UNITED NATIONS,
March 20 – On Myanmar, Japan's
Abe government's ambiguous
position was highlighted back
in October 2017 when UN
Special Rapporteur on Human
Rights in Myanmar Yanghee Lee
urged the country, still then
on the UN Security Council,
not to block a Council
resolution, here.
Now, after pro-Abe media
Sankei Shimbun claimed
breathlessly from Singapore
via Hideki Yoshimura that its
Myanmar sources assured it
Rohingya would begin returning
from Bangladesh on March 16,
the government has in fact
built chain link fences to
prevent such returns. As
initially with an Okinawa
do-gooder story, until now no
retraction. Instead,
opting
for now
instead like
Mayu Uetsuka
of Sankei
Shimsun,here,
to jump on the
U.S.gun
control
bandwagon,
while having
ignored the UN
itself
promoting and
advertising
automatic
weapons, tanks
and even
rocket
launchers in
its 1-B
basement.
(Inner City
Press
exclusive
series,here,videohere.) Are these
glaring
omissions
known to
correspondents
Hiroyuki Kano,Krose
Etsuia
and even, inLondon,
Okabe Shinbun?
To say nothing
of actually
detainedTatsuya
Kato who at
least then
defended press
freedom, with
Jun Kurosawa
UNdeclared?
While some say
"it's all
set," this
could and
should all be
turned around.We'll
have more, much more, on this.
in
the wake of
admitted
misreporting
on Okinawa,
accountability
meanscuttingof
one month's
salary from
the Naha
bureau chief.
But are such
cuts overseas,
amid
"coverage" of
cuts of beef,
not likely to
cause more
errors? Like
the recent
report focused
on coal,
pointing the
finger at
Vietnam,
Russia, China,
Vietnam and
South Korea.
Omitted,
apparently
intentionally,
are violations
by Japanese
companies,
like Bank of
Tokyo
Mitsubishi, as
Inner City
Press hasreported.
It is facts
chucked or
thrown, rather
than fact
checked. The
reporting is
politicized,
or asidentifiedin
Tokyo, "last
week the
Sankei Shimbun
retracted an
article it
published in
December about
a U.S. Marine
who was
injured in a
car accident,
saying it
could not
confirm that
the marine had
been trying to
save a
Japanese
citizen when
he was hit by
the car. In an
article
published on
Feb. 8, the
Sankei Shimbun
explained it
had received a
comment from
the U.S.
Marine Corps
in Okinawa
about the
accident, but
had failed to
confirm with
the Okinawa
Prefectural
Police whether
the marine
really saved
the man."Now
Yahoo Japan
has apologized
for even using
Sankei
Shimbun: "We
have a
responsibility
for providing
news stories
to our users,”
Yahoo said.
“We take
seriously the
fact that we
delivered
false news
stories and
deeply
apologize for
it.”We'll
have more, as
much
more as
necessary,on
this:Consider
a recentprofileof
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres by
the Sankei
Shimbun,
casting
Guterres and
more decisive
than his
predecessor
Ban Ki-moon.
One, that's
not saying
much. Two,
along the same
lines, Ban at
least audited
the Ng Lap
Seng UN
briberycase,
something
Guterres has
yet to do with
the larger
China Energy
Fund Committee
/CEFC
China Energy
UN bribery
scandal, with
the companynowtaken
over by the
Shanghai
government.
Three, the
combative or
defensive
approach to
China is
mirrored by
one by South
Korea,
particularly
as that
country
refuses to
give up on the
issue of
comfort women
used by Japan
in World War
II. Notably,
the misogyny
is replicated
in the
microcosm of
the United
Nations. The
same
publication
has had its
#MeToo
moments, in
and out of
Manhattan
(female
correspondents
it is said are
not allowed to
have children
during their
deployments);
local hires
regardless of
years of
effective
service face
imminent
termination
for not
immediately
dropping their
young
children. As
the law has
evolved in the
United States
that could of
course be
turned around.
On the now
exposed
reporting
about a car
crash in
Okinawa back
in December
2017, complete
with similar
finger
pointing at
the Ryukyu
Shimpo and
Okinawa Times.
