By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, May 7,
2014 -- A month
after UN Peacekeeping
under Herve
Ladsous having
purged
Congolese and
Rwanda historical
documents by letting
go of the
MONUC.org
domain was
exposed by
Inner City
Press, more
spin and
snafus have
come to light.
The MONUSCO
mission, which
has yet to
explain how
the UN's
stated "Human
Rights Due
Diligence"
policy will
apply to its
support of the
Minova rape
units of the
Congolese Army
now that impunity
has been confirmed,
bragged of
using its
drones to spot
a ship sinking.
To some using
the incident
to promote
drones seems
self-serving,
with Ladsous
talking up
drones in the
Central African
Republic.
But when Inner
City Press
sought to
track down the
underlying
MONUSCO press
release, the
mission's Twitter profile page's link to
"MONUSCO.org"
results in
"This Site Is
Under Construction."
Click here to
view.
So under Ladsous,
with his own
history in
1994 in the
Great Lakes
region, UN
Peacekeeping
purged the
information in
MONUC.org --
and links to a
MONUSCO.org
that is "Under
Construction."
It's akin to
some to France's
position in
boycotting the
April 7, 2014
ceremony
in Kigali
commemorating
the 1994
Rwanda
genocide: a
wish by some
that history
can be erased,
or in this
case purged
and
(partially) rebuilt,
under
construction.
Again we ask:
when UN
Peacekeeping
closes down or
even just
re-names one
of its
missions, what
remains of its
history,
including its
website and
domain?
Well at least
under Herve
Ladsous as
regards the
old MONUC.org,
now renamed
MONUSCO,
history is
purged, sold
off, covered
up.
And then,
tellingly, the
UN dissembles,
today telling
Inner City
Press that
MONUC.org is
not really
gone. But it
is - click
here and watch
as www.MONUCO.org
redirects to
www.waypathinternet.com
- and along
with it,
history of
complicity in
the Rwanda
genocide.
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,
at a page
named http://www.monuc.org/news.aspx?newsID=17015
"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.
And so on
April 8 Inner
City Press
asked the UN's
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq
what had
happened to
MONUC.org, and
to the
information
about the
Rwanda
genocide that
used to be on
it. Haq's
office
returned with
this, copied
to lead
spokesperson
Stephane
Dujarric,
which leaves
MONUC.org and
that now
missing
information
UNaddressed: