise
of a
profession,
whether as an
employee or an
independent
contractor."
Here
is a photo
of Sullivan
with the
people he says
he doesn't
know listed
him for the
August 2
event.
There are been
other events
with Sullivan,
for example here:
"MagneGas
Announces
Panelists for
World Water
Day Summit at
the UN... The
Summit will
begin with a
welcome from
the CEO of
MagneGas
Corporation
Ermanno
Santilli and
Inspector
Matthew
Sullivan of
the United
Nations
Department of
Safety and
Security."
And another
("Reelcause,"
here in PDF)
and yet another:
"Discussing
the GTX
SmartSoles
with various
officials
including
Inspector
Matthew
Sullivan of
the
United
Nations’
Department of
Safety and
Security."
In fact, the
for profit
company has
had it stock
touted citing
UN Sullivan's
involvement, here:
DirectView
Holdings,
"facilitated a
number of
introductions
and
collaborative
meetings for
DirectView
executives
throughout the
course of the
week including
with the
United
Nations'
Inspector of
Operations
from the
Department of
Safety and
Security."
While Ban
Ki-moon cited
immunity /
impunity for
10,000 killed
by cholera in
Haiti, a
meting on
which Sullivan
Banned Inner
City Press
from on July
26, doesn't
this implicate
at least US
securities
laws?
Since the
above is
easily
available
online, Ban
Ki-moon's
Office of the
Spokesperson's
denial and
stonewalling
is worse then
negligent.
Under
Ban Ki-moon,
as shown in
the Ng Lap
Seng / John
Ashe case
investigation
of which
resulted in
Ban evicting
Inner City
Press from the
UN in
retaliation,
using
Sullivan,
everything has
become for
sale.
How high does
this
particular
scam go in the
Department of
Safety and
Security,
whose Captain
McNulty and
seven officer
physically
ousted Inner
City Press on
February 19? Audio
here;
McNulty initially
refused to
identify
himself.
DSS later cited
a non-public
Handbook to
justify Inner
City Press'
ouster, here.
Is USG Peter
Drennan in on
this? Michael
"Mick" Brown,
who oversees
McNulty? There
are some fine
people in DSS,
but it must be
cleaned up,
and all
retaliation
reversed and
addressed.
How
about the
Department of
Management
which is
titularly in
charge of
these events
in the UN,
including
Andrew Nye,
Craig Boyd and
British
Assistant SG
Stephen Cutts?
Ban Ki-moon's
UN is corrupt
throughout,
and retaliates
against the
Press which
pursues and
reports on
it. The
UN's ouster
and eviction
of Inner City
Press, and
harassment and
censorship
since, has
been pure
retaliation.
Now what?
Here's the
notice for the
August 2
event,
followed by
the UN's
transcript of
Ban's Haq's
denials:
"COPsync
Co-sponsors
#Stand2Protect
Peace Summit
at the United
Nations
DALLAS, July
26, 2016
/PRNewswire/
-- COPsync,
Inc. (NASDAQ:
COYN),
announced
today that
they are
co-sponsoring
the
#Stand2Protect
Peace Summit
in conjunction
with UN
Ambassador
Jack Brewer,
the Blue Alert
Foundation,
the United
Federation for
Peacekeeping
and
Sustainable
Development,
and Trust 2
Protect. The
Summit will be
held at the
United Nations
Headquarters
on August 2,
2016, from
3:00 pm - 6:00
pm EDT.
The goal of
the United
Nations
#Stand2Protect
Peace Summit
is to bring
together
community and
global
leaders, law
enforcement,
politicians
and
influencers to
discuss real
solutions to
end the
growing
distrust
between
communities
and law
enforcement.
Prominent
speakers at
the Summit
will include
... Inspector
at the United
Nations
Headquarters
Mathew
Sullivan"
This is
a for-profit
company,
selling
services to
Police
Departments.
Why is UN DSS
Matty Sullivan
involved?
Inner City
Press after
publishing the
above asked
Ban Ki-moon's
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq,
UN transcript
here and
below; video
here
Inner City
Press:
Yesterday,
there was a
public
announcement
by a
for-profit
company called
COPsync Inc.
that is going
to hold an
event in the
UN on 2 August
called “Stand
to Protect
Peace
Summit”.
And basically,
I mean, it's a
for-profit
company and it
sells products
and services
to police
departments.
And maybe they
have rented
out space in
the UN, maybe
you will find
this out, but
I wanted to
ask you about
is, they list
as a
participant as
part of their
pitch to
attend it the
involvement of
Inspector of
the UN
Headquarters
Matthew
Sullivan, a UN
DSS
[Department of
Safety and
Security]
individual.
So, I wanted
to ask you
either now or
later today,
what is the
UN's
involvement in
this
for-profit
event and how
is it
consistent
with the
commitments to
do due
diligence
after the Ng
Lap Seng
South-South
News scandal?
