On
Sri Lanka, UN Won't Observe, Has Hopes for IDPs, Mute on
Accountability
By
Matthew Russell Lee
Ban
Ki-moon
answered only the first to the two questions, citing Sri Lanka's
commitment to empty the camps by the end of January -- that is, after
the elections. According to aid groups, over 90,000 people, nearly
entirely Tamils, remain in the camps. Fewer than 10% of them are
registered to be able to vote.
UN's Ban, Inner City Press in front, answer on
accountability not shown
Here
was the
exchange, as transcribed
by the UN:
Inner
City Press: I wanted to ask you, if I can, on Sri Lanka. Right now
the IDP [internally displaced persons] camps, there are still people
inside them. There has also been a failure to do any investigation of
the events of May, and most recently, it seems like you have decided
not to send electoral assistance to the country. Can you say how the
first of those are consistent with the commitments made to the UN,
and your commitment to stay on top of this issue?
Ban
Ki-moon: On Sri Lanka, their promise, President [Mahinda] Rajapaksa's
promise is that by the end of January this year, his Government will
have all the remaining displaced persons in the camp resettled,
reintegrated into their native homes or some other place. I am going
to discuss this matter with the Sri Lankan Government. I hope that
they will keep their promise.
What
about
accountability? The Special Raporteur on Summary Executions Philip
Alston gives a press conference at the UN on January 7. Watch this
space.
* * *
UN's
Ban Mute on Sri Lanka's Election Request, Impunity and Fraud Implicitly
Accepted, UN Sources Say
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, January 6 -- The UN's conflicted stance on Sri Lanka has
become more apparent in the run up to the Rajapaksas' January 26 snap
election. Nine days ago, Inner City Press asked
the spokesman for
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to confirm that Sri Lanka had requested
some UN presence during the election, and to state the UN's
response.
While
the
Spokesman, Martin Nesirky, did not answer this question for an entire
week, Inner City Press has been told first by one, now by a second, top
adviser to Ban Ki-moon that the UN would not be responding positively
to the request.
One
adviser said
bluntly, we don't want to legitimize an election we have our doubts
about. He added that the excuse the UN would give was that the
request had come from Sri Lanka's electoral body, and not the
Rajapaksa administration. At most, he said, the UN might send some
informal representative of the Secretary General.
This
seems a
strange logic, to only accept elections help request from incumbent,
who as with Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan are often the ones most
actively making up fake voters and suppressing out of power
candidates' votes. But it does seem to be the UN's position.
On
January 5, Inner
City Press asked Spokesman Nesirky about a request for electoral
assistance from twenty opposition parties in Georgia, as well as for
a belated answer to the week-old Sri Lanka question. On Georgia,
Nesirky said that UN only accepts requests from governments.
On
Sri Lanka,
Nesirky acknowledged his Office's non-response for eight days, saying
he had been seeking guidance, but had yet to receive it.
Later
on January
5, Inner City Press spoke with another senior Ban advisor. He also
indicated that the UN would not be saying yes to Sri Lanka. If this
is so widely known in the UN's 38th -- now 3rd -- floor, why can the
Office of the Spokesperson not say it, even after nine days? "The
clock is ticking," Nesirky said on January 5.
It
appears to some
that the UN's game is to run out the clock on Sri Lanka's request.
In Vavuniya internment camp, Ban's plastic image
used by Sri Lanka
This
comes in the
context of Ban Ki-moon, after his whirlwind visit to Sri
Lanka, where in the Vavuniya internment camp the government hung a
large photograph of him shaking hands with Presidential brother Basil
Rajapaksa (above), saying he would be monitoring Sri
Lanka, for an inclusive political process.
Now, as
Mahinda Rajapaksa
(with whom Ban has described himself as having a close relationship)
calls a snap election to try to establish a family dynasty, the UN
wants to look away, but doesn't want to admit it will look away.
Something
of a
wrench has been thrown into the Rajapaksas' plans by the candidacy of
ex-General Sarath Fonseka, who has accused Presidential brother
Gotabhaya Rajapaksa of ordering the shooting of Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam leaders who sought to surrender, after speaking with Ban
Ki-moon's chief of staff as well as with Norway, waving white flags.
For
these and
other war crimes, Ban said the UN would press for accountability.
Little has been done since on this front. Now, one of Ban's advisors
has conveyed to Inner City Press the UN's acceptance that the
Rajapaksas will never accept an independent investigation. The UN's
theme seems to be "look away, look away." Watch this site.
* * *
At
UN, China Takes Few Questions, ECOWAS Unheeded on Guinea, Myanmar
Waits
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, January 5 -- As China takes over the UN Security Council
presidency for the month of January, at the customary program of work
press conference, its Permanent Representative Zhang Yesui took only
six questions -- four topics and two follow ups -- and barely
answered them.
One of the
questions was from Chinese state owned media Xinhua and was a
softball. What is China's thinking in choosing to hold its thematic
debate about regional organizations -- including the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization -- and how can regional organizations help
maintain stability?
Ambassador
Zhang
Yesui, seeming entirely prepared for the question, said that often
regional organizations know more about the problems that they deal
with. He cited the African Union's work on Sudan, and later Somalia
-- although that doesn't seem to be going so well -- but he might
have mentioned ASEAN and its "hands off Myanmar" stance.
Some
analysts
believe that China's and the U.S.'s increasing use of regional
organization reflects that militarily dominant countries, not wanting
the UN to criticize what they do, from Xinjiang to Afghanistan, like
to limit the Security Council's jurisdiction. One test of this will
be whether the U.S., up in arms about Yemen, raises the matter at the
Security Council.
Ambassador
Zhang
Yesui was asked if China thinks that "moderate Taliban in
Afghanistan" should be spoken with. He replied that "internal
affairs of a state should be determined by its people."
Surprising,
then,
that China goes along however reluctantly with the Council's
statements on Myanmar, urging the military junta to engage with the
opposition and free Aung San Suu Kyi. China, of course, has just
imposed an 11 year sentence on Liu Xiaobo. No questions on this,
however, were taken at the briefing.
Ambassador Zhang
Yesui said there has been progress with North Korea -- his American
counterpart Susan Rice says the same. Kim
Jong Il is reportedly headed to Beijing. Meanwhile, the Indian
miltary has spoken darkly of "two front" preparations
for Pakistan and China, but this rattling of nuclear sabres was not
mentioned in the press conference. It's a regional thing.
At UN, President Hu, ECOWAS views not shown
In
the program of
work's footnotes is the phrase "Peace consolidation in West
Africa." While no question on this was taken, one assumes this
means Guinea, the massacre of September 28 and the resulting UN
report. A Presidential Statement is being prepared.
While
China may go
along with it, China signed a business deal with the junta soon after
the massacre. This contradicted the stance of the regional
organization, ECOWAS. What was that again, about respect for regional
organizations? Watch this site.
* * *
In
UN Council, