UN
Killed 10,000 in Haiti, After
Mass Arrests in 2004,
ICP To Return to Scene
of the Crime with UNSC
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Video here,
song here
UNITED NATIONS,
June 20 – While in some places
the UN system may be doing
good work, its killing of more
and 10,000 Haitians with cholera,
and its years of denial, have
been a low point. Now with the
UN Security Council slated to
visit Haiti from June 22 and
24 -- Inner City Press will
cover it -- the strange and
some say shameful history of
the UN's MINUSTAH mission
comes to the fore. After the
UN Security Council on April
30, 2004 approved the
deployment of MINUSTAH, by September
30, 2004 protesters were being
killed, then further
protesters arrested and loaded
into UN Armored Personnel
Carriers. Particularly given
the position of CARICOM and
the African Union, this was a
low for the UN. But it would
go lower still. On June 20,
2017 the departing MINUSTAH
mission will hold a ceremony
to close its regional bureau
in the south, again bragging
of spending $48 million. But
given the reneging on much
larger sums for bringing
cholera, advocates slammed the
"statement delivered by Deputy
Secretary-General Amina
Mohammed in a briefing to the
General Assembly appealing for
member state funding and
reporting on the UN’s progress
in implementing the New
Approach. Ms. Mohammed
announced that the UN proposes
taking a 'community approach
and establish[ing] priorities
for projects in consultation
with victims and their
families and
communities.' The
statement reverses the UN’s
previous position, which
committed to assessing the
feasibility of individual
victim payments before making
any decision, including
through 'consultations on the
ground with victims and their
communities.' Mario
Joseph,
Managing
Attorney of
the Bureau des
Avocats
Internationaux
said that 'Powerful
governments’ refusal to
allocate even MINUSTAH’s
leftovers to save lives from
the cholera outbreak it caused
demonstrates their lack of
commitment to Haiti, to UN
accountability and to the rule
of law. Since the cholera
epidemic started in 2010,
these governments have found
$4 billion to maintain
soldiers in a country that has
not had a war in anyone’s
lifetime, and want to continue
spending money on an unwanted
peacekeeper presence, but they
cannot find 1% of that amount
to fight the worst cholera
epidemic in modern times.”
This is a pattern on which
we'll have more. After
then-President Aristide was
forced into exile in, echoing
today, the Central African
Republic, the UN Security
Council on April 30, 2004
dutifully created a mission to
take over from the US, French
and Canadian troops who has
deployed during Guy Philippe's
force's killing spree.
Promoting it was then French
Ambassador de la Sabliere,
self-described father of the
UN's since-questioned (at
least on Yemen) Children and
Armed Conflict mandate. Given
today's Security Council
splits, particularly on regime
change, one marvels that
Resolution 1542 was passed
unanimously. Already in the
mix was, for example, Haitian
rights attorney Mario Joseph,
now an astute critic of the
UN's total evasion of
responsibility for killing
over 10,000 Haitians with
cholera. We'll have more on
this. On June 14, 2017 the new
(well, 162 day old) UN
presented what it called a new
approach on cholera - not long
after Secretary General
Antonio Guterres' delayed
approach to the UN's lead
poisoning victims in Kosovo
was criticized. Inner City
Press asked the UN about it on
June 16, in the run-up to the
UN Security Council's visit to
Haiti next week (we will cover
that). From the UN's June 16
noon briefing, video
here, transcript:
Inner City Press: on Haiti, I
went back and looked at what
Amina Mohammed said, that
'there are no funds for Track
2, and we propose to take a
community approach. ' And I'm
sure you've seen a number of
advocates — Mario Joseph,
other well-known, long-time
Haiti cholera activists — have
said this is an outrage, that
basically what the
Secretary-General announced,
Ban Ki-moon at the end of his
tenure, is being totally
rejected, and any consultation
with the affected communities
will take place after this
speech by Amina Mohammed.
Spokesman: I don't think
it's being rejected. I
think I was asked this
question yesterday. We,
obviously, are eagerly
awaiting funds. But, I
think… I don't think there's
been a change. The
challenge for us is the lack
of funding.
Inner
City Press: But
the sentence "we propose to
take a community approach",
that seems pretty
definitive. That seems
like, this is the approach
that we're taking.
Before there were two.
Now there's one.
Spokesman: This is the
approach that is being taken
now. I think it's one
step at a time, as we had said
in the beginning.
Inner City Press:
There's an upcoming visit by
the Security Council to
Haiti. Do you expect…
how is the Secretary-General
going to hear from the
affected communities, what
they believe should happen?
Spokesman: Well, I
think, first of all, through
our staff on the ground.
And, as we've said, we would
be appointing an envoy soon.
We'll see.
