Purging
Rwanda
History,
Ladsous' DPKO
Let MONUC.org
Go, Cover Up
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, April
7, 2014 --
When UN
Peacekeeping
closes down or
even
just re-names
one of its
missions, what
remains? Well
at least under
Herve Ladsous
as regards the
old MONUC
mission in the
Congo, now
renamed
MONUSCO,
history is
purged, sold
off, covered
up.
On
April 7, 2014,
the 20th
anniversary of
the beginning
of the
genocide
against the
Tutsis in
Rwanda,
Ladsous openly
refused to
answer Inner
City Press'
question about
when MONUSCO
will belatedly
go after the
Hutu FDLR
militia,
saying
"Mister, you
know I never
answer your
questions and
you know very
well why." Video here.
Why,
then? Ladsous
was France's
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
at the UN in
1994 during
the Rwanda
genocide, and
he argued for
French
policies
including the
escape of the
genocidaires
into Eastern
Congo. See
sample
memo, here.
Ladsous
would
certainly like
that 1994 memo
to disappear -
in fact, by
refusing to
answer Press
questions he
tries to
disappear the
issue.
But consider
this:
On
the old MONUC
missions
website,
MONUC.org, was
this about
former UN
staffer
Callixte
Mbarushimana:
"Callixte
Mbarushimana
in Paris
"The
serious and
consistent
allegations
against
Callixte
Mbarushimana,
the
executive
secretary of
the FDLR, have
been a source
of
considerable
embarrassment
for the UN for
many years.
After the
evacuation of
foreign staff,
the
44-year-old
computer
technician
appointed
himself as
Officer-in-Charge
of the United
Nations
Development
Programme
(UNDP) in
Rwanda, from
10 April to 4
July 1994. He
is accused by
dozens of
witnesses,
including
former
colleagues,
militiamen and
local
administrators,
of used his
position, and
the resources,
of the
UNDP, to
advance the
policy of
massacres,
including the
murder of
Tutsis who
worked for the
UNDP. Dressed
in military
fatigues,
armed
with a gun and
carrying
grenades in
his belt,
witnesses say
that he
lent the
vehicles and
satellite
telephones of
the UNDP to
militaryofficers,
that he also
used the UNDP
vehicles to
facilitate
his own
contribution
to the
killings."
On
a previous
April 7, Inner
City Press had written
about
Mbarushimana,
citing and
linking to
MONUC.org.
But attempting
it on April 7,
2014
it emerged
that the UN
has not only
abandoned the
website of its
largest and
longest
running
peacekeeping
mission - it
has allowed a
for
profit company
PathwayInternet.com
to take it
over. So much
for preserving
memory. Under
Ladsous, the
goal seems to
be to censor
or disappear
memory.
Also
in Ladsous' UN
Peacekeeping
there is a
process of not
speaking in
the
first place.
At the event
on April 7,
2014 where
Ladsous
refused to
answer, Inner
City Press
also asked why
for example
Ladsous'
Western
Sahara mission
MINURSO has no
social media
presence. It
is listed at
the bottom of
UN Peacekeeping's
website as a "missions
with no social
media presence."
The
answer given
-- not by
Ladsous, who
refuses Inner
City Press
questions --
is that for
some missions,
countries do
no give
permission for
certain
equipment or,
apparently,
Twitter
accounts.
But who could
it be, banning
MINURSO in
Western Sahara
from social
media?
Ladsous
tries
to spoonfeed
information to
friendly
scribes; in
his favor
first
the UN
Correspondents
Association
(requested by
Agence
France
Presse)
then the
current
spokesperson
of UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon have
made threats
to discourage
coverage.
There's more
on
this - but this is today's video, here; this
is today's UN.
Watch
this site.