Deputy
Spokesman:
I actually
spoke with Mr.
Sullivan
earlier
today.
He has
confirmed to
me that he had
not heard of
this
particular
speaking
engagement
before, was
not aware of
it, and is not
participating.
ICP
Question:
They put it
out on PR
Newswire.
So, what is
this
involving?
Can you get an
answer?
They obviously
know who he
is, so what is
his
involvement
with the Jack
Moore
Foundation and
with these
individuals?
Deputy
Spokesman:
He is not
involved in
this.
That is what
he has told
me. For
anything
further, you
need to ask
them.
ICP
Question:
But, it's in
the UN, it's a
for-profit
event in the
UN, so I'm
asking in the
wake of the Ng
Lap Seng
scandal.
What is the
UN's
involvement in
this event
taking place?
Deputy
Spokesman:
First of all,
you are trying
to tie into
similar
things.
I don't speak
for this
company.
You would have
to talk to
that company
about what
they're
doing.
Regarding how
they do their
arrangements,
you would have
to ask
them.
Regarding Mr.
Sullivan, no,
he is not
involved in
this?
ICP
Question:
Are they
paying the UN
to use the
room?
It's being
held in UN
Headquarters,
2 August at 3
p.m.
Deputy
Spokesman:
This is not
something… the
UN does not
charge for the
use of the
UN. Yes?
ICP
Question:
Why are they
in the UN?
Deputy
Spokesman:
You would have
to ask that
company.
Ban's Haq
said, ask
them. But they
have already,
according to
the UN, lied
about
Sullivan's
involvement.
The UN under
Ban Ki-moon is
a wild west of
corruption
that is not
being cleaned
up - instead,
Ban throws
about the
Press that is
asking about
it.
On July 1,
Inner City
Press asked
this Ban
Ki-moon
spokesman,
Stephane
Dujarric,
about the
superseding
indictment of
Ng Lap Seng to
include UNDP
and all acts
through
September
2015.
Paragraph 12
names the
Secretary
General.
Video
here; UN
Transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: the UN
bribery case
of Ng Lap Seng
has now had a
superseding
indictment
that accuses
Mr. Ng of
buying
benefits from
UNDP (United
Nations
Development
Programme) and
expands the
time limit of
the case up to
September
2015.
So, one, I'm
wondering if
you have any
comment on
this, as it
seems to be an
expanding
case.
And, two, I
want to
reiterate the
request now
for several
months that
UNDP hold a
press
conference, at
least on the
audit that it
released, and…
and state
where… why the
money that was
given…
Spokesman:
I think on
your… on your
second part,
you can
address that
request to
UNDP.
Inner City
Press: I
have.
Spokesman:
I have not
seen the new
indictment, so
I cannot
comment on it.
Inner
CityPress:
You had said
from here that
they would do
it. I've
spoken to the
head of the
office, and he
hasn't done
it. I'm
wondering, has
the Secretary,
Ban Ki-moon,
head of the
system…
Spokesman:
I know where
we are.
Inner City
Press:
Cover up.
Spokesman:
You're always
free and have
always been
free to
express your
opinions.
Dujarric said
Inner City
Press is free
to say what it
wants . Yes:
from the
street, to
which Ban and
his Head of
Communications,
with an assist
from Dujarric,
first threw
Inner City
Press on
February 19 (audio
here) then
evicted its
files (Video
here.) On
July 1,
Dujarric at
noon said he
hadn't read
the
superseding
indictment.
Then he left
the UN just
after 3 pm,
with no
briefing for
six days. This
IS a cover up,
on which we're
have more.
The
audit of Ban's
Secretariat,
completed
early this
year but first
put online
by Inner City
Press,
directly
criticizes
Cristina
Gallach, the
Under
Secretary
General for
Communications
and Public
Information.
On June 29,
Inner City
Press asked UN
spokesman
Farhan Haq, video here,
UN transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: Monday
down in… in
Federal Court,
there was a
hearing for
Mr. Ng Lap
Seng in the
ongoing case,
and Assistant
District
Attorney
[Daniel]
Richenthal
basically
widened the
case and said
they're going
to be… there's
more things
they're
looking at as
to Ng Lap
Seng, and he
also described
in more detail
a, quote,
conduit of
bribery taking
place within
the UN.
And I wanted
to know, since
you've said
you're
monitoring it,
what is the
UN's response
to the new
information
that was
presented on
Monday?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Yeah, we are
aware of the
latest
information,
and, as I've
pointed out,
the situation
of South-South
News is under
review.
It continues
to be under
review, but
certainly, any
new
information is
useful in
light of that.
After the
above, a
corporate news
wire which has
a conflict of
interest on
this passed
through South
South News'
claims that it
has had "no connection with any government at any level"
- this is
false. But the
conflicted
corporate
wire, with its
own Permanent
seat on the
board of hte
UN
Correspondents
Assocation
which took
money from
Ng's South
South News,
merely passes
through the
denial. Call
it journalism?
We'll have
more on this.
On June 27,
former South
South News
reporter
turned
spokesperson
for John Ashe
and now his
family wrote
to the UN
press corps,
some of whom
she saw over
the weekend:
"Dear Friends
and Dear UN
and Media
Representatives,
I am kindly
forwarding a
Statement from
the Family of
the late John.
W. Ashe,
President of
the UN General
Assembly 68th
Session, at
the request of
his widowed
wife, Anilla
Cherian.I have
accepted to
forward this
Statement in
my personal
capacity and
in honor of
Ambassador
Ashe’s legacy
as a
long-serving
diplomat.
I will not be
addressing any
questions and
I do
appreciate
your
understanding.
It was very
nice seeing
several of you
over the
weekend. I
hope you are
all doing
well."
If the goal
was to
distinguish
South South
News from John
Ashe and Ng
Lap Seng, this
doesn't do it.
The audit
deals with
South South
News - which
as of June 27
STILL has a UN
office, photo
here,
UNlike Inner
City Press. In
Ban's UN one
only gets due
process if one
has money, or
pays money, as
South South
News did,
including to
the UN
Correspondents
Association
which then
gave Ng Lap
Seng a
photo-op with
Ban. Or as the
Saudis did to
get Ban to
remove them
from the Yemen
Children and
Armed Conflict
annex.
On June 27 in
Federal Court,
Assistant U.S.
Attorney
Daniel
Richenthal
said that
South South
News was a
conduit for
bribery
involving the
now
conveniently
(and
mysteriously)
deceased
former PGA
John Ashe.
(Some with
links to Ashe
try to erase
all trace, but
here
is one:
UNCA with
AAshe's
spokesperson
Konja,
formerly of
South South
News), which
one
wire-with-a-conflict
covering this
story never
mentions.
Compare to this.)
Meanwhile
while Inner
City Press can
only work with
minders, its
office given
to Akhbar
Elyom's
correspondent,
a former UNCA
presdient,
sits empty and
Gallach
gallavants in
Paris. We'll
have more on
all this.
Nor does Ban's
audit mention
that his Sri
Lanka adviser
Vijay Nambiar
and his
spouse, Ban
Soon-taek,
were both
present at the
founding of
the Global
Sustainability
Foundation;
the latter
took photos
with South
South News'
indicted
Vivian Wang at
the UN
Correspondents
Association
ball where
UNCA gave Ng,
from whose
South South
News it took
money, a photo
op with Ban
himself.
On April 16,
at Ban's and
his USG
Cristina
Gallach's
direction,
Inner City
Press' long
time UN office
in S-303 was
evicted and
five boxes of
files were
dumped onto
First Avenue.
Video
here and here.
On April 20,
the Free UN
Coalition for
Access sign on
S-303 was
removed (photo
here)
without the
consent of
Inner City
Press' office
mate, also a
FUNCA member,
who was told
that the lock
was being
changed,
presumably to
sell the
office to
someone else.
Inner City
Press
immediately
objected to
MALU, the DSG,
Chef de
Cabinet and
Spokesman,
putting them
on notice.
And lo and
behold it was
given to a
former UNCA
president who
never comes to
the UN, never
asks
questions:
Saana Youssef
of Egyptian
state media
Akhbar Elyom.
This is Ban's
UN.
UNCA,
at least under
Giampaolo
Pioli, openly
tells people
to pay it
money, it can
get them UN
official
space. This is
corruption.
Now
since the
eviction of
Inner City
Press, South
South News has
sent out a
press release
saying that
despite the
guilty plea by
its President
Francis
Lorenzo and
indictment of
its Vice
President
Vivan Wang, it
is clean - and
blames its
problems on a
"few
independent
journalists."
Wonder who's
referred to -
as the other
one(s).
Not Reuters,
which passes
through
without
analysis South
South News'
press releases
- and without
disclosing
that Reuters'
Lou
Charbonneau
and now
Michelle
Nichols have
occupied
Reuters'
permanent seat
on the
Executive
Committee of
the UN
Correspondents
Association,
which took
South South
News' money
then arranged
a photo op for
Ng Lap Seng
with Ban
Ki-moon.
South
South News'
founding is
described in
the John Ashe
and Ng Lap
Seng
indictment; it
is portrayed
through gauze
in the OIOS
audit. The
name South
South News has
appeared in
the Panama
Papers.
