South
Africa
Ambassador
Kumalo Brought
Decolonization
To Life on
UNSC Defended
Press Access
RIP
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Periscope, song,
II
UNITED NATIONS
GATE, January 16 –
It is with
sadness that
Inner City
Press notes
the passing of
Dumisani
Kumalo, South
Africa's
Ambassador to
the UN, cab
driver, human
being. We
covered him
when South
Africa was on
the UN
Security
Council in
2008; he was
open and
articulate,
and one
intervened to
overturn a
block by
France on
Inner City
Press
accompanying a
Security
Council trip
through
Africa. Once
when Inner
City Press was
ejected from
covering a UN
Fourth
(Decolonization)
Committee
meeting about
Western Sahara
- long before
colonial
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres ejected
Inner City
Press from the
UN as a whole,
199 days and
counting -
Kumalo
approached and
said loudly,
directed at
the UN
Secretariat,
"The Press is
pushed out of
a meeting
about
decolonialization?"
Well, yes.
Story here.
Another:
Kumalo
described a
situation in
which the
Council's
"lead
countries" on
African
conflicts are
not themselves
from Africa,
but are the
"former
colonial
powers." He
gave France's
management of
all things
Chad as an
example, and
said that when
he was in Chad
this year, he
asked "what
are we doing
here?" Story here. Rest
in
peace.
On Western
Sahara, when
the UN
Security
Council's rare
meeting
began back on
March 21, Secretary
General Antonio
Guterres'
personal envoy
Horst Kohler walked
in with
security.
Asked if he
would speak
with the press
afterward, he
had one word:
"No." He is
based in
Germany and has
been allowed
to spend
public funds
on his own
holdover team, just
as Guterres
spends public
funds to go to
his home in
Portugal. Now
as Guterres'
retaliatory
ban
on Inner City
Press even
entering the
UN, now in its
196th
day and based
on a frivolous
Morocco
Mission
complaint,
Morocco which
Guterres has
praises so much
on migration
has on
January 14
prevented the
Spanish
jurist Luis
Mangrané from
entering.
He had arrived through
the Canary
Islands. "Customs
prevented the
man from
entering the
city, stating
that he was a
persona non
grata in
Morocco. Luis
Mangrané was
expected to
visit, as an
international
human rights
observer, the
trial of
Brahim Dehani,
which was held
on January
16. Brahim
Dehani was
arrested on
December4 while
he was
reporting on a
demonstration,
taking photos
of the violent
actions
against the
protesters.
His camera was
confiscated.
Earlier
in the month
Morocco expelled
two Spanish
citizens. While
no written
order was
given - this
lack of due
process is
shared by
Guterres -
they were
reportedly
told they
should be
staying in a hotel,
not elsewhere.
Is this an
acceptable
policy in
Guterres' selective
system of
migration? It
can be asked,
though probably
not by the
correspondents
Guterres and
his Alison Smale
allow into
their UN, top
heavy with
state media
including
from Morocco.
Before
the
December 19 UN
noon briefing
Inner
City Press in
writing asked
Guterres, his
Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric and
Global
Communicator
Alison Smale
who promised
answers, questions
including
this:
"December
19-3: On
Western
Sahara,
confirm SG
receipt of and
state his
response to
letter of
Polisario
urging him to
clear “mines
that threaten
the lives of
Saharwis” and
that on
Friday,
December the
14th, two
mines caused
the “death of
a Sahrawi man
and serious
injuries to
others”?
Dujarric
didn't read
out the
question the
way for
example even
the IMF does
with Inner
City Press'
questions; he
entertained
questions
from
pro-Morocco
scribes to
which he and
Guterres
and Smale give
UN office space
even if they
write no
articles. Today's UN
is corrupt.
Chinese
and Moroccan
state media
bragged about
Guterres'
meeting with
Morocco's King
about Western
Sahara - a
meeting of
which
Guterres' opaque and
increasingly
corrupt UN
provided no read out. Xinhua
reports that
On the Western
Sahara
dispute, the
Moroccan king
reiterated to
Guterres "the
support of
Morocco for
efforts made
by the
secretary
general and
his personal
envoy to reach
a final
political
solution to
this regional
dispute." And
from Guterres?