On that oneMasato
Inui, an
executive
officer at
Sankei
Shimbun,has made
promises. But so
far they are false. In
Myanmar Japan's Embassy in
Yangon has announced a program
that is all about "the
humanitarian-development
nexus," eschewing human
rights. Embassy press release
here.,
citing among others UNFPA
(which gave radio equipment to
a station in Burundi run by
strongman Pierre Nkurunziza, here).
This downplaying of human
rights by Japan has drawn
criticism from, among others,
the International Commission
of Jurists which says, "it's
time for Japan to step up and
urge Myanmar to respect human
rights in Rakhine State." But
to some it appears that
today's Japan is playing a
different game. When Japan's
foreign minister Taro
Kono was at the UN in
September, Inner City Press asked
him about his country's future
with UN Peacekeeping. He
indicted that no new PKO
deployments are planned for
now. Instead, Japan is
focusing on funding and some
training for others' troops,
for example with the
International Peace Support
Training Center in Karen,
Kenya. Japan's "Yen diplomacy"
was also on display at this
weekend's New York retreat of
the UN's African Group
ambassador, where Japan was
one of the few non-African
countries seen present, photo
here. African sources point to
some Japanese hard power,
citing a Japan
Self-Defence Force deployment
of 180 personnel at a military
naval base in Djibouti, by
Camp Lemonnier, the US
military's base adjacent to
the country’s international
airport. After the killing of
the Japanese journalist, Kenji
Goto, and another hostage,
Haruna Yakwa, by ISIS in
February 2015, Japan has
gotten more active. But
African sources want more.
"This ain't no Belt and Road,"
one of them said. On Japan's
major military focus, in the
face of North Korea sanctions,
the UN in December 2017 used
the sanctioned Foreign Trade
Bank and Russia's Sputnik Bank
to release EUR 3,974,920.62
into the country, documents
obtained by Inner City Press
and exclusively published on
February 21 show. The US
announced new
sanctions on February 23, and
has now asked the UN sanctions
committee which approved the
UN's own transfer to adopt the
US list. Japan has chimed in
on three: Belize's Wan Heng
11, North Korea's Yu Jong 2
and Dominica-flagged Yuk Tung.
Significantly, though, the UN
on February 23 refused to
answer basic questions about
its hard currency dealings in
North Korea. At the February
23 UN noon briefing, Inner
City Press asked UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres'
spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: I sent you
these in writing, but I wanted
to ask you, I guess, not
having gotten any answers, to
factual questions about the
transfer of hard currency into
DPRK, North Korea. The
letters that we obtained and
published is about one quarter
[of 2017], but is there a way
to know what the the euro or
dollar volume for the year
2017 is? And has the UN
conducted any audit of its
activities, because there's no
country plan, at least none
that's public?
Spokesman: "I will see
what we can… what we can get."
Hours later Dujarric called
his end of day and week lid,
without providing any of the
information. This is called a
cover up. On February 21,
Inner City Press asked the
Dutch chair of the UN Security
Council's 1718 Sanctions
committee about the exemption.
He refused to comment, saying
the issue did not come up in
the meeting he had just
exited. Video here.
But a letter from
Sputnik Bank stated that
"unauthorized person (I.V.
Tonkih) led negotiations
with Korean party on interbank
correspondent relationship."
Photos here,
more documents in PDF now
published on Patreon, here.
On February 22, Inner City
Press asked UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres'
spokesman Stephane Dujarric
about how Sputnik Bank, given
its admission, was selected,
and then additional questions
in writing, below - which
Dujarric would not answer or
confirm. Video here.