Also on June 16, the
International Monetary Fund
announced a staff-level
agreement for a
staff-monitoredprogram with
Haiti, its Chris Walker
saying, "the IMF team reached
a staff-level agreement with
the authorities on an SMP
covering the period of
June-December, 2017. Under the
SMP, fiscal policy will focus
on mobilizing domestic budget
revenue to make room for
needed increases in public
investment, notably with
regard to reconstruction from
the effects of Hurricane
Matthew, and investments in
health, education, and social
services. This will be
achieved in part through the
elimination of excessive
subsidies, including subsidies
for retail fuel sales.
Crucially, these actions will
be accompanied by mitigating
measures to protect the most
vulnerable. The SMP also
recognizes that to provide the
resources for increasing
public investment and raising
economic growth over the
medium term, it is vital to
bring an end to the large
losses arising from the
operations of the public
electricity utility EDH, which
in recent years have been
responsible for approximately
half of the public sector
deficit.
The Central Bank of Haiti
(BRH) will aim to protect
international reserves and
preserve exchange rate
flexibility, while acting as
necessary to contain
disorderly market conditions.
Under the SMP, the BRH will
limit monetary financing of
the government deficit, based
on the SMP agreement, and will
strive to achieve low
inflation, while maintaining
an adequate flow of credit to
the private sector. Structural
reforms under the SMP will
focus on tax reform and on
improving transparency of
public accounts. IMF staff
will work closely with the
authorities to monitor
progress in the implementation
of their economic program. In
addition, the IMF will
continue to provide technical
assistance to support Haiti’s
capacity-building efforts and
its reform program. The SMP is
designed to build a track
record and successful
performance will catalyze
donor flows and support a
future request for an Extended
Credit Facility (ECF)
arrangement."
On June 15
the UN bragged of $48 million
in projects as it closed down
the northern Haiti outpost it
opened in 2004 - still without
paying for cholera. US Vice
President Mike Pence met
Haiti's President in Miami and
issued this read-out: "The
Vice President today met with
President Jovenel Moise of
Haiti in Miami, Florida. On
behalf of President Trump, the
Vice President congratulated
President Moise for his
election earlier this year,
and recognized Haiti for
filling key government
leadership positions. The two
leaders stressed the
importance of pursuing an
economic reform agenda to
attract investment and
generate growth. The Vice
President and President Moise
reiterated their common
commitment to building on
strong bilateral ties, and
working together to pursue
issues of mutual interest.."
Would that include Temporary
Protected Status? We'll have
more on this. On June 15,
Inner City Press asked UN
Spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: I wanted to
ask you about the presentation
yesterday about the new
approach to the UN's role in
cholera in Haiti. Two
things. I saw David Nabarro
there. I wanted to ask
you, I know that he ran for
WHO. Is he back as a UN
official? Amina Mohammed
said that the
Secretary-General will soon be
naming a high-level
envoy. Maybe you won't
give a time frame, but what's
the process, I guess, as I
haven't seen it advertised…?
Spokesman: No, the
Secretary-General, I think, is
considering a number of
people, and he will appoint
the person he best sees
fit. As you know, not
every high-level position is
posted on the
Secretary-General's
website. Some he chooses
to do that with. Others,
he does not. But he's
obviously consulting with
Member States and trying to
find the best possible
person. I do… and,
hopefully, we'll have that
announcement sooner rather
than later.
Inner
City
Press:
And Mr. Nabarro, did he just
return to his Special Envoy…
what's his post?
Spokesman: I believe
he's returned to a post that
he had. I'm not aware of
the exact details.
Inner City Press: When
the Secretary-General took off
on his trip that he would be
back in New York the morning
of Thursday, 15 June.
That announcement is still
what qualifies as his daily
schedule. Where is
he? Is he here…?
Spokesman: Yes, he’s
landed. He landed very
early this morning, and I hope
for his sake that he's resting
at home, but he's in New York.
To
stake out the June 14 meeting,
the "new" UN still required
Inner City Press but not other
less critical media to have a
minder (who also asked Inner
City Press to leave). Jamaica
spoke the on the UN restoring
its good name; the
representative of the Hadi
government whose call for
airstrikes led to cholera in
Yemen spoke too. Amina
Mohammed spoke of a new high
level envoy. In the hall
afterward was David Nabarro.
(In the hall DURING the
meeting was Morocco's Omar
Hilale, apparently more
concerned with blocked UN
human rights observers in
Western Sahara or now, Rif.)
Penned in, Inner City Press
spoke with some Perm Reps but
not the Secretariat's
speakers. (In fairness despite
restrictions it has added a
link to the speech, here.)
The Department of Public
Information, which had
defended Ban's denial of
responsibility, now promoted
Guterres and Mohammed's "new"
approach. All this while
imposing and continuing
restrictions on the Press.
