UN
Peacekeepers'
Inaction in S.
Kordofan Was
"Ambiguous"
and So It Was
Edited Out,
OHCHR
Belatedly
Tells Press
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 31 --
Even before
the UN
peacekeepers
in Southern
Kordofan
entirely
stopped
protecting
civilians on
July 9 upon
the expiration
of the mandate
of the UN
Mission in
Sudan, they
were criticized
for inaction
on murders of
people
including
their own
employees
in Kadugli in
June.
When
Inner City
Press asked
the Anglican
bishop of
Kadugli, he
said that the
UN
peacekeepers
had sided with
government
aligned
militias.
With
surprising
candor, a
draft UN
report on
Southern
Kordofan,
obtained and
put online
by Inner City,
reported
that
"29.
On
8 June, an
UNMIS
independent
contractor
(IC) was
pulled out of
a vehicle by
SAF in front
of the UNMIS
Kadugli Sector
IV Compound in
the presence
of several
witnesses,
while UN
peacekeepers
could not
intervene. He
was taken
around the
corner of the
compound and
gunshots were
heard. Later
he was
discovered
dead by UNMIS
personnel and
IDPs."
When
asked about
the phrase "UN
peacekeepers
could not
intervene," UN
officials
including now
former
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations
chief Alain Le
Roy emphasized
that the
report could
still be
changed.
When
the Office of
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights Navi Pillay
finally issued
the report,
the line "UN
peacekeepers
could not
intervene" had
been entirely
removed:
"17.
On
8 June, an
UNMIS
individual
contractor
(IC) was
pulled out of
a vehicle by
SAF in front
of the UNMIS
Kadugli Sector
IV compound in
the presence
of several
witnesses. He
was taken away
from the
vicinity of
the compound
and gunshots
were heard.
Later he was
discovered
dead by UNMIS
personnel and
IDPs."
Inner
City Press asked now former
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq
about the
deletion of
the phrase and
was told to
"ask Navi
Pillay."
As Pillay and
an entourage
left the UN
Security
Council on
August 19,
Inner City
Press stopped
her and asked
about edits.
"She has an
appointment,"
a staff member
intervened.
"We will
e-mail you an
answer."
After
waiting more
than a week,
Inner City
Press sent
this and other
questions to
Pillay's
spokesman
Rupert
Colville in
Geneva. To his
credit,
Colville two
days later
sent an
explanation,
published in
full here;
on this edit
he wrote:
"draft
para
29 / final
para 17:
original
phrase 'while
UN
peacekeepers
could not
intervene' is
ambiguous.
Does it mean
they were not
ABLE to? If so
was that for
circumstantial
reasons, or
because of
rules of
engagement? Or
does it mean
they chose not
to? After
checking with
the field, we
were unable to
establish the
precise
circumstances,
so the
reference was
deleted."
For
UN
peacekeepers
to fail to act
during
killings,
important in
this instance
to no less
that the
Bishop of
Kadugli and
previously of
interest from
Srebrenica to
Rwanda, should
not be left
ambiguous --
but it should
definitely not
by deleted, by
the UN.
The
Office of the
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights could
and should
have
determined
what were the
rules of
engagement for
these UN
peacekeepers,
and should
have addressed
the
allegations by
the Bishop of
Kadugli and
others that
the
peacekeepers
decided not to
act because
they sided
with Khartoum
and its
militias.
To delete the
reference and
airbrush out
the
peacekeepers
is, in this
view, entirely
irresponsible.
So too, some
feel, has been
Pillay's
silence on the
UN at least
twice flying
in a UN
helicopter
Southern
Kordofan's
governor Ahmed
Haroun,
indicted by
the
International
Criminal Court
for war
crimes. In
this context,
to air brush
out inaction
by UN
peacekeepers
in the same
geography
appears even
worse.