For
now, another
UN example. To
deliver
"personal"
invitations to
the South
South Awards,
which USG
Gallach
attended in
September
2015, South
South News
needed access
to the UN
during the
Septameber
High Level
week. So,
Inner City
Press is
informed,
South South
News personnel
got D or
Diplomat
passes through
Lorenzo's
Dominican
Republic
mission to the
UN. Back,
indeed.
Here
are an initial
two of many
photographs of
that event,
these by Luiz
Rampelotto of
Europa
Newswire via
Facebook,
including one
of now
indicted
Vivian Wang of
South South
News with Mrs.
Ban
Here's from
South South
News' press
release:
"It is
disgraceful
that a few
independent
journalists
are exhibiting
a lack of
professionalism
and
irresponsibility
by attacking
everything and
anyone they
believe is
linked to this
case. This is
often done by
insinuation,
guilt by
association
and baseless
assumptions
that disparage
many innocent
people and
organizations.
Irresponsible
assumptions,
fact-twisting
and
misinformation
serve to
distort the
perception of
the situation,
while
affecting our
hard work and
the work of
many innocent
people who
have
absolutely
nothing to do
with this
case.
These types of
attacks are
counterproductive
and
unprofessional.
We believe
these attacks
reflect poorly
on the
integrity of
the profession
of journalism
as a whole.
Not to justify
any illegal
activities,
but all sorts
of
organizations
worldwide have
been victims
of
unscrupulous
people, as
have other
organizations
facing similar
circumstances.
We as
employees will
defend our
hard and
honest work
and we will
defend the
commitment to
our goals and
objectives of
producing
quality
journalism to
inform about
these
important
issues. This
hard-earned
reputation has
been tainted
by some
unscrupulous
acts. Many
media and
administrative
professionals
have proudly
worked for
South-South
News and can
attest to the
integrity of
our media
operation.
This is a
complex case
in which many
players from
different
organizations
and events
have been
implicated, as
detailed in
the
Government’s
complaint. It
is working its
way through
the United
States
judiciary
system, as it
well should.
If you have
questions
regarding the
people
mentioned in
the US
Government
complaint, you
should contact
their legal
representatives
directly.
Again,
South-South
News is
continuing its
professional
day-to-day
functions by
providing some
of the most
comprehensive,
high-quality
coverage of
the UN and
disseminating
information on
global
development
issues."
The same
indicted
Vivian Wang of
South South
News with
David Ng Lap
Seng at the
same UNCA
event
On
this, Inner
City Press on
January 29
sought to
cover an UNCA
event held in
the UN Press
Briefing Room,
which was
nowhere listed
as
closed.
On February
19
Gallach,
without
recusing
herself,
unilaterally
deactivated
Inner City
Press UN
residential
correspondents
pass, and had
Inner City
Press'
reporter
physically
thrown out on
First Avenue
without coat
or passport. Audio
here.
This is
called
retaliation.
On the
afternoon of
April 12,
Inner City
Press while
with another
colleague
asked Ban
about
Gallach's
orders.
"That
is not my
decision," Ban
said quickly.
He is aware;
the ouster and
censorship
serve him, but
he says it is
not his
decision, just
as for example
Sri Lanka's
Mahinda
Rajapaksa or
higher profile
censors might.
On the
evening of
April 12
Gallach ordered
the final
eviction
of all of
Inner City
Press'
investigative
files on
Saturday,
April 16 at 10
am. This is
the face of
today's UN
corruption.
This is what
the UN
eviction order
sent to Inner
City Press
says:
Subject:
Office
To:matthew.lee
[at]
innercitypress.com
From: Tal
Mekel [at]
un.org
Date: Tue, Apr
12, 2016 at
6:47 PM
Dear Mr. Lee,
Further to the
letter to you
from Cristina
Gallach,
Under-Secretary-General
for
Communications
and Public
Information,
on 30 March
2016, we note
that you did
not remove
your
belongings
from the
office by the
6 April
deadline as
required.
As you have
still not
removed your
belongings, we
wish to inform
you that your
belongings
will be
packaged on
Saturday 16
April 2016 at
10:00 a.m.
After
carefully
packaging them
up, your
belongings
will be
forwarded to
Bronx NY
headquarters
address for
Inner City
Press that you
had listed in
your media
accreditation
application.
If you wish us
to forward
your packaged
belongings to
another
address
instead,
please let us
know as soon
as possible.
We request
your presence
during the
packing.
Please contact
the Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit (MALU) to
make the
necessary
arrangements.
If you are not
present, the
packing and
forwarding
will still
take place at
10:00 a.m. on
Saturday 16
April 2016.
Best, Tal
Tal Mekel
Acting Chief
Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit
United Nations
- S-250
New York, NY
10017
And here is
some of what
the OIOS
audit says,
about USG
Gallach:
"37. On 30
June 2015,
Global
Sustainability
Foundation
sponsored an
exhibition
titled “The
Transformative
Power of Art”
in the
visitors’
lobby at
United Nations
Headquarters.