This is today's UN. Ban before
he left, for a failed run for
South Korea's presidency, said
he would raise $400 million
for Haiti. 55 days later,
barely two percent of that had
been raised. Now major states
merely "take note" of
proposals to leave money
behind in Haiti. Still, the
worst of the organization is
exemplified in its Department
of Public Information,
particularly as regards
planning to mislead the public
in 2017 about such issues has
peacekeepers' rapes and
bringing deadly cholera to
Haiti.
See UN
Plan, exclusively put
online here.
UN
Peacekeeping needs radical
reform, and UN DPI needs to be
disbanded.
Gallach
produced a propaganda plan for
2017, which multiple outraged
UN sources leaked to Inner
City Press. Gallach's "2017
Communications Guidance"
has a paragraph on cholera in
Haiti which does not mention
that the UN brought the
disease to the island. Page 9.
While
barely a million dollars,
nearly all of it blood money
from Ban Ki-moon's South
Korea, has been raised,
Gallach tells her propaganda
troops to "promote the UN's
efforts to combat the disease
harnessing.. social media
tools."
This is
propaganda.
Likewise on
sexual exploitation and abuse
by peacekeepers, Gallach's
rah-rah implies that the
corner has been turned. Page
5. While the UN's billion
dollar DR Congo mission is a
mere footnote, the UN's failed
envoy on Yemen is portrayed as
successful on Page 6. The
section on the Middle East ,
and pages 10 and 14-15, are
designed to trigger budget
cuts.
UN's
"2017 Communications Guidance,"
Here, Is Propaganda Plan of Cristina
Gallach, Who Should Be Fired by
Matthew
Russell Lee on Scribd
It is
Gallach who should be fired,
even before she is forced out
on March 31.
As the UN
remains unreformed after Ban
Ki-moon's ten years ended with
corruption, long asked about
by the Press, exposed, budget
cuts are coming.
In
Washington executive orders
are being prepared to cut up
to 40% of the US'
contributions to the UN, and
to fully cut funding to
entities blamed for violation
of human rights.
Inner City
Press has put that draft
EO online here.
One
obvious question is whether
the total denial of due
process for whistleblowers -
already part of US law - and
investigative press which covers
UN corruption
constitutes such a violation.
For
example, the UN Department of
Public Information under
Cristina Gallach in early 2016
threw
Inner City Press out of the
UN, dumping its
investigative files onto First
Avenue, without a single
hearing or opportunity to be
heard, and no
appeal since.
All this for
seeking to cover an event in
the UN Press Briefing Room
which was nowhere listed as
closed, and leaving as soon as
a single UN Security officer
said the Spokesman, Stephane
Dujarric, wanted Inner City
Press out.
Gallach had a
conflict of interest, having
been asked
by Inner City Press about her
own links with
Macau-based businessman Ng Lap
Seng, facing trial (like Ban
Ki-moon's nephew and brother)
on bribery charges.
There are no
rules, only the one-person
fiat rule of an official
dumped on Ban's UN by Spain,
where she had previously
managed, at most, seven people
as spokesperson to Javier
Solana. Nothing has been done;
eleven months later Gallach
still requires Inner City
Press to have "minders"
to cover the UN Security
Council.
The cuts,
and a new US Ambassador, are
coming. Six days after a
confirmation hearing in which
she called for accountability
at the UN, including for
peacekeepers' abuses, Nikki
Haley on January 24 was
confirmed to replace Samantha
Power as US Ambassador to the
UN.
This came
after at least two business
days of no
photos replacing those
of President Barack Obama and
Vice President Joe Biden at
the US Mission to the UN.
On January
24, Inner City Press asked
former UN official, now
Swedish foreign minister
Margot Wallstrom about Haley's
call to defund countries whose
peacekeepers abuse. Tweeted
video here. There are
reforms needed at the UN.
Back on
January 18 before Haley spoke
as nominee for US Ambassador
to the UN, Senator Bob Corker
said he sometimes wondered if
just-left Secretary General
Ban Ki-moon had a pulse.
In fact,
Ban was quite active in
helping his own relatives at
the UN, promoting his son in
law to the top UN job in
Kenya, his brother mining in
Myanmar with a "UN
delegation," indicted nephew
using Ban's name to sell real
estate.
When Haley
began, she said the UN has a
"checkered history." That's
being diplomatic. Consider a
head of Peacekeeping who has
linked rapes to R&R, video
here.
Consider a
head of the UN "Department of
Public Information" who did no
due diligence over indicted UN
briber Ng Lap Seng - then
evicted and still restricts
the Press which asked here
about it. Audit
here, Para 37-40, 20b; NYT
here.
In
response to questions, Haley
praised the UN peacekeeping
mission in Sierra Leone,
questioned the one in South
Sudan and that country's
government. She noted that
countries make money off their
peacekeepers. The case in
point, we note, is Burundi, here.
***
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