Nothing. On
December 6
from the Geneva
talks the
Frente
POLISARIO said
it "is deeply
concerned by
the EU
Commission's
sustained,
illegal and
uncompromising
efforts to
secure trade
deals with
Morocco which
include the
territory of
Western Sahara
in violation
of the rulings
of the
European Court
of Justice.
Such an
approach,
which clearly
preempts and
undermines the
outcome of
negotiations,
defies logic.
We urge
European
leaders to use
this window of
opportunity to
invest their
efforts into
the UN Peace
Process, and
use trade
constructively
as a positive
incentive for
peace." We'll
have more on
this - for now
we note the
silent of UNSG
Antonio
Guterres, who
not only may
be eating
this fish but
is making a deal with
Morocco in
light of its
hosting the
migration
meeting, a bit
akin to his
troubling
multiply
sources deal
with Cameroon
to ignore Biya's slaughter with Cameroon
chairing the
UN Budget
Committee.
Back on November
28 Norway
announced it
will end its
divestment in
Cairn Energy
and Kosmos
Energy - because both
say they have
discontinued exploitation
of the natural
resources of Western
Sahara. Thus,
Norway
Government
Pension Fund
Global will no
longer exclude
them.
Meanwhile, as
if in a
parallel UNethical
world, the UN
of Antonio
Guterres has
refused to
answer Inner City
Press' weeks
old question
about the long
luxury
stay in
Morocco by Guterres
Under
Secretary
General Catherine
Pollard,
despite the
"promise" by
Guterres' USG
for Global
Communications
Alison Smale
to UN Special Rapporteur
for Freedom of
Expression David
Kaye that
Inner City
Press' written
questions
would be
answered so
that the UN
could claim,
despite banning Inner
City Press
from entering
the UN and
asking questions
are their
now-lame noon
briefing, that
Guterres
somehow
respects
freedom of the
press. He does
not. We will
have more
about the
upcoming talks, even
as we cover the UN
bribery trial
that began
November 26. As
Inner City
Press puts
its questions,
until Guterres'
ghoulish
ban ends, at
the UN
Delegates
Entrance and
gets some
answers,
Morocco's delegation
after their
false
complaint was
used in part
to ban Inner
City Press
answers
nothing. Watch
this site.
On
October 31
there were
three
abstentions to
the adoption
of Resolution
2440, extending
MINURSO for
six months.
Guterres' UN,
or his Alison
Smale's DPI,
refused to
send the
resolution to banned
Inner City
Press until
long after it
was given
to Moroccan and
French state
media. On
November 8 for
the noon briefing
it remains
banned from by
Guterres for the
127th day,
Inner City
Press sent this
question in
writing to
Guterres, his
Nigerian
Deputy SG,
Smale, and two
spokesmen
including Stephane
Dujarric:
"November
8-4: On
Western
Sahara, what
is the SG's
comment and
action, and
separately
that of his
Personal Envoy
Horst Kohler,
at the
“business”
conference
last week
regarding
which
Polisario have
in an open
letter to the
SG called an
example of
Morocco's
"hostile
expansionist
policy”? Also,
please explain
why USG
Pollard is in
Morocco, how
long she has
been there and
at what cost?
This close to
the Migration
Meeting, what
is the need
for a USG
rather than
technical team
to be there?
Is taking
Morocco's
money for this
a conflict of
interest given
the UN's
purported role
in holding a
referendum on
Western Sahara
independence?"
No answer,
typically,
while AFP and
others blather on
in the
briefing. This is
today's UN
under
Guterres.
Back on
October 31 at
the stakeout,
Morocco's PR Omar
Hilale took
handpicked
questions from
correspondents
already
handpicked by
Guterres and
Smale: Morocco
state media,
retirees, France
24. It was a
fake-out
at the
stakeout. Hilale
bragged that
referendum is
no longer on
the table -
that is, that
the UN
under Guterres
has finally
fully broken
its promise. Why would
anyone believe
Guterres' UN
in the future?
Here
were Inner
City Press'
questions to
Hilale before
it was ousted
(with Smale
using a false
complaint from
Morocco's
Mission to the
UN and her own
bitter deputy),
on YouTube,
and here's a song.
