Inner
City Press put
this question
to Ladsous'
spokesperson
Kieran Dwyer
on Thursday. Raw
video here,
from Minute
1:41:50.
Doesn't
Ladsous' open
refusal to
answer
critical Press
questions
undermine the
UN's ability
to tell
governments
they should
answer such
questions?
After
a lengthy
answer by
South Sudanese
journalist
Oliver Modi to
another Inner
City Press
question,
Dwyer took the
floor to say,
"it is
absolutely
true that Mr
Ladsous is on
record that he
will not take
questions from
you at this
point." Edited
video here
and embedded
below.
Dwyer
said this is
because of
"innuendo" and
"personal
slurs" even
"before he
took office."
What
Inner City
Press reported
was HOW
Ladsous took
office -- as a
last minute
replacement
for Jerome
Bonnafont.
Maybe Ladsous
didn't like
that being
reported.
In
fact, in the
UN
Correspondents
Association,
Tim Witcher of
Agence France
Presse asked
for action
against Inner
City Press for
that story.
But both
before and
after
publication,
numerous
Security
Council
Permanent
Representatives
told Inner
City Press
this was the
truth. That's
not innuendo.
After
UNCA's
Executive
Committee
stepped things
up and tried
to get Inner
City Press
thrown out,
including of
the UN,
Ladsous
latched onto
it and on May
29, 2012
announced he
would not
longer answer
Inner City
Press'
questions. It
was pure
opportunism on
Ladsous' part.
Dwyer
re-took the
floor, saying
that linking
Ladsous and
The Drone he
moved to
procure for
Western Africa
(Cote
d'Ivoire) and
DR Congo even
before having
approval was
"baseless."
But these were
complaints
made to Inner
City Press by
member states
in the C-34
committee on
peacekeeping.
Like
the Department
of Public
Information
has tried,
Dwyer tried to
use Inner City
Press'
introduction f
the twitter
hashtag
#LADSOUS2013
in December
2012 to
justify
Ladsous having
started to
refusal Inner
City Press
questions in
May 2012. The
dates just
don't work.
Finally
Dwyer
claimed that
when Ladsous
refused Inner
City Press'
question about
the rapes in
Minova on
November 27
and took other
journalists
out into the
hall, it was
only French
radio.
But
Inner City
Press filmed
it, and put it
online:
the gaggle
included for
example
Reuters Louis
Charbonneau,
who despite
his name is
not French,
and not radio.
Video
here.
Dwyer
claimed that
despite
Ladsous'
stonewalling,
he answers
questions. But
even when
true, it's on
a delay.
Inner
City Press
asks a
question, like
to Ban Ki-moon
on December 5
to Ban Ki-moon
and December 7
to Ladsous,
and DPKO gives
the answer to
Reuters,
Charbonneau or
Michelle
Nichols, and
AFP's Witcher
who has more
recently filed
a complaint to
defend
Ladsous, but
not to Inner
City Press.
But
this could not
be said: Dwyer
asked DPI's
Maher Nasser
to "redirect"
the
discussion. To
be continued.
Watch this
site.