Amid
ISIL Advance,
UN Cites
200,000 Yazidis
in Mountains,
US Airdrop
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 7, updated
-- As the
Islamic State
in Iraq and
the Levant (ISIL)
continues to
advance, a
urgent UN
Security
Council
meeting was
called. But
what would it
issue, beyond
a press
statement?
[See US
statement,
below]
After
6:30 pm,
Council
president for
August Mark
Lyall Grant
emerged to
read a press
statement,
followed by
question and
answer stakeouts
by French
deputy Alexis
Lamek and
Iraqi Permanent
Representative
Alhakim.
Inner City
Press asked
Lamek if
France will
take military
action. While
we'll await
the French
mission's
transcript,
Lamek eventually
said "that
needs to be
done indeed."
Inner City
Press asked Alhakim
about airdrops,
if ISIL has anti-aircraft
guns and if
the dam has
been taken
over. This
last, he denied,
saying that
ISIL does not
control the
dam.
Update:
after those
stakeouts, a
senior US
Department of
Defense
official told
the press:
“I
can confirm
that tonight,
at the
direction of
the Commander
in Chief,
the U.S.
military
conducted a
humanitarian
assistance
operation in
Northern Iraq
to air drop
critical meals
and water for
thousands of
Iraqi citizens
threatened by
ISIL near
Sinjar. The
mission was
conducted by a
number of U.S.
military
aircraft under
the direction
of U.S.
Central
Command. The
aircraft that
dropped the
humanitarian
supplies have
now safely
exited the
immediate
airspace over
the drop
area.”
And shortly
after that, US
President
Barack Obama
announced he
has authorized
airstrikes. He
took no
questions.
There is a
draft resolution
in the works,
with UK
Ambassador
Lyall Grant
saying that a
new draft
would be
circulated
later on August
7. The Security
Council leaves
on August 8
for a
week-long trip
to Europe and
South Sudan
and perhaps
some other
places for now
undisclosed.
Some wonder
how they will
keep up not
only with Iraq
(and the
Levant) but
also Gaza and
conceivably Ukraine
and other
matters.
In a statement
from Baghdad,
the UN mission
UNAMI
announced that
“over the last
48 hours
200,000
civilians have
fled the
advance of
ISIL, with at
least 180,000
crossing into
the Dohuk
district of
the Kurdistan
Region.” UNAMI
said “up to
200,000
predominantly
Yazidi
civilians
becoming
trapped on
Jabal Sinjar
in territory
not controlled
by ISIL.”
Even
before the Security
Council turned
from its
regularly
scheduled Darfur
meeting to the
urgent session
on Iraq,
Secretary General
Ban Ki-moon,
not in the UN
but "in New
York"
according to
his public
schedule, put
out a
statement
calling on
those with
“resources to
positively
impact the
situation to
support the
Government.”
Did
that mean air
strikes?
On
July 25 after
the UN
Security
Council met
behind closed
doors with the
Syria
Commission of
Inquiry's
Paulo Sergio
Pinheiro and
Karen AbuZayd,
the two
Commissioners
and UK
Ambassador
Mark Lyall
Grant came to
take questions
from the
press.
Karen
AbuZayd spoke
of abuses not
only by the
government but
also, in
response to a
question, by
what she
called the
Islamic State
of Iraq and
[Syria], ISIL.
Inner City
Press when
called on
asked her
about ISIS'
takeover of
border
crossing,
renaming as
Islamic State
and attacks on
non-Sunni
Muslims in
Mosul.
In
this context,
what did she
think of hers
or another
Commission of
Inquiry
covering the
group's abuses
in Iraq as
well? Bigger
picture, does
the state by
state focus of
the UN make
sense in this
context?
AbuZayd
said
she prefers
not to call
them “Islamic
State,” it
give them too
much credit.
Pinheiro
resisted any
talk of
expanding his
Commission's
mandate --
Syria is
enough.
A US
state media
asked about
foreign
fighters,
including
pro-government;
Pinheiro said
that Hezbollah
is the only
group of
foreign
fighters he's
away of.
This
is strange,
given that the
UN's
own recent
report on
Syria
humanitarian
access
notes that “on
June 29, the
Islamic State
issued a
statement
announcing
that the
Caliphate
included
people from
the following
nationalities:
Caucasian
[sic], Indian,
Chinese, Shami
(Levantine),
Iraqi, Yemeni,
Egyptian,
North African,
American,
French,
German, and
Australians."
Watch this
site.
Footnote: one
wanted to ask
AbuZayd about
developments
-- to put it
mildly -- in
Gaza, where
she used to
head UNRWA,
but this too
was deemed
beyond the
scope of the
stakeout.
Another former
Gaza hand, John
Ging, has
been speaking
on the topic
this week.
Perhaps we'll
hear from Ms.
AbuZayd. We'll
be watching.
* * *
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