The UN, with
censorship
in New York
including
beyond the
UN's gates
and with
broken
promises in
Western
Sahara, Yemen
and Cameroon,
is in steep
decline. On
October 29 the scheduled
adoption of
the MINURSO resolution
was taken off
the UN Security
Council schedule
- nor was it
on for October
30. So it will
be done, or
rolled over,
right at the
October 31
deadline. Even
with Inner
City Press
banned by
Guterres, a
Council
diplomat to
whom we're
giving
and will
always give
anonymity told
Inner City
Press, "The
experts met
today to
discuss the
draft. The
major issue is
the time frame
for mandate
renewal. The
US is saying
six months but
France is
arguing for
one year
renewal. There
are also other
issues.
Reference to
the neighbors
and the issue
of self
determination
- the need for
it to be
clearly stated
like in the
past, so on
and so forth.
We’ll see how
the US is
going to
accommodate
all the
comments
expressed
during the
negotiation.
Revised text
to be
circulated
tomorrow." We
are grateful
for the
assessment
and pass it on
in the
public
interest;
watch this
site. Back
on October 11,
Guterres'
ban excluded
Inner
City Press from
the
Council's
consultations
on Western
Sahara (before which
French
Ambassador
Francois
Delattre said
"On MINURSO,
we believe the
current trend,
the current
dynamic is
positive")
- as well as
the testimony
in the UN's
Fourth (Decolonization)
Committee,
the
public record
reflects
that Guterres
and Catarina
Vaz Pinto who
has not
moved to
New York went
on what was
called a
"business"
honeymoon --
to Morocco.
See here,
referring to
"honeymoon in
Morocco,
though it is
believed the
Prime Minister
will be
dealing with
business which
is not
necessarily 'unofficial.'"
Now in
France charges
have been filed with
the State
Prosecutor at
the High Court
of Paris for
"colonization
crimes"
against BNP
Paribas,
Société
Générale (both
late linked with MBS'
Davos in the
Desert even
post Khashoggi),
Crédit
Agricole,
airlin Transavia,
French Dutch
airline
France-KLM, AXA and
UCPA, which
runs
surf
competitions
in Dakhla. They
are
was based on
the two
rulings
pronounced by
the Court of
Justice of the
European Union
(CJEU) in
January 2016
and February
2017.
This is
Morocco and
its trolls glory
in the lawless
move by
Guterres to
have Inner City Press
roughed up and
banned now for
110 days and
counting.
It only strengthens
ours resolve
to report.
Guterres
is
ingratiating
himself to
Morocco in the
run up to the
migration compact
conference, not
unlike his silence
on the slaughter
in Cameroon to
gain support
of Paul Biya's
ambassador Tommo
Monthe as
chair of the
UN Budget
Committee. In the
Fourth
Committee, a
women who linked
herself to
the US
Department of
Justice gave a
speech
about crime in
what she
called the
"Tindorf"
camps.
This as the
Vice Chairman
of the
European
Parliament
Committee on
Foreign
Affairs,
Anders
Primdahl
Vistisen of
Denmark claims
the
EU-Morocco
draft
agreement "does
not provide
for the
recognition of
Morocco’s
sovereignty
over Western
Sahara." The
honeymoon is
over. Watch
this
site.
The
African
Union
reportedly
wants to
re-open its
office in the
UN's MINURSO
mission, from
which it
might for
example
monitor human
rights as the
UN does
not
- this while
Guterres
awards free
access and
office space
to numerous
Morocco state
media while
restricting
Inner City
Press and
coming up, through
his spokesman
Stephane Dujarric
and ironically
Al Jazeera,
with pretexts
to threaten
more
restrictions,
here.
The
basis for
Guterres'
position?
Morocco will
host "his"
migration
meeting and he
needs them, just as
he needed the
Cameroonian chair of
the UN Budget
committee and so
went silent on
slaughter of Anglophones
there. On June
22, Guterres'
UN guard, with
automatic
weapons with
them, ousted
Inner City Press
from the UN
during an
event at which
Guterres gave
a speech. Video
here,
story here,
new petition here.new petition here.new petition hThere
was Morocco
diplomat
angle, here. Then
on July 3, a more
violent ouster
from covering the UN
Budget
Committee, and
a ban since, made
permanent by
Guterres' "Global
Communicator" Alison
Smale
on August
17 without
any due
process. On September
17, a US read
out with
Morocco's
foreign
minister
included Iran by
name - but not
Western Sahara:
"Secretary
Michael R.