Ban
& Pillay
& Deputy
Kang, Kordofan
edits &
comments on
Haroun flights
not shown
Another
edit involved
moving where
Sudanese
Central
Reserve Police
moved arms
from inside to
outside of the
UNMIS
Protective
Perimeter.
The
draft:
"42.
On
8 June, UNMIS
Human Rights
witnessed the
movement of
four armed men
(two armed
civilians and
two Central
Reserve
Police)
carrying
weapons in and
out of the
UNMIS
Protective
Perimeter
without any
intervention
from the UNMIS
peacekeepers
guarding the
premises."
The "final"--
"30.
On
8 June, UNMIS
Human Rights
witnessed the
movement of
four armed men
(two armed men
in civilian
clothes and
two Central
Reserve
Police)
carrying
weapons in and
out of the IDP
area situated
outside the
UNMIS
protective
perimeter."
Of
this, Colville
writes
"draft
para
42 / final
para 30:
Change made
because
checking
process
suggested
factual error
regarding
location of
movement of
arms, which in
turn cast a
very different
light on
behaviour of
UNMIS troops."
Beyond
the seeming
emphasis on
exonerating
the
peacekeepers,
one wonders
even if the
movement of
arms by
Central
Reserve Police
was "outside
the UNMIS
Protective
Perimeter" but
still
witnessed by
the UN, why
did the UN not
act, and was
the
peacekeepers'
presence
airbrushed out
of the final
report?
Entirely
taken out were
two
paragraphs
about the
Sudanese Red
Crescent,
since accused
of filling
mass graves
and lighting
the corpses on
fire.
"53.
As
of the morning
of 20 June,
there were
about 11,000
IDPs in and
around the
vicinity of
the UNMIS
Protective
Perimeter,
most of whom
had come from
Kadugli and
its immediate
environs. In
an attempt to
force these
IDPs to return
back to their
homes, it is
believed that
National
Security
agents,
donning Sudan
Red Crescent
vests, came to
the UNMIS
Protective
Perimeter and
requested all
the IDPs to
relocate to
the Kadugli
Stadium by
17:00 that
same day where
they would be
addressed by
state
authorities on
the security
situation and
where they
would be
provided basic
services
including
shelter in
schools. Human
Rights
verified this
allegation
through
multiple
interviews of
IDPs within
the UNMIS
Protective
Perimeter.
54.
UNMIS
Human Rights
also observed
a well known
National
Security agent
wearing a
Sudan Red
Crescent
reflective
vest
intimidating
IDPs. When
approached and
questioned by
UNMIS Human
Rights the
agent
identified
himself as a
NSS agent and
said he had
received
instructions
from
state-level
authorities to
move out IDPs
from the UNMIS
Protective
Perimeter.
IDPs
interviewed
said that they
were informed
by Sudan Red
Crescent
personnel that
they must
evacuate the
Protective
Perimeter by
16:00 and that
they feared
the Central
Reserve Police
would evacuate
them forcibly
if they did
not leave the
premises."
Of
the deletion
in full of
these
paragraphs,
Colville
writes:
"removal
of
draft paras
53-54: After
fact-checking,
we did not
feel we could
substantiate
the
allegations in
these two
paragraphs.
This does not
necessarily
mean they were
not true --
just that we
did not have
sufficiently
solid evidence
to include
them at the
time we
finalized the
report."
Has
OHCHR gotten
more
information
since it
finalized the
report? And
what of the
line that UN "Human
Rights
verified this
allegation
through
multiple
interviews of
IDPs within
the UNMIS
Protective
Perimeter"?
Did these
"multiple
interviews"
not take
place? Did
witnesses
later recant?
If so, why?
OHCHR and the
UN should
still explain
this,
particularly
in light of
what has since
come out about
the Sudanese
Red Cross,
which
President Al
Bashir now
says is the
only group
permitted to
provide aid in
Southern
Kordofan.
Colville,
again to his
credit, had
more to say,
including
about other
OHCHR reports
about Abyei
and the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo. His
full response
about the
report and
edits is here.