Inner City
Press on
behalf of the
Free
UN Coalition
for Access
went to the UN
Spokesperson's
Office on
September 29,
the eve of the
Security
Council's
month meeting,
and asked for
an explanation
why rather
than reform
the pre-spin
system, the
reports are
simply not
pre-released.
There was no
explanation.
Update:
on September
30, the UN
Spokesperson's
office put the
report, dated
September 23,
into its "Gray
Lady." What
was the point?
We'll have
more on this.
The UN should
be
transparent.
The
new report
goes on,
"Government-
controlled
cities and
towns
continued to
be subject
toindiscriminate
mortar
attacks,
shelling and
vehicle-borne
improvised
explosivedevices
by armed
opposition,
extremist and
designated
terrorist
groups,
notably in
Aleppo and
Damascus
governorates.
For example,
in Aleppo
city,
extensive
shellingin the
Khalideah
residential
and commercial
area at the
beginning of
September
resulted in
the deaths of
eight
civilians,
including
women and
children."
On a
group neither
listed with
ISIL and Al
Nursa, nor
(formally)
with the Free
Syrian Army,
the new UN
report says
"On September
5, armed
opposition
groups took
control of the
Dokhanya and
Ein Tarma
suburbs of
Damascus and
engaged
government
forces in
Midan and
Zahira al
Jadida,
located less
than 2 km from
the Old City.
A similar
operation took
place in
Teshrine
district,
north of
Damascus. On
16 September,
one of the
main Islamic
Front factions
(Ajnad al
Sham)
announced the
beginning of a
second phase
of rocket
attacks on the
centre of
Damascus."
In the new
system,
selective
reports
circulate for
days before
the UN's
actual report.
The spoon-fed
pre-spinner,
ironically,
has engaged in
censorship
of other
leaks, click
here for
ChillingEffects.org,
here
for critique
by the
Electronic
Frontier
Foundation.
As Inner City
Press reported
here,
Australia
along with
Luxembourg and
Jordan pushed
a
resolution on
Syria aid
access.
Again,
the UN report
does not
directly
address calls
in Washington
to support the
Free
Syrian Army --
which is still
listed by
another part
of the UN as
recruiting and
using child
soldiers.
On ISIL, the
report
continues in
Paragraph 8:
"ISIL
continues to
increase its
influence in
the Syrian
Arab Republic,
predominantly
along the main
supply lines
in rural
central Homs,
Hama, Rif
Dimashq,
southern
Hasakeh and
western
Aleppo. It
also continues
to fight for
the control of
border
crossings and
natural
resources.
During the
reporting
period, it
made advances
in Raqqa,
Hasakeh, and
Aleppo
governorates
following
clashes with
Government
forces."
How has the
pre-spinning
worked, or not
worked? Back
on July 24 at
11:15 am US
state media
began tweeting
about the
report. Inner
City Press
went to the
Spokesperson's
Office and
asked if it
had been put
out as
described
below. No, was
the answer.
But 15 minutes
later, the
Spokesperson's
Office
squawked that
the report had
been
distributed to
the Council,
and there is
then was in
the "gray
lady" -- the
only UN report
still
distributed
this way -- no
reports on
Africa are.
Back
on June 20,
just before 6
pm, the UN
Spokesperson's
Office
announced over
its "squawk"
system to
correspondents
still in the
building that
the report had
been
circulated.
This meant it
had been
placed in
piece of
furniture in
the
Spokesperson's
Office which
has sat empty
for many days
now.
Apparently
only these
Syria reports
are now
pre-released,
pre-announced
and pre-spun.
In terms of
the
Spokesperson's
duty to answer
questions,
there was by
closure on
June 20 no
answer to
Inner City
Press' request
to confirm or
deny Ban
Ki-moon was
handed legal
papers about
the
introduction
of cholera
into Haiti
as he
entered the
Asia Society,
Inner City
Press coverage
here.
Back on May 22
the UN's go-to
wire service,
which has also
tried
to get other
media thrown out,
gushed that
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
"toughly
worded
report... said
Syrian
President
Bashar
al-Assad's
government
bore the
greater
responsibility."
This wire's
report didn't
mention the
Free Syrian
Army
displacing
people (in the
report) or the
FSA
recruiting
child soldiers
(in another
recent UN
report,
which Inner
City Press noted
here.)
Nor did it
mention, for
example,
"45,000 in
areas besieged
by opposition
forces in
Nubul and
Zahra." The
number remains
the same in
the June 20
report.
As we
diplomatically
sketched on
April 23
hoping for
some reform,
the UN
Spokesperson's
Office makes
"advance
copies" of
reports
available.
That is fine -
but there is
no consistency
in who they
tell of the
availability
of reports or
how they make
the
announcement.
Showing bias,
they only
"squawk" over
the internal
intercom
system some
but not all
reports.
Now this
inconsistency
applies to
pre-releasing
some but not
all reports.
Who decides?
How?
Using the
squawk system
rather than
e-mailing all
resident
correspondents
favors media,
like the UN
friendly wire,
which have a
person sitting
in their
office -- for
example a
person who
filed a "for
the record"
complaint
against
another media,
than scammed
Google into banning the
leaked
complaint from
Search,
misusing the
Digital
Millennium
Copyright Act,
click here for
that.