This
exhibition was
curated by an
Italian
artist, whose
works were
displayed
along with the
works of other
artists
participating
in one of his
workshops.
38.
Exhibitions in
publicly
accessible
areas at
Headquarters
are governed
by the
Secretary
General’s
Bulletin
ST/SGB/2008/6,
which
stipulates,
inter alia, as
follows:
(a) The United
Nations
Exhibits
Committee,
which is an
interdepartmental
body of the
Secretariat
chaired by the
Under
Secretary
General for
Communications
and Public
Information
[Cristina
Gallach] is
the standing
body that
reviews and
authorizes
such
exhibitions;
(b) Any
proposal
originating
from an NGO or
foundation
must be
accompanied by
a written
communication
of support
from a
Secretariat
department or
office, a
separately
administered
organ or
programme of
the United
Nations, an
organization
of the United
Nations system
or a permanent
or observer
mission to the
United
Nations;
(c) Exhibit
proposals
focusing on a
specific
individual, or
originating
from a single
artist, shall
not be
permitted;
(d) The
Exhibits
Committee may,
at its
discretion,
reject a
proposal for
an exhibit in
part or in its
entirety, or
require the
elimination or
alteration of
any part
thereof; and
(e) The
secretariat of
the Exhibits
Committee
shall inform
the Assistant
Secretary
General,
Office of
Central
Support
Services, of
the
authorization
granted for a
proposed
exhibit.39.
OIOS noted
that the
exhibition
held of 30
June 2015 was
not in
compliance
with these
provisions.
The Exhibits
Committee did
not authorize
the exhibition
because it did
not receive a
proposal in
accordance
with (b)
above. The
Chef de
Cabinet of the
Office of the
President of
the
sixty-ninth
session of the
General
Assembly
informed the
Exhibits
Committee of
the
President’s
decision to
host a series
of major
cultural
events, which
included an
exhibition,
reception, and
concert. The
Committee
informed the
Office of the
President that
the exhibition
was not in
accordance
with the
regulations
for exhibits
in publicly
accessible
areas at
Headquarters,
but the Office
of the
President
decided to
proceed with
the exhibition
anyway.
Therefore, the
Exhibits
Committee did
not accept,
reject or
alter the
“proposal”.
40. OIOS notes
that the
Exhibits
Committee only
had an
advisory role
in the matter,
and in the
circumstances
described, it
could not have
possibly
prevented the
staging of the
event.
However,
considering
that the
exhibition was
attended by
the
Secretary-General
and other
senior
Secretariat
staff despite
its
non-compliance
with the
Secretary-General’s
bulletin on
exhibits, the
perception
that the NGO
was given
preferential
treatment or
favour (that
too without
performing any
due diligence
checks) could
have an
adverse impact
on the
Organization’s
reputation.
This risk is
aggravated by
the
allegations in
the criminal
complaint
against Sun
Kian Ip group,
with whom this
NGO is
affiliated."
While Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric has
said this
audit will not
be made public
until April
22, on April 6
as a
full text
exclusive
Inner City
Press
published the
audit while
noting
affiliates the
UN audit
omitted, and
portions of
the audit that
some involved
seem to be
trying to
cover up,
including not
only as to the
Department of
Public
Information,
but also the
Global Compact
and other
back-doors
into the UN,
including but
not limited to
"Friends of
the UN."
Beyond
the Under
Secretary
General of the
Department of
Public
Information's
responsibility
for exhibits
in the
Visitor's
Lobby such as
the one
indicted Sheri
Yan's Global
Sustainability
Foundation
held on June
30, 2015, she
was also in
charge when
GSF was
allowed,
without any
due diligence,
to on March
25, 2015
sponsor an
event entitled
"Unveiling of
the 'Ark of
Return'
Permanent
Memorial."
Audit at
Paragraph 20
(b).
Inner
City Press asked
the UN about
DPI's
engagement
with the
Global
Sustainability
Foundation
around the Ark
of Return in October
2015. To
be diplomatic,
this should
have led to /
required a
recusal.
DPI, the audit
says, was
"associated"
with Ng Lap
Seng's and
Frank Liu's
World Harmony
Foundation
through
something
called the
"Friends of
the UN" based
in Los Angeles
/ Santa
Monica. We'll
have more on
this.
As
Inner City
Press
demonstrated
even before
publishing the
audit, the
Global Compact
as of April
2016 lists
Ng's World
Harmony
Foundation as
a member,
despite the
October 2015
indictments.
Now we
note that the
Global
Compact,
represented at
Ng's Macau
event in
August 2015,
has a
representative
who because
not a UN staff
member kept
the iPad Ng's
Sun Kian Ip
foundation
gifted. What
kind of "anti
corruption" UN
Global Compact
is this?
