IMF
Moves To Fund Equatorial Guinea
Ignoring Support to Jammeh and
Human Rights Inner City Press
Asked Of
By Matthew
Russell Lee, CJR PFT NY
Post
NEW YORK CITY,
Dec 18 – When
the
International
Monetary Fund
held its
biweekly
embargoed
media briefing
on November
7,
Inner City
Press
submitted
questions including
on Equatorial
Guinea, see
below.
On
December 12
when Inner
City Press
again
submitted
questions to
the IMF
online, about
human
rights, the
IMF in its
last in-person
briefing of
the year spoke
about Equatorial
Guinea and
an upcoming Executive
Board meeting
only in terms
of
"anti-corruption
and governance"
- nothing
about human
rights, which
Inner City
Press asked
about, along
with Cameroon.
(In fact, the
IMF took that question from
the Paul Biya
government's
state media.) We said
we'd
have more on
this - and
now, hours
before the IMF
Executive
Board meets,
we do:
"The
government of
Equatorial
Guinea has
refused to
serve legal
papers on
former Gambian
dictator Yahya
Jammeh, who
has been
living in
exile in
Equatorial
Guinea since
January
2017.
The legal
papers would
formally
notify Jammeh
of a civil
lawsuit filed
in the High
Court of The
Gambia by
three
survivors of
Jammeh's
fraudulent and
destructive
HIV and AIDS
"Treatment
Program."
The suit,
which was
filed in May
2018, is
supported by
AIDS-Free
World in
partnership
with the
Gambian-based
Institute for
Human Rights
and
Development in
Africa
(IHRDA).
Combeh Gaye of
the Gambian
law firm
Antouman A.B.
Gaye & Co.
is
representing
the three
claimants.
Jammeh was
granted
political
asylum by
dictator
Teodoro Obiang
Nguema
Mbasogo,
Equatorial
Guinea's ruler
since seizing
power in a
bloody coup
d'etat in
1979. Jammeh
is reportedly
living in a
luxurious
villa in
eastern
Equatorial
Guinea."
A mansion,
like UNSG
Antonio
Guterres' on
Sutton Place
in
Manhattan
while he bans
Press from
the UN and
benefits
from immunity
despite links
to convicted UN
briber
CEFC China
Energy. The
UN's failure
to live up to
the principles
it preaches
to others will
bring it low.
On
November 7
Inner City
Press asked: "On
Equatorial
Guinea, what
is the status
(and dollar
volume) of the
IMF's
consideration
of a program,
and the
weighing if at
all on the
length of time
Obiang has
been in power?
"The loan, the
amount of
which has not
been revealed,
is scheduled
to be
considered by
the IMF
executive
board in
December."
From
the IMF's
November 7 transcript,
with video on page:
"There's
another
question from
Matthew, which
I'll take on
Equatorial
Guinea, asking
what's the
status and the
volume of the
IMF's
consideration
of a program
for Equatorial
Guinea and the
weighing, if
at all, length
of time that
President
Obiang has
been in power.
On that, I can
say that just
recently on
October 21st,
the Equatorial
Guinea
authorities
and an IMF
team reached
staff level
agreement on a
three-year
arrangement.
Again, under
the extended
Fund facility,
which is the
more
concessional
arm of the
IMF's lending.
The
authorities
are working on
an agreed set
of measures
that could
allow the new
program to be
considered by
the IMF's
Executive
Board in
December. And
Matthew had
asked about
the volume.
We're looking
at the program
that could be
supported by
approximately
$280 million.
So, that's
four [sic]
Equatorial
Guinea.
And anything
else in the
room?"
On September
26 Spokesperson already
then
Gerry
Rice,
for new
Managing
Director
Kristalina
Georgieva, on
Turkey said "this is also from
Matthew, he has
asked '
On Turkey,
what is the
IMF's response
to ruling AKP
deputy chair
Numan
Kurtulmuş
criticizing a
meeting
between IMF
&
opposition
parties,
saying Turkey
has "closed
the topic with
the IMF."'
Then Rice said
it is normal
to meet with
opposition -
except in
Cameroon,
apparently -
and that there
has been no
indication
from the Turkish
authorities
they are
looking for a
program.
On
September 12 Inner
City Press
asked the IMF:
"On Zimbabwe,
please confirm
or deny IMF's
Patrick Imam
saying that
"it is clear,
compared to
the
projections of
the original
SMP, which did
not foresee
the severity
of the drought
and its
secondary
impact, nor
the
electricity
shock, that
growth is
almost
certainly
going to be
revised
downwards and
inflation
upwards
compared to
the original
SMP
forecasts."
And what is
the IMF's view
of the
(economic)
impact of the
crack down on
protest and
human rights
defenders?"
Spokesperson
Gerry Rice said that
the IMF team
is in Harare,
from September
5 to 17. On
human rights,
he said the
IMF "focuses
on economics"
and that such
questions
should be
directed to...
bilateral
creditor. At
least he
didn't say the
UN, which under
Guterres
doesn't care.
More
here.
***
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
UN Office: S-303,
UN, NY 10017 USA
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other, earlier Inner City Press are
listed here,
and some are available in the ProQuest
service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright 2006-2019 Inner City
Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at]
innercitypress.com for
|