Other
international
organizations
handle this
with less
bias. The IMF
gives
accredited
media like
Inner City
Press
embargoed
copies of
documents, and
hold
embargoed
briefings to
which
accredited
journalists
anywhere in
the world can
pose questions,
then wait and
report at the
embargo time.
The UN must
improve: and
the Free
UN Coalition
for Access
is working on
this.
Other have
complained
about this
murky UN
practices;
others still a
month ago
asked FUNCA to
wait a week
before
proposing
reforms, which
it did. But
where are any
reforms? We
will continue
to Press.
If the Gulf
& Western
insiders on
the board of
the UN
Correspondents
Association,
which tried
to get other
media thrown
out of the UN,
have a problem
with
disclosure,
they too
should push
the UN to
reform. But
they won't
even reform
themselves,
and for
example commit
not to seek
the expulsion
of other media
from the UN.
The current
spokesperson
has taken
sides on this
and other
things; it is
time for
reform. If Ban
Ki-moon is so
tough and
principled,
why was he praising
the president
of Sri Lanka
just after a
report showed
him seeking to
"go all the
way" and kill
all his
opponents?
This all
circles back.
We'll have
more on this.
Further
back-ground:
On April 30
when UN
Humanitarian
chief Valerie
Amos took
media
questions,
Inner City
Press asked
her about two
paragraphs of
her report on
Syria, the
advance copy
of which was
released on
April 23 as
analyzed
below.
Paragraph 47
disclosed 25
UN staff
members
detained.
Inner City
Press asked,
by whom? Amos
said by both
the government
and the armed
groups.
The
June 20
report, in
Paragraph 44,
says
"29 UN staff
(27 UNRWA
and 2 UNDP)
are currently
detained of which
four are
missing."
The Free
UN Coalition
for Access
has repeatedly
asked,
including at
UN noon
briefings, why
these reports
don't just go
online for all
to see. The
response,
off-camera,
has been to
allow
translation
into the UN's
official six
languages.
Really?
The result is
that stories
are written,
for example here
by Reuters,
that focus on
the Syrian
government
while the
report has
whole sections
about Al
Qaeda, Al
Nusra, ISIS,
et al. Is this
retyping
really
"reporting" by
the Reuters
bureau chief,
who himself is
engaged in
censorship,
here?
Despite
the lack of
any stated
rule in this
regard,
FUNCA and
Inner City
Press have
been
criticized for
even
questioning or
reporting on
this
anti-public
process. A
previous UN
spokesperson
told Inner
City Press the
reason for
stealth is
that "the
member states"
would like
pre-release
before
translation.
But doesn't
the
Secretariat
WORK for
member states?
Or is this how
they buy the
fealty of the
scribes?
But if Gulf
media
immediately
scans and puts
the advance
copy online,
where is the
mystery? Where
is the double
standard?
Wouldn't it be
better for the
UN itself to
put the report
online when
available?
And
then not, as it did
on Western
Sahara,
change the
report after
getting pushed
around? FUNCA
is and will
remain for UN
transparency
and fair
treatment. And
FUNCA
maintains there should be answers --
including from
UN
Under
Secretaries
General --
and written
rules. The UN
has outright
refused to
explain why
for example
the Turkish
Cypriot leader
Eroglu was
allowed to
speak on UNTV
but Polisario
is not. The
lack of rules
only benefits
the powerful:
media,
countries,
corporations.
When Qatar
sponsored an event at
the UN in New
York on March
21 featuring
the Syrian
Coalition
headed by
Ahmad al
Jarba, a group
calling its
the Syrian
Grassroots
Movement held
protests
seeking to
oust Jarba.
By March 22,
the group
stated that
some 40,000
people in 58
cities inside
Syria had
participated
in
demonstrations
to get Jarba
out of his
post, saying
"it is time to
put an end to
political
corruption."
Back in
September
2013, France
sponsored an
event in the
UN and called
Jarba the sole
legitimate
representative
of the Syrian
people. French
Ambassador
Gerard Araud
was the first
questioning at
Qatar's March
21 Syrian
Coalition
event. What is
France's
position now?
Who chooses
the leaders?
Likewise, back in
July 2013
and earlier
this month,
the Jarba-led
Syrian
Coalition held
faux
"UN" events in
the clubhouse
Ban Ki-moon's
Secretariat
gives to the
largely Gulf
and Western UN
Correspondents
Association.
How does that
now appear, in
light of the
anti-Jarba
protests?
Qatar's March
21 event was
not listed in
the UN Journal
nor in the UN
Media Alert.
It was not on
the UN's
publicly
available
webcast.
Select media
outlets were
there, when
Inner City
Press came in
at the end to
ask a
question: Al
Jazeera on the
podium in
Qatar's event,
Al Arabiya
like a Saudi
diplomat --
not the
Permanent
Representative
-- in the
audience along
with Al Hayat,
even Al Hurra,
on whose
Broadcasting
Board of
Governors US
Secretary of
State John
Kerry serves.
The new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
is against
faux UN
events, in the
clubhouse the
Secretariat
gives to
what's become
its UN
Censorship
Alliance or
elsewhere.
Watch
this site.