On April 11,
after
publishing the
above, Inner
City Press
asked Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
it, and when
Ban will
answer
questions. Video here, UN
transcript
here:
Inner City
Press:
onthis OIOS
inquiry, I
want to ask
you
something.
One of the
entities
controlled by
Mr. Ng Lap
Seng is World
Harmony
Foundation.
I don’t know
if it was you
or Farhan
[Haq] last
week that said
it’s still a
member of the
Global
Compact, but
it also seems
to partner
with DPI
(Department of
Public
Information)
is associated
through
something
called Friends
of the United
Nations, which
seems to be
based in Santa
Monica,
California.
It’s a little
unclear.
Can you say,
is this one of
the ground
balls that you
guys are going
to be running
down, in terms
of what other
groups enter
through that
way?
Also, what
explains World
Harmony
Foundation six
months after
the indictment
still being
part of the
Global
Compact?
And one other
Global Compact
question.
The audit
specifically
says that, of
the iPads
given out at
the Macau
event in
August, the
representative
of the Global
Compact has
not returned
it, said that
he’s not going
to return
it. He’s
not a staff
member and
he’s keeping
it. It’s
right in the
audit.
And so I
wanted to
know, since
the Global
Compact said
it’s about
transparency,
anticorruption,
is this
okay?
And why isn’t
he a staff
member if he’s
representing
the Global
Compact?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I don’t
know.
That’s a
question you
should… in
terms of World
Harmony,
whether or not
they’re still
a member, is a
question you
can ask of the
Global
Compact.
Obviously, as
we said, the
audit is an
initial step,
and other
issues are
being pursued.
Inner City
Press:
But are they
going… I mean,
I guess Global
Compact, UNDP
(United
Nations
Development
Programme),
are they going
to hold a
press
conference?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
You should ask
them.
They have
press people,
like the
Secretariat,
and they’re
there to
answer
questions.
Inner City
Press:
And the
Secretary-General,
you said he’ll
be in the room
tomorrow, but
he won’t
speak.
Looking at the
list of press
conferences,
it seems like
the last one
was December
of last year…
Spokesman:
He will have…
there will be
some sort of a
press
conference…
there will be
a press
conference,
probably on
Friday, tied
to the climate
event.
Inner City
Press: this
OIOS [Office
of Internal
Oversight
Services]
audit, I
obtained it,
published it
and I want to
ask just for
today, two
specific
questions
about
it. One
is, it talks
about funds
going to this
thing called
UNPAN, which
I've heard of,
but it seems
to be pretty
obscure.
And in looking
at its
website, it
claims to be
publishing
articles they
say were
published in
December 2016,
which hasn't
actually
occurred
yet. So,
there's
something a
little… What's
been done on
the
recommendations
as to… to
UNPAN and the
use of its
name by the
entities that
were
audited....
Spokesman:
The recommend…
the audit, I
think, as all
of you have
seen now,
includes
recommendations
and includes
the status of
those
recommendations,
and we're
following
through with
them.
Inner City
Press: I'd
asked Farhan
[Haq]
yesterday
about the 30
June 2015
event in the
Visitor's
Lobby, which
has a section
of the whole
audit about
DPI
[Department of
Public
Information]
being in
charge of it,
not doing
it. I
want to ask
you about
another event,
which was 25
March, this
unveiling of
the Ark of
Return permit
memorial,
which they
said was no
due diligence
done of the
Global
Sustainability
Foundation.
It seems like,
in this audit,
they make
these two
findings about
DPI, these two
events, but
it's only
looking at it,
I guess,
institutionally.
As I've asked
you, when
Global
Sustainability
Foundation was
founded in
this building,
a senior
adviser of the
Secretary-General
and his spouse
were present…
Spokesman:
I mean, I
think…
Inner City
Press:
Does this
audit look at
individuals or
only
entities…?
Spokesman:
The audit
looks at…
looked at the
systems.
When there are
issues related
to
individuals,
further
investigations
are being
done.
Inner City
Press:
Right.
But, it seems
like they only
mention the
individuals
that were in
the criminal
complaint.
There was
nothing…
Spokesman:
You know, the
audit… I think
the audit
speaks for
itself and
outlines how
we're
following up
with it.
There is
a need for
follow up.
The
audit cites
Ng's
Interntional
Organization
for South
South
Cooperation's
engagements
with, or
capture of,
the UN agency
UNPAN, the UN
Public
Administration
Network. A
visit on April
8, 2016 to UNPAN's
website
finds them
featuring
articles they
say were
publishd in
December 2016
- that is, in
the future.
Ironically,
the article(s)
address the
topic of
corruption.
That is
today's UN.
The audit for
example does
purport to
cover South
South News,
but not the
big money
South South
Awards held in
September 2015
at the Waldorf
Astoria
including the
Under
Secretary
General of the
Department of
Public
Information
(DPI) Cristina
Gallach.