Pompeo met
today with
Moroccan
Minister of
Foreign
Affairs and
International
Cooperation
Nasser
Bourita.
They discussed
opportunities
to expand our
strong
economic and
security
cooperation,
including
shared efforts
to end Iran’s
support for
terrorism and
counter its
malign
influence in
the region.
Secretary
Pompeo and
Foreign
Minister
Bourita agreed
to hold the
next session
of the
U.S.-Morocco
Strategic
Dialogue in
Washington
next
year.
They also
discussed
other regional
and
international
issues." Some
wonder, on
all of the
above, where
is John
Bolton? Back
on
August 1 for
UK Ambassador
(and
incoming UNSC
President)
Karen Pierce's
"press"
conference from
which Inner
City Press was
banned, it
submitted this
question to
the UK Mission: "on
the agenda
there's
Western Sahara
on the
afternoon of
Wednesday 8
August. Last
month Sweden
said at the
beginning of
the month that
it would be
seeking agreed
Press Elements
from every
consultation.
Will the UK be
seeking Press
Elements from
this Western
Sahara
consultation?
And if not,
why not?
if it could be
read out and
Amb Pierce
answer it on
camera it
would be
appreciated."
But the question
was not
read out at the Press-less
press conference
at
which the UK
called on many
state media. Nor was
it answered
when submitted
a second time. At
the UN
Delegates
Entrance gate
on August 8
the Morocco
delegation refused
to answer
Inner City Press'
questions;
inside the UN
Guterres
and his Alison
Smale give
multiple
offices to
Morroco state media,
some of whom
double as UN
staff. In this
context, here
is Polisario's
August 8
statement:
"Today,
Personal Envoy
for Western
Sahara Mr.
Horst Köhler
briefed the UN
Security
Council on his
recent visit
to the region
and the next
steps he
intends to
take. Taking
note of the
briefing, the
Frente
POLISARIO
reiterates its
commitment to
cooperate
fully with the
Personal Envoy
in the
framework of
the UN
political
process, and
stands ready
to engage in
the
negotiation
process, as
called for by
the Security
Council. The
Frente
POLISARIO is
encouraged by
the Personal
Envoy’s
efforts since
he assumed
office and
urges the UN
and in
particular the
Security
Council
members to
fulfill their
responsibility
in line with
the principles
and purposes
of the UN
Charter and in
full respect
for the
inalienable
right of the
people of
Western Sahara
to
self-determination
and
independence. “The
Frente
POLISARIO
remains
encouraged by,
and supportive
of, the
efforts of
Personal Envoy
Köhler to
relaunch the
long-stalled
UN peace
process,” said
Sidi Omar, the
Frente
POLISARIO’s
representative
at the United
Nations. “The
people of
Western
Sahara, who
still endure
the horrors of
the Moroccan
occupation of
their land,
have waited
patiently for
too long to
exercise their
inalienable
right to
self-determination
and
independence.
The Frente
POLISARIO
stands ready
and willing to
come to the
negotiating
table to
achieve a
just, peaceful
and lasting
solution to
the conflict
of Western
Sahara, which
ensures the
inalienable
rights of our
people.”"
In
May 19
Guterres issued
a runic
statement on
Western Sahara,
citing Kohler:
"The
Secretary-General
is closely
following the
developments
in Western
Sahara. In
accordance
with Security
Council
Resolution
2414 (2018)
adopted on 27
April 2018,
and in order
to maintain an
environment
conducive to
the resumption
of dialogue
under the
auspices of
his Personal
Envoy Horst
Köhler, the
Secretary-General
calls for
maximum
restraint. No
action should
be taken,
which may
constitute a
change to the
status quo."
Is this a
reference to
Tifariti?
Guterres also
claims to be
following many
other
situations
closely, even amid
targeted
killings the
UN does and
says nothing
about. We'll
have more on
this.
After
the April 25
vote on
extending
MINURSO's
mandate was
postponed, it was
re-set for April 27
at 3 pm. And
Inner City
Press published
the draft in
blue, with six
month
extension, here
on Scribd.
When the vote
was taken, not
only Ethiopia
and Russia
abstained, but
China too.
Afterward
Inner City
Press asked
Morocco's
Ambassador
Omar Hilale
about the
abstentions -
he said they
will be forgotten
- and about
Paragraphs 69 and
52 of the UN
report, on
harassent of
human rights
defenders and
restrictions
on MINURSO. Hilale
said to ask
the UN for
Morocco's
response. He
then held up
flyers of a
tank, a
modified pick
up truck and
an automatic
weapons,
saying that
Algeria buys
these rather
than
feeding
people. Inner
City Press asked
him about the
Rif in Morocco
- he acknowledged that
more could be
done, spoke of
discipline
on some
ministers. Finally
Inner City
Press asked
him about
resources,
fish and
phosphate. He
answered, this
round, only
about fish,
saying that
the EU is
re-writing its
agreement to
explicitly
including
Western Sahara.
Human rights
indeed. At
the stakeout
there were,
multiple
Morocco state
media given
full access,
unlike
Inner City
Press, and UN DPI's Hua
Jiang who is
responsible,
along with
Alison Smale,
for
this lawless
disparity. Inner
City Press pursued
it, alone, to
the UN
Security
Council
stakeout on
April 26 where
staff said
it'd be Monday,
then to the UN
basement where
the Council's
President Peru
told it, Maybe
before. Only a
six month
extension, to
be revisited in
October. All
that pressure
for this. Amid
escalating
spin in the
run-up to the
slated
extension
the MINURSO
mission -
with the R for
Referendum
still not
carried out -
on
April 18,
after
Guterres'
spokesman Stephane
Dujarric
entertained
questions from
multiple of
the Moroccan
state media
the UN gives
office space
and full
access to,
Inner City
Press asked, UN
transcript here: Inner
City Press:
Morocco seems
to be claiming
that both Bir
Lehlou and
Tifariti are…
where the UN
has team sites
are located
within the
buffer
zone.
Frente
Polisario says
that's
entirely
false.
Obviously,
this is a
dispute about
where these
meetings take
place.
What I wanted
to know, it
should be
pretty
straightforward
for the UN to
say, given how
long it's had
a mission
there, are
these two
sites, Bir
Lehlou and
Tifariti, are
they within
the buffer
zone or, as
stated
otherwise, are
they not in
the buffer
zone?
Spokesman:
I don't have
any new
language on
Western
Sahara, so
I'll get back
you to." And the
next day,
April 19, he
came to the
briefing and said
"I can say
that neither
Bir Lahlou nor
Tifariti fall
within the
buffer strip."
Asked and
answered.
Inner
City Press has
exclusively
published
the marked up
new
Security
Council draft
resolution, here
on Scribd and
attached here on Patreon. Now
just before
the Security Council
vote comes a
detailed
report on the
export of
phosphorus from
Morocco
occupied
Western Sahara. From
the report: "A
remarkable
development of
2017 is the
arrest in
South Africa of
a vessel
carrying
phosphate rock
from Western
Sahara to a
New Zealand
based
importer, and
the South
African High
Court placing
rightful ownership
of the cargo
in the exiled
government of
Western
Sahara. The
effect on the
trade has been
noticeable.
Three
previously
long-term importers
seemingly
stopped buying
after this
incident, and
the transit
routes were
shifted to
abandon
stop-overs in
Panama and
South Africa." The
full WSRW
report is here.
As
published by
Inner City
Press, the UN
Security
Council draft
now proposed
that
the Council
“Expresses
concern
regarding the
Polisario
Front’s
announcement
of the planned
relocation of
administrative
functions to
Bir Lahlou,
and calls for
the Polisario
Front to
refrain from
any such
destabilizing
actions." Was
this really
announced? On
April 24,
Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric,
UN transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: on
Western Sahara, there's
a draft that
Inner City
Press
published it,
and the draft,
which I know
you're not
going to
respond to,
but there's a
reason I'm
asking you
this.
One of the
paragraphs in
the draft, 2
ter, quote,
“expresses
concern
regarding
Polisario
Front's
announcement
of the planned
relocation of
administrative
functions to
Bir
Lehlou”.