From the UN transcript:
Inner City Press: I wanted to
ask you quickly about a thing
in North Korea. I've
learned yesterday and
published the documents of a
waiver sought by the UN
system, he UN Resident
Coordinator, Tapan Mishra. To
use a, some say little-known,
but, in any case, not a
prominent Russian bank as a
correspondent bank to send €4
million into North Korea in
December. And I wanted
to know, first of all, how is
the bank… there's a document
that's… that's part of the
request that shows that the
Russian bank acknowledges that
an unauthorized person even
negotiated the correspondent
bank relationship. How
does the UN system choose
which correspondent bank to
use? And is this
comment… is this… it seemed
like they presented this as an
emergency for third-quarter
disbursements of 4 million
euros into North
Korea…Spokesman: Listen,
I don't know the details of
the agreement. What I do
know is that the UN operates,
has humanitarian presence and
has a presence in
Pyongyang. We abide… the
DPRK [Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea], as you
know, is under very strict
sanctions from the Security
Council, which include issues
of the banking sector.
We do need to get money to pay
staff and to run our
programmes. I think it's
only normal that we go through
the Sanctions Committee to get
the waivers. We don't
want to be… obviously, the
Secretariat doesn't want to be
in violation of Security
Council resolutions. To
say that dealing with the
banking sector in terms of
banks that are willing to do
business legitimately in the
DPRK is challenging would
probably be an
understatement. But
whatever rules there are, I
have no doubt that they were
followed. Inner City
Press: So, simple
question, is this… is this put
out… is there a procurement
for this? I'm asking you
because there's some questions
about how the bank was
selected even from… their own
documents acknowledge some
irregularities. So how…
can you look? Spokesman:
As I said, I don't have
further details. I can
look into it, but I know we're
working in a very challenging
environment in trying to
follow the rules and
regulations to the 'T.'"
To the T? Inner City Press has
also aske in writing, "Please
state the total of funds the
UN system (including
specifically the agencies
named in the Resident
Coordinator's request)
transferred in 2017 to DPRK,
including total for program
use (development assistance)
and total for UN use
(maintenance, local salaries,
etc). When was the last audit
of UN activities in North
Korea / DPRK done? There will
be more." In 2017
then-chairman of the UN
Security Council's 1718 /
North Korea sanctions
committee Sebastiano Cardi of
Italy informed Sputnik Bank to
release the nearly EUR 4
million to the Foreign Trade
Bank - the very entity for
dealing with Latvia's ABLV
Bank has been sanctioned by
the United States. Previously,
Cardi by letter had, according
to UN Resient Coordinator
Tapan Mishra, neglected to
"make clear reference to the
need for cash withdrawal." The
Treasurer of the UN
Development Program Paul
Gravanese then asked Cardi for
wider authorization for FTB to
withdraw funds. This only
concerned the third quarter of
2017 - what has been done
since? The new chairman
declined to say. Others say,
the UN has fixed nothing,
sweeps everything uner the
rug. Earlier this month
when Inner City Press asked if
the Committee's rulings on
request for exemptions, and
the underlying requests
themselves, are placed on the
Committee's website or
otherwise made public. The
answer was and is no.
Inner City Press will have
more in this exclusive series. Media paid to
cover the UN too often let it
off the hook, on issues from
North Korea to UN corruption
to most recently automatic
weapons. The UN has been the
venue for bribes paid from
Macau based operative Ng Lap
Seng and now Patrick Ho of the
China Energy Fund Committee -
but on February 13 in the same
basement the North Korea
sanctions committee meets in
the UN allowed an Indonesia
based weapons company to
advertise not only machine
guns and drones but even tanks
inside the UN. Periscope video
here.
But when the Japanese media
paid to cover the UN belatedly
chime in on gun control, like
Sankei Shimbun's Mayu Uetsuka
here,
they ignored the UN's total
failure in even advertising
guns after the Florida
shooting. They could have
covered it, and still could;
their Mr Tatsuya Kato in South
Korea, whom Inner City Press
supported here
and here,
and also in Sankei, proves
there is something to support
on a free Press basis. But. As
the North
Korea UN
sanctions
"experts"
report
continues to
be cherry
picked further
and further
down the food
chain, now
that North
Korea paid its
2017 UN dues
by means of a
swap is also ignored,
like
the recent
report focused
on coal,
pointing the
finger at
Vietnam,
Russia, China,
Vietnam and
South Korea.
Omitted,
apparently
intentionally,
are violations
by Japanese
companies,
like Bank of
Tokyo
Mitsubishi, as
Inner City
Press has reported.