(Inner City
Press in
October 2015
questioned Ms.
Gallach about
her
participation
in the South
South Awards,
video
here. On
February 19,
2016 Gallach
ordered Inner
City Press to
leave its long
time office
and stripped
its Resident
Correspondent
accreditation,
without once
speaking to
it. This is
the subject of
an April
5 letter to
Ban Ki-moon
from the
Government
Accountability
Project,
demanding that
this “crude
and heavy
handed”
retaliation be
reversed,
watch this
site.)
On April
7, Inner City
Press asked UN
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq a
first round of
questions
about some of
the
limitations of
the audio, video here,
Inner City
Press: I've
now obtained
and published
this OIOS
audit of
selected NGOs
and related
entity that
you said will
come out on 22
April.
And there's
different
things I want
to ask you
about it, but
main thing I
want to ask
about is,
there's an
entire section
that runs from
paragraph 37
through
paragraph 40
that it's
about an
exhibit they
say was
improperly
held in the
Visitor's
Lobby on 30
June
2015.
And it goes
through a lot
of detail, and
it says that
the
Under-Secretary-General
of the
Department of
Public
Information is
in charge of
the exhibits
committee and,
I guess, in
charge of the
space.
And somehow,
this exhibit
was held in
violation of a
number of the
rules that
apply to
it. What
I'm wondering
is, what is
the
response?
Obviously, it
seems like you
guys have had
access to this
audit even
before it was
sent to Member
States.
What is the
thinking… the
way they walk
through it is
they say… it
seems strange.
If she's in
charge of the
space and the
exhibit took
place without
complying with
the rules,
what is the
response to
her
responsibility
for
that?
And what steps
have been
taken?
The audit
doesn't say
that any steps
have yet been
taken to
address that.
Deputy
Spokesman
Haq:
Well, with
regard to the
specific cases
referred to in
the audit,
actions being
taken to
determine
responsibility
and any
follow-up and
any measures
that may be
deemed
appropriate.
And so, we'll
continue to
study that.
Inner City
Press:
And who
decides? In
getting the
audit, there
obviously is a
long section
about
South-South
News, but I
noticed that a
related entity
of which
there's been a
lot of
coverage is
South-South
Awards.
And it's
unclear, it's
not mentioned
once in
here.
And this is
something
that… I mean,
the
Secretary-General
received the
South-South
Award.
This is an
entity that's
absolutely
connected to
Ng Lap Seng
and Frank
Lorenzo et
al. So,
the question
is, who… maybe
that's OIOS,
but who
decided on the
scope of this
audit, the
date that it
would start, 1
January 2012,
and the
exclusion of…
of… one of the
things that
people
covering this
scandal have
focused on are
these glitzy
events in the
Waldorf.
The
Under-Secretary-General
of DPI did
attend in
September, but
prior to that,
Ms. [Susana]
Malcorra took
an award for
Ban
[Ki-moon].
Why is this
not in the
audit?
And will there
be an audit of
South-South
Awards going
forward?
Deputy
Spokesman
Haq: I
think the
audit is what
it is.
It's prepared
by the
professional
people in the
Office of
Internal
Oversight who
deal with
audits.
And you can
evaluate the
results for
yourself.
Inner City
Press:
And just one
other thing I
wanted to ask
about, because
I know I'd
asked Stéphane
[Dujarric] and
you, going
back to
October, about
the inclusion
of South-South
News content
in UN
Television
archives.
And,
eventually,
you came back
with this
answer that it
was due to
Habitat.
And I just…
I've pointed
out to you
that there's a
number of
things that
have nothing
to do with
Habitat, a
number of
inclusions
that you just
search UNTV
for
"South-South
News".
But, I do
notice in this
audit that
there is a
reference to
South-South
News and
Habitat.
So, I wanted
to know, was
this finding
that you said
of people
looking into
how it got in
there, was it
basically just
taken from
reading the
audit, or was
there a… a… a…
an analysis,
either by your
office or DPI,
of how the
many other
inclusions of
South-South
News and UNTV
archives took
place?
Deputy
Spokesman:
No, our office
had checked
with
DPI.
That was prior
to us knowing
about the
results of the
audit.
Similarly,
using timing
as a basis of
omission, by
stopping the
audit at
January 1,
2012, OIOS did
not address
the issue of
Ng's South
South News
getting a
photo op
directly with
Ban Ki-moon in
December 2011
at the UN
Correspondents
Association
ball at
Cipriani's
42nd Street
after giving
money to UNCA
including for
a two page ad
spread in
UNCA's “ball
book.”