And I wanted
to ask you
whether… given
that… that,
you know,
MINURSO
[United
Nations
Mission in
Western
Sahara] is
there, are you
aware… has
there been a…
a… a… an
announced
planned
relocation?
What's your
position on
that?
Spokesman:
I think the…
Inner
City Press:
I'm not asking
about the
draft.
I'm asking
about the
facts.
Spokesman:
No, I think
the… whoever…
whatever
parties
decides to
change…
relocate
whatever they
would want to
relocate is up
to them to
announce.
Inner
City Press:
Right, but
they… don't
they… so,
you're not
aware of them
telling
MINURSO…
Spokesman:
I'm saying
it's up to
them to
announce.
What is your
other
question?" And
that's how the
UN avoids
questions.
Today's
UN gives
office space
and full
access to multiple
Moroccan
state media,
including
moonlighters
as UN staff,
while evicting
an restricting
underdogs. On
April 4 after
Moroccan
Foreign
Minister
Nasser Bourita
met Guterres
-- who gave no
read out, as
has become his
norm --
Morocco
arranged a
press
conference,
not in the UN
Press Briefing
Room but
elsewhere. In
it, Bourita reportedly
threatened military
action,
and said Guterres
spoke to the
King by phone
(again, no read-out) and
to the
President of
the Security
Council.
Arranging this
was the
Moroccan
Mission to the
UN, which in its
last public UNTV stakeout
in the UN, last
April
video here,
used the
platform to criticize
the Press for
asking too
many questions.
Expect more. On
April 5
Inner City Press
asked
Guterres'
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, UN
transcript here: Inner
City
Press: a
readou of the
meeting
that the
Secretary-General had
with the
Foreign
Minister of
Morocco. There
are these
quotes from
the Foreign
Minister of
Morocco after
the meeting
saying that
all options
are on the
table; Morocco
is considering
taking up its
responsibility
to act if the
UN
doesn't.
Is it true
that the
Moroccan
Foreign
Minister
threatened
military
action in the
meeting? And
what was the
Secretary-General's
response?
Spokesman:
Listen I'm
challenged
enough to
speak for the
Secretary-General,
so I will not
speak for any
other
parties.
The
Secretary-General
and the
Foreign
Minister
discussed
issues of
mutual
concern.
Including,
obviously, the
situation in
the Western
Sahara.
Inner
City Press:
No, but, I
mean, I guess
if he's a
conflict-prevention
guy and…
and… and
the person
that he meets
with comes out
of the meeting
saying, I
threaten to
take military
action…
Spokesman:
The
Secretary-General's
focus
continues to
be on
prevention of
conflict, and
that's why he
meets
regularly with
representatives
of Member
States.
Inner
City Press:
But I'm
saying, with
the Polisario
Front, their
representative
at the UN, now
recently
deceased, with
whom on the
other side as
a
conflict-prevention
man is Mr.
Guterres speaking?
Spokesman:
"As you know,
the death of
the Polisario
representative
was very
sudden, coming
in the last
two or three
days. I
don't know if
they have
appointed
someone to
replace him."
And
now Guterres leaves town for
another six days. Inner City
Press also asked the Dutch military
adviser, video here.
Back
on March 21 when
Horst Kohler left the
Security Council at 4:40 pm Inner
City Press asked him, Was there any
discussion of natural resources
(exploitation) and the
European Court of Justice
decision? There was no
direct answer.
Periscope video
here. But Team
Kohler took a detour and
visited with Moroccan Ambassador
Omar Hilale, holding
court in the second floor
hall where Inner City
Press due to
censorship, unlike
Moroccan state media,
cannot go. Now
Hilale,
on the day
presidency of
the Security
Council passes
from the
Netherlands to
Peru, has
written
threatening
military
action, using
Latin
("casus
belli"). Now on
April 2, the
Polisario
Front has sent
a three page latter
to the
Security
Council,
denying
Hilale's
allegations
and calling
them a
smokescreen. Letter,
in three
photos, here.
Even
before
Inner City
Press at 1 pm
on April 2
asked the President
of the
Security
Council
Gustavo
Meza-Cuadra of
Peru about the
letter - he
confirmed
receipt - UN
Spokesman
Stephane Dujarric
said the UN's MINURSO "has "not
observed any
movement of
military
elements in
the northeast
territory.
