UNITED
NATIONS,
September 11,
more
here --
With UN
Peacekeeping
under Herve
Ladsous set to
take over the
mission in
Central
African
Republic on
September 15,
the UN's
desperation
and / or lack
of standards
has come too
the fore.
Ladsous decided
to "re-hat" to
UN Blue the DR
Congo Army,
which is on
the UN's own
list of child
soldier
recruiters.
Sri Lanka's
Army, being
investigated
by a panel
formed by vote
by the UN
Human Rights
Council for
abuses in
2009, when
tens of
thousands of
civilians were
killed, has
been accepted
by Ladsous to
provide helicopters
to his mission
in former
French colony
CAR.
Tellingly,
Ladsous
refuses to
answer Press
questions (video compilation here, UK
coverage here);
the UN's
Censorship
Alliance threatened
the Press not
only to stop
covering
connections
from Sri Lanka
and its war
crimes but
also Ladsous.
This is what
the UN is becoming;
the new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
opposes it.
Last month after
French
"peacekeepers"
reported shot
and killed
five people in
the PK5
neighborhood
of Bangui in
the Central
African
Republic,
Inner City
Press asked
Dujarric about
it on August
21, video
here.
Dujarric
essentially
said Inner
City Press
should have
asked the UN's
chief in CAR
about the
shootings...
before they
happened. From
the
transcript:
Inner
City Press: I
wanted to ask
you about in
the Central
African
Republic there
are reports of
fighting
between the
residents of
PK-5
neighbourhood
of Bangui and
the French
peacekeepers
or soldiers,
five killed,
40 injured,
and I’m
wondering,
does the
mission there,
are they
monitoring
that, are they
looking into
how it
happened?
What…
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I’m trying to
get some
information
from the
mission.
As soon as I
have it, I
will share it
with you.
Inner City
Press:
And also, the
reason, if you
could ask them
because there
have been
previous, I’m
not saying
that is the
case in this
case but there
have been
previous
encounters
which
residents said
that they were
shot and the
aggressors
were the,
“peacekeepers”,
and each time
it was said
that the
mission would
be looking
into
this.
But I have yet
to hear any
kind of report
on those, I
can name the
incidents or
you can go
back and there
has been at
least three
and whatever
happened to
those?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
Did you have a
chance to ask
General Gaye?
Inner City
Press:
No. I asked
him about DRC
soldiers.
Spokesman
Dujarric:
Great. I
will get the
Under-Secretary-General
When Gaye took
questions --
to his credit,
unlike his
boss Herve
Ladsous --
these PK5
killings by
the French
soldiers
hadn't yet
taken place.
To be fair,
perhaps
Dujarric was
referring not
to the new
killings, but
the older
ones. But nine
hours after
the briefing,
no further
information
had been
provided. It
may be that
the problem is
not (only)
with the
Office of the
Spokesperson,
but more
fundamentally
with UN
Peacekeeping
as Ladsous has
been allowed
to run it.
The "DRC
soldiers"
question was
why UN
Peacekeeping
under Herve
Ladsous would
accept into
the
forthcoming UN
mission in
CAR, MINUSCA,
the DRC Army
which is still
listed on the
UN's child
soldier
recruitment
list and
provided
impunity for
130 rapes by
its soldiers
in Minova,
Eastern Congo
in November
2012,
conviction
only two. Click
here for that.
Back on July
17 when
Ladsous said
he would take
questions
about
peacekeeping
in the Central
African
Republic,
Inner City
Press arrived
early to ask
about reports
the current
MISCA
peacekeepers
have killed
civilians, for
example in
Bozoum, here.
Ladsous
however
refused to
answer the
question. Video here.
So on July 17,
Inner City
Press put the
same question
to UN deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq:
what does the
UN know, and
what has it
done about,
allegations of
killing by
MISCA
peacekeepers,
proposed to be
"re-hatted" in
September?
Haq told Inner
City Press to
"ask MISCA."
So the UN has
no role, and
will
automatically
put UN "blue
helmets" on
these troops?
Inner City
Press also
asked about media
reports in
Nepal that
Ladsous will
visit that
country on
July 11, ostensibly
to "acquire
information on
the latest
political
situation
[and] the
progress made
in terms of
constitution
writing."
But do Ladsous
and DPKO have
any mandate to
review
constitutions?
Shouldn't
Ladsous if
there review
cholera
screening, in
light of
bringing the
disease to
Haiti? Ladsous
did not
answer, and
neither did
Haq.
On July 16 at
the Security
Council
stakeout,
first Ladsous
sought out a
softball
question in
French; then
when the Press
question about
MISCA in
Bozoum was
asked, he
shook his head
and said, “I
give the floor
to Madame.”
Earlier
in
the afternoon
at the same UN
Television
stakeout, the
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
of Rwanda had
answered Inner
City Press'
question by
stating that
Ladsous'
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations not
only flew a
sanctioned
FDLR militia
leader in the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo -- Ladsous
has also
refused to
answer
Rwanda's
formal June 26
complaint.
Video
here.
So
Inner City
Press asked
that question,
politely but
audibly. Again
Ladsous
refused to
answer,
looking
desperately
around for a
friendly
question.
Ladsous
has adopted
this position
-- video
compilation
here --
since Inner
City Press
asked him
about his
history during
the Rwanda
genocide in
1994, as
France's
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
in the
Security
Council
arguing for
the escape of
genocidaires
into Eastern
Congo, sample
memo here.
It was and is
a
straightforward
question, the
type public
officials
answer every
day. But
Ladsous has
refused, and
has gone
further.
Because
Ladsous is
protected --
was nominated
-- by the
French
government
which has
controlled UN
Peacekeeping
four times in
a row now,
this anamoly
is allowed to
go on inside
the UN.
Here's
how it look
from outside,
in the UK New
Statesman.
And here
is a video of
Ladsous
ordering his
spokesperson
to take the
microphone
away so
that questions
about rapes by
his partners
in the DRC
Army could not
be asked.
Here
is a video of
Ladsous taking
the friendly
scribes
atop the UN
Correspondents
Association
into the hall
for a private
briefing. To
this has the
UN descended.
More
seriously, UN
Peacekeeping
by most
accounts
brought
cholera to
Haiti, which
has killed
over 8,000
people. Inner
City Press
asked Ladsous,
loud and clear
(but nothing
but polite) if
his DPKO now
belatedly
screens
peacekeepers
from cholera
hot spots
before
deployment.
Ladsous
refused to
answer. To
this has the
UN descended.
The new Free
UN
Coalition for
Access has
formally
proposed that
UN Under
Secretaries
General not be
allowed to
take this
approach.
Watch this
site.