While
Dujarric's
deputy Farhan
Haq allowed
four UNCA
board members
from Reuters,
France 24 and
Agence France
Presse to seek
to rebut this
including by
directly
addressing
Inner City
Press in the
noon briefing
on April 6,
the cut-off at
January 1,
2012 is
problematic,
especially as
related to Ban
Ki-moon
himself.
The
audit goes out
of its way to
say that Ban's
Executive
Office of the
Secretary
General did
not know when
a letter to it
was modified
to add the
name of Ng's
firm and of
South South
News. How is
that possible?
And again, why
was Ban's
direct dealing
with Ng cut
out from the
audit by a
matter of
days?
Many of the
irregularities
in the audit
are things
first reported
by Inner City
Press, such
as Yan's
Global
Sustainability
Foundation
funding the
UN's slavery
memorial,
including an
engagement
with Gallach's
DPI which even
the audit
criticizes
while DPI
tries to deny.
Undeniable is
that Gallach
chaired the UN
Exhibits
Committee
which allowed
the bogus
“Transformative
Power of Art”
exhibit on
June 30, 2015.
How does
Gallach's no
due process
ouster of
Inner City
Press on
February 19,
2016, when
Inner City
Press was
thrown into
the street and
its laptop on
the sidewalk
by eight UN
guards, look
now that the
audit is out?
Even with the
audit
inexplicably
omitting the
South South
Awards -- Ban
Ki-moon got
one of the
awards -- the
audit chides
DPI for lack
of due
diligence for
its slavery
event, and
Gallach as
chair of the
Exhibit
Committee
which allowed
the Jun 30,
2015
“Transformative
Power of Art”
exhibit.
"The
Government
Accountability
Project
complained
about Lee's
fallout in a
Feb. 26 letter
to the U.S.
Permanent
Mission of the
United
Nations.
'The action
targeted
Matthew Lee
alone, and
appears to be
retaliatory in
response to
independent,
critical
journalism,'
wrote Beatrice
Edwards, the
project's
international
program
director.
UNCA, the
group whose
meeting Lee
got in trouble
for recording,
has denied the
appearance of
unfairness.
'UNCA stands
for press
freedom and
vehemently
defends rights
of journalists
at the UN and
around the
world,' the
statement
says."
Really?
Where? It was
the Free UN
Coalition for
Access asking
this month
about the UN
requiring
minders, not
only in UN
Headquarters
but also in
South Sudan.
The Courthouse
News
continues:
"Lee blasted
what he
described as
'post-hoc'
justifications
for his
ouster, which
he compared to
a Franz Kafka
novel.
'Initially,
they tried to
say that I
secretly
filmed a
closed
meeting,' he
said.
'That's fallen
apart because
the meeting
wasn't
recorded as
closed.' Lee
laughed off
allegations
that he
entered a
restricted
area to
secretly film
the meeting,
which he
broadcast via
a popular
web-casting
platform.
'It's hard to
say that a
Periscope
live-streaming
with my arms
up is secret,'
he said.
By downgrading
his
residential
correspondent
credentials to
a second-tier
status, the
U.N. has
restricted
Lee's freedom
of movement,
forced him to
be chaperoned
by a minder."
That's
right, a UN
minder
courtesy of UN
Communications
chief Cristina
Gallach and
ultimately,
Ban Ki-moon.
In terms of
violations,
and cover up,
see Paragraphs
37 through 40
of the OIOS
audit.
Inner City
Press on April
5 asked if
Ng's World
Harmony
Foundation is
still part of
the UN Global
Compact;
deputy
spokesperson
Haq said he
would check
but never came
back with an
answer. On
April 6 Inner
City Press
asked again
and Haq said
yes - now we
see it is
confirmed and
criticized in
the audit.
Worse while
Inner City
Press from
October 2015
on asked
Dujarric and
Haq how South
South News got
its content in
the UNTV
archives run
by Gallach's
DPI, Haq
belatedly
mentioned only
one use,
connected to
HABITAT. Now
we see the
HABITAT -
South South
News
interaction is
listed in the
audit, which
it seems Haq
consulted
before
answering (and
whatever else
he did with
the audit).
But why
didn't OIOS
look into
South South
News' OTHER
inclusions in
DPI's archives
of UNTV? Watch
this site.
Another
question, now
more poignant
with the full
audit online,
is why the
wire services
reporters from
Reuters and
Agence France
Presse, on the
Executive
Committee of
the UN
Correspondents
Association
which took
Ng's South
South News'
money and then
gave Ng a
photo op with
Ban Ki-moon,
didn't even
MENTION that
DPI, their
partner in
censorship,
was listed and
criticized in
the audit.
Not only
the South
South Awards,
but the the
Gallach-approved
bogus
exhibition
criticized in
detail in the
audit is
nowhere in
their reports.
Hence the
April 6 threat
and April 6
noon briefing,
video here.
We'll have
more on this Follow @innercitypressFollow @FUNCA_info