UN's
Ladsous Met
Sudan's
Bashir, ICC's
Bensouda Says
Has No Info
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 11 --
When on Sudan
the
International
Criminal
Court
prosecutor
Fatou Bensouda
briefed the UN
Security
Council on
Wednesday,
about the need
to arrest
Sudanese
president Omar
al
Bashir, there
was an
elephant in
the room: UN
Peacekeeping
chief
Herve Ladsous,
who met
with Bashir in
July.
Actually,
Ladsous
had been in
the Security
Council in the
morning, but
unlike
the other two
briefers did
not speak to
or take any
questions from
the press when
he left.
Bensouda
said
that either
Sudan could
come contest
the indictment
of Bashir
(and others
including
Ahmad Haroon,
to whom
Ladsous' UN
Peacekeeping
has given free
flights to and
from Abyei)
-- or, arrests
should be
made. Ladsous
made no
arrests in
July.
After
Wednesday's
meeting, Inner
City Press
waited and
asked Bensouda
what
she as
prosecutor
thought of UN
official
Ladsous having
met with
Bashir.
Bensouda
said,
"we are
consistently
saying that
these non
essential
meetings
should be
avoided.... I
do not know
what was the
purpose of
that meeting."
She
cited a UN
policy -- put
out by the
Office of
Legal Affairs
but
apparently not
respected by
Ladsous'
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations --
of only
essential
meetings being
held with
indictees.
Inner
City Press
asked her if,
as a major /
vocal state
party to the
Rome
Statute told
it, the UN is
now going to
give the Court
or Association
of State
Parties prior
notice before
contacts like
Ladsous' with
Bashir.
Bensouda
replied
that she
wounldn't call
it notice, but
"we have
discussed some
visits before,
why it was
essential."
So,
Inner City
Press asked,
what about
Ladsous' July
2013 meeting
with
Bashir?
Bensouda
said, "the one
in
July, we have
not had any
information
about it."
Ladsous
has a history,
of
not answering
Press
questions. Video here, UK
coverage here.
But this
is one he
should answer.
Will he?
Sudanese
Permanent
Representative
Daffa-Alla
Elhag
Ali Osman,
after harshly
criticizing
Bensouda in
his speech in
the Council,
agreed to
answer a few
Inner City
Press
questions
afterward in
the so called
Turkish Lounge
next to the
Security
Council.
While
this used to
be the media's
space, during
the UN
renovation the
UN took money
from Turkey
for the space.
Now, it is
said,
reporters can
only go there
if invited by
a diplomat.
This is
challenged by
the new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
as a decline
in
working
conditions and
access under
this UN.
Wednesday
as
noted Inner
City Press was
invited into
the Turkish
Lounge area,
but
nevertheless
was told to
get back in
the penned
stakeout. (In
noting this,
the focus is
not on the one
endeavoring to
implement the
vague policy,
but on the
policy and
vagueness
themselves,
which are an
invitation,
too often
accepted, for
more UN double
standards.)
Meanwhile
scribes
favored by --
and spying
for -- the UN
and its
Censorship
Alliance
(click here)
plop down in
the Turkish
Lounge to
make cell
phone calls.
Likewise
while
disfavored
NGOs are told
they cannot be
at the
stakeout, last
week Human
Rights Watch's
UN lobbyist, a
former France
24 and Le
Monde
journalist,
was at the
stakeout
spinning Central
African
Republic,
with no
mention of its
problems'
French
colonial
roots. As
Sudan says:
double
standards. As
Inner City
Press says:
Ladsous is
the elephant
in the room.
Watch this
site.