It is facts
chucked or
thrown, rather
than fact
checked. How
far will
today's UN go
to placate
some
countries,
while ignoring
others and restricting
the Press? On
January 26 UN
"global
communications"
chief Alison
Smale flew to
Charleston,
South Carolina
for a photo op
and UNTV video
with China's
Xiamen
Airlines for
having
painting the
UN's "SDGs"
logo on the
side of an
airplane. This
without having
answered Press
questions
about her
Department of
Public
Information's
malfeasance
with resources
allocated by
the General
Assembly for Kiswahili
and about the
lack under her
"leadership"
of any content
neutral UN
media access
rules.
Afterward,
when Inner
City Press
asked for the
mp4 video
of her South
Carolina
junket - Inner
City Press is
informed that
the plane she
celebrated
could not in
fact fly - it
was told to
"Ask UN
Webcast,"
which is under
Smale. They
were asked -
and have not
given the
video. Nor has
Smale offered
any response
to a detailed
petition
two weeks ago,
while
re-tweeting
her former
employer the
NYT and
current boss
Antonio
Guterres. But
who is making
who look bad?
And how can a
former NYT
editor have no
content
neutral media
access rules,
and no
answers? As
she restricts
Inner City Press from its
UN reporting on
Cameroon,
Myanmar,
Kenya,
Yemen
and elsewhere?
We'll
have more on
this. While
any country
would try to
get the UN to
promote its
airline, if
the UN would
do it, Smale
is the UN
official who
responsible
for Inner City
Press being
restricted and
evicted as it
reports on the
UN bribery
scandal of
Patrick Ho and
China Energy
Fund
Committee.
Smale hasn't
even deigned
to answer
petitions in
this regard,
in September
(she said she
recognized the
need for the
"courtesy" of
a response,
never given)
and in
January --
too busy
flying to
South Carolina
to promote an
airline:
Today's
UN of Antonio Guterres, who
just met
with ICC indictee Omar al
Bashir, and his Deputy Amina
J. Mohammed who has refused
Press questions
on her rosewood signatures
and now the refoulement of 47
people to Cameroon from "her"
Nigeria, has become a place of
corruption and censorship. On
January 30 as Inner City Press
sought to complete its
reporting for the day on
Guterres' Bashir meeting and
Mohammed's Cameroon no-answer,
it had a problem. It was
invited to the month's UN
Security Council president's
end of presidency reception,
6:30 to 8:30 - but with its
accreditation reduced by
censorship, it could not get
back into the UN after 7 pm,
to the already delayed UN
video. It ran to at least
enter the reception - but the
elevator led to a jammed
packed third floor, diplomats
lined up to shake the outgoing
UNSC president's hand. Inner
City Press turn to turn tail
back to the UN, passing on its
way favored, pro-UN
correspondents under no such
restriction. Periscope here.
Inner City Press has written
about this to the head of the
UN Department of Public
Information Alison
Smale, in Sepember
2017 - no answer but a new threat - and this
month, when Smale's DPI
it handing out full access
passes to no-show state media.
No answer at all: pure
censorship, for corruption.
Smale's DPI diverted funds
allocated for Kiswahili,
her staff say, now saying they
are targeted for retaliation.
This is today's UN. Amid UN
bribery scandals, failures in
countries from Cameroon to
Yemen and declining
transparency, today's UN does
not even pretend to have
content neutral rules about
which media get full access
and which are confined to
minders or escorts to cover
the General Assembly. Inner
City Press, which while it
pursue the story of
Macau-based businessman Ng Lap
Seng's bribery of President of
the General Assembly John Ashe
was evicted by the UN
Department of Public
Information from its office,
is STILL confined to minders
as it pursues the new UN
bribery scandal, of Patrick
Ho and Cheikh Gadio
allegedly bribing President of
the General Assembly Sam
Kutesa, and Chad's Idriss
Deby, for CEFC China Energy.
Last week Inner City Press
asked UN DPI where it is on
the list to be restored to
(its) office, and regain full
office - and was told it is
not even on the list, there is
no public list, the UN can
exclude, permanently, whomever
it wants. This is censorship.
***
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