MINURSO
continues to
monitor the
situation
closely." On
April 3, one of
the Morocco
state media to
which the
UN gives
office space
and full
access while
evicting and
restricting
Inner City
Press "asked"
Dujarric
about some
media saying
the UN was
daring to
disagree with
Hilale, was
even siding with
Polisario. Dujarric
said of course
not, and when
Inner City
Press asked if
anything had
changed from
his statement
the day
before,
Dujarric said
he expected to have
something
later on April
3. Periscope
video here.
When? In what
format? Watch
this site. Does
the timing of
Hilale's
letter, not noted
along with the
(written)
medium by Al
Jazeera,
spring from
the situation
on the ground
or a plan of April
lobbying? All
this while
Secretary General
Guterres,
who notably
sides with the
over-dog in
places ranging
from Cameroon
to Yemen, was on
a four day
unannounced
(but belatedly
confirmed to
Inner City Press) four
day weekend at
his real home
in Lisbon,
missing in
action (MIA).
On
March 21 the
two Morocco state
media didn't
ask anything
during the
UNTV stakeout. The
UN gives them
full access,
one of them
doubling as a
UN staff
members. This
is how the UN
works, or
doesn't.
Some
tell Inner City Press at least Kohler is
holding meetings, with French Le Drian
(opposing any human
rights component
in the MINURSO
mandate),
Sweden and the
African Union.
This last made
Morocco mad.
The Moroccan
mission has
lobbied the UN
Department of
Public
Information,
now run by
Alison Smale,
against Inner
City Press,
frivolously;
still, Inner
City Press
remains restricted
in its
movements in the
UN while
covering
meetings on
the second
floor when
often Morocco's
Ambassador Omar
Hilale is buzzing
around
lobbying. Hilale
has a habit
of counting
how many
questions
Inner City
Press asks. Inner City Press has three times asked the UN for
an update on the work of Antonio Guterres'
personal envoy Horst Kohler, who has
no presence at UNHQ in New York, only in Germany.
On March 12, Inner City Press asked
for his and Guterres' view
on the holding of the Crans
Montana Forum in Dakhla,
transcript here: Inner City
Press: on Mr. Horst Köhler's
work on Western Sahara, and I
did want to ask, since having
not gotten one, a specific
question, which is that I think
this Crans-Montana forum is
kicking off, and I've seen a lot
of back-and-forth on it.
And, as you may know, the
African Union specifically
called in one of its resolutions
for it not to be held in this
disputed territory and for
countries not to go. And
I'm wondering, if we can't get
an update, can we get Mr. Hans
[Horst] Köhler's view on this
forum being held at this time
and this place? Spokesman:
Mr. Köhler, as you know, has
been meeting with the
parties. He met… I think
his last round of meetings was
in Lisbon, where he met with the
representatives of
Morocco. As for the
holding of this event, we have
no particular comment, and I'm
not aware of any UN
participation in it.
Inner
City Press:
I'll go back
and look at
previous -- Spokesman:
Well, I know
what happened
previously. Inner
City Press:
I'm sure you
do." On
March 5 Inner
City Press
asked again,
UN transcript
here: Inner
City Press: you'd
said, on
Western
Sahara, that
you were
trying to get
something from
Mr. [Horst]
Köhler.
There was
reportedly a
meeting
between him
and the
Moroccan side
in
Lisbon.
Is that the
case?
And what was-- Spokesman:
That's my
understanding.
I'm trying to
get some more
details."
That's what he
said last
time. On
February 27
the Court of
Justice of the
European Union
"held
that, taking
accountof the
fact that the
territory of
Western Sahara
does not form
part of the
territory of
the Kingdom of
Morocco, the
waters
adjacent to
the territory
of Western
Sahara are not
part of the
Moroccan
fishing zone
referred to in
the Fisheries
Agreement.
Lastly, the
Court examines
the
territorial
scope of the
Protocol to
the Fisheries
Agreement.
Although that
Protocol does
not contain
any specific
provisions on
that subject,
the Court
states that
several of its
provisions use
the expression
'Moroccan
fishing zone.'
