As
Uganda
Invites Bashir, Indicted by ICC, It Cites Ahmadinejad, and Mugabe, Ban
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
June 11 -- "We have an obligation," Ugandan
Ambassador Rugunda told Inner City Press on June 8, "as African
Union members, and hosting the AU. President Bashir has been invited
by Uganda."
But
what about his
indictment for war crimes by the International Criminal Court, Inner
City Press asked, of which Uganda is a member? Won't Uganda has a
duty to seek to arrest Bashir?
"That
would
be like President Obama arresting Ahmadinejad when he comes to
address the General Assembly," Ambassador Rugunda said.
One
of his aides
added that Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe had attended a European Union -
AU summit, over the objections of "the Europeans," because
he is a member of the AU.
But
Bashir has
been indicted by the ICC, Inner City Press pointed out.
"We
are
asking for a deferment," Ambassador Rugunda answered. "We
believe these interactions," he said, are useful "for
ultimate peace."
When
Bashir was
inaugurated after his election amid deaths and threats against
observers, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon set to the ceremony both
of his top advisers in Sudan, Ibrahim Gambari and Haile Menkerios.
UN's Ban arriving in Uganda, Bashir not yet show, follows
When
Inner City
Press asked Ban's spokesman how this didn't undermine respect for the
war crimes indictments of the ICC, the response was that attending
the ceremony was somehow necessary to the UN's work, to staying in
the country.
Meanwhile,
Ban
while in Kampala for the recent ICC conference on the crime of
aggression was publicly quoted as urging African leaders to cooperate
with the ICC. While he was quoted urging them to convince Bashir to
turn himself in to the ICC in The Hague, the UN has since denied Ban
said that. Still, sending Menkerios was a signal to Uganda and others
that dealing with Bashir, indicted for war crimes, is okay.
On
June 11, ICC
prosecutor Ocampo should be asked for his view of Uganda's stance.
Meanwhile Sudan's Ambassador to the UN is presenting a book, that the
ICC is Guantanamo Bay for African leaders. Ocampo should be asked
about this as well. Watch this site.
* * *
Somali
Diaspora
Questions UN's Move, from Twin Cities to West Bank
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
WEST
BANK,
June 10 -- People with no assurance of ever returning home
follow politics more closely than those who've never left. Hassan, a
Somali living in the Minneapolis neighborhood called the West Bank --
of the Mississippi River -- asked
bitterly why the United Nations
sent Ahmedou Ould Abdallah and now "the Tanzanian"
Augustine Mahiga, as envoy to his homeland. "Who not a Somali?"
Hassan asked Inner City Press on June 10. "Are we not good
enough?"
Hassan
works at
Safari Express, an East African take out restaurant, in the Midtown
Global Market in south Minneapolis. Over a plate of chicken suqqar,
he recounted to Inner City Press how the civil war in his country
makes it impossible to return. Some, he said, return only to fight,
usually for Al Shaabab, "The Youth."
Outside
in the
Chicago and Lake neighborhood, women in veils walk in front of liquor
stores and half abandoned buildings. The Ugbaad Cafe is closed and
boarded up, across the street from one of Minneapolis' Peavy Parks.
Two blocks further south, traversed on one of Minneapolis' bikes to
rent and share, nurses are picketing Children's Hospital.
"Is
that a
rental bike?" a Somali calls out to Inner City Press. Yes it is.
From 11th and Marquette out to 30th and Lake is less than 20 minutes.
The same to the West Bank and Riverside.
It is June in
Minneapolis
and aging rock bands play for free. There is a statue for Mary Tyler
Moore. Make it, Mary Tyler Moore in Mogadishu. "Don't go there,"
Hassan advises Inner City Press. "They kidnap you for money."
Ruins in Somalia, West Bank (of Minneapolis) not shown
In
fact, Inner City
Press traveled with the UN Security Council and Ould Abdallah to
Djibouti in 2008. Ministers of the Transitional Federal Government,
some from Minnesota, stayed in the expensive Kempinsky Hotel and
assigned themselves positions.
Now they
control four square blocks in
Mogadishu. The view of them from Riverside, from Minneapolis Somalis,
is less than positive. "We need our country back," Hassan
said over chicken. Then he smiled and went back behind the counter.
* * *
At
UN,
Somalia
Post Handed from Ould Abdallah to Mahiga, of Yemen's G-77
Deal
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
June
9 -- The UN's envoy on Somalia Ahmedou Ould Abdallah,
who called for a moratorium on press reporting of civilian deaths in
Mogadishu and cut a stealth deal about Somali off shore rights with
Kenya and Norway, has been relieved of his functions.
Sources
last
week
told Inner City Press that he was being replaced by Tanzania's
current Permanent Representative to the UN, Augustine Mahiga. The
affable Ambassador Mahiga has been seeking a UN job for some time. He
put himself up for the number two post in the UN Development Program,
running against his own foreign minister. Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon and UNDP's Helen Clark bypassed the African Group and gave to
post to Rebecca Grynspan of Costa Rica.
On
June 4, rather
than simply write the story without receiving confirmation, Inner
City Press asked
UN
Deputy Spokesperson Marie Okabe:
Inner
City
Press:
Ould-Abdallah.. is leaving in July and seeks to remain as
an adviser to the Secretary-General. I just want you to confirm that
he is leaving, and to confirm or deny that Augustine Mahiga, the
Tanzanian ambassador, is going to be named the SRSG
[Secretary-General’s Special Representative].
Deputy
Spokesperson:
I
have nothing on any appointments.
Inner
City
Press:
But Ould-Abdallah has said publicly that he is leaving
in July. Is that the case?
Deputy
Spokesperson:
I
have nothing on that.
Inner
City
Press:
He said it.
Deputy
Spokesperson:
I
have nothing on appointments for Somalia today.
Even
thought
Inner
City Press knew it to be true, confirmation was sought from
Mahiga himself. The Tanzanian Mission said he was in Europe thought
June 18, but they would ask him (the staffer said, "that is good
news"). But Mahiga, who previously asked Inner City Press to
email him articles, did not respond.
Now,
five
days
after Inner City Press publicly asked about Mahiga and Somalia,
Ban Ki-moon has formally named Mahiga to the Somalia post, which is
actually based in Nairobi, Kenya.
Mahiga, stars and bars behind him, TFG not shown
On
June 9, before the confirmation, Inner City Press asked
Ban's
Associate Spokesperson Farhan Haq if the UN had consulted with
the Transitional Federal Government about Mahiga. Haq said yes --
but we'll have more on this.
Several
sources say that Mahiga is
"so pro American, he'll make it all about counter - terrorism."
Then again, that has already been the UN's approach.
These
sources
note
that the UN way for a diplomat to seek a Secretariat job is for he or
she -- almost always he -- to beginning selling out his Group and
even his country, in exchange for the coming favor. The Secretariat
uses the needs and wants of Permanent Representatives to obtain
certain actions or forbearance in the budget committee -- which has
continued meeting this week, despite the announced conclusion in May
-- the General Assembly and in this case the peacebuilding
commission.
"Consider
Yemen,"
one
well placed source told Inner City Press. "With
all of the conflicts and problems, you might expect the UN to name an
envoy or otherwise get involved. But since Yemen managed to head the
Group of 77 this year, they use that leverage to tell the UN to do
nothing. In exchange for which, the Group of 77 does not move to hold
Ban accountable." Watch this site.