That
expression is
the same as
that to be
found in the
Fisheries
Agreement,
which defines
it as 'waters
falling within
the
sovereignty or
jurisdiction
of the Kingdom
of Morocco.'
The Court
concludes that
the 'Moroccan
fishing zone'
under the
Protocol does
not include
the waters
adjacent to
the territory
of Western
Sahara." But
at a human
rights event
at the
European
Union's office
in New
York City last
week, in an
hour long
session of
bragging, this
EU over-reach
did not come
up, and no
questions on
it were
permitted
(Inner City
Press had to
run back to
the UN to meet
the 7 pm censorship
deadline
imposed by UN
Global
Communicator
Alison Smale. This
curfew
does not
apply to the
many Morocco
state media
she and
Antonio
Guterres give
full access
and work space
to.)
And the UN of
Smale and
Guterres, when
Inner City
Press asked on
February 27,
wouldn't say
anything about
UN
representative
Kohler or the EU
decision. From
the UN
transcript:
Inner City
Press: on what
you just said
of no comment
on the EU
Court of
Justice
decision that
the… that the
waters off
Western Sahara
don't… can't
be agreed to
by
Morocco.
I wanted…
could you…
when you said
you have no
comment on it,
is there some
way to seek
whether this…
the personal
representative,
Mr. Horst
Köhler…? Spokesman:
I have no
particular
comment on
it. As
soon… if and
when we do
have a
comment, I
will share
that comment. Inner
City Press:
And relatedly,
what I wanted
to ask is,
I've heard
that unlike
his
predecessors, for Mr.
Köhler,
there's no New
York presence
of that office
or
mandate.
It's all in
Germany.
Is that the
case? Is
there some
way… how would
one go about
seeking a
comment from
this Special
Envoy and…
and… can you
have any
update on his
work? Spokesman:
"Through us or
through DPA
[Department of
Political
Affairs].
Yes, I'm
waiting for an
update,
because I
think there
are some
meetings going
on.
Masood-ji?"
Yeah.
In
the earlier decision
from the EU
Court of
Justice: "In
his Opinion
today,
Advocate
General
Melchior
Wathelet
proposes that
the Court
should answer that
it has
jurisdiction
to assess the
legality of
international
agreements
concluded by
the EU,
that an
association
such as WSC is
entitled to
challenge the
legality of
the Fisheries Agreement
and that the
Fisheries
Agreement is
invalid
because it
applies to the
territory and
waters of
Western
Sahara." It's here, in eight
languages. On
January
11, Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
it, video here, UN transcript here:
Inner City
Press: I'd
asked you
about this…
and I guess on
Tuesday,
apparently,
you confirmed
that the
Secretary-General
did write a
letter to the
Frente
Polisario, the
part that you
read out was
on Guerguerat.
In
the interim,
the EU Court
of Justice
Advocate
General has
issued a… a
ruling
yesterday that
the EU Morocco
Fisheries
Agreement is
illegal for a
variety of
grounds,
including the…
you know, that
it violates
international
law. Some
people in
Moroccan state
media said
that there was
no letter; now
there is a
letter.
Can you say,
were the… was
the concept of
natural
resources, now
highlighted
once again by
the EU Court
of Justice,
part of this
letter or not?
And would you
just release
the letter to
prevent this
kind of…? Spokesman:
No, I won't…
the letter was
a private
letter.
I just wanted
to confirm
that it had
been sent, and
I'll leave it
at that. Inner
City Press:
So, really,
it's not…
so… Does
the
Secretary-General
or Mr. Köhler
have any
comment on
this EU
decision… in
terms of
natural
resources…? Spokesman:
"Not this a
point [?]
Obviously,
we're focusing
on Mr. Köhler
and his
ability to do
his work." On
Western Sahara
after a long
delay, UN
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres named
Horst Köhler
as his
Personal
Envoy,
replacing
Christopher
Ross. Inner
City Press was
exclusively
told by UN
Department of
Political
Affairs staff
that the delay
was
attributable
to Kohler's
demand to have
his own
personal staff
put on UN
contracts - a
demand that
Guterres gave
into, allowing
Kohler to put
long-time
German staff
in P-5 and P-3
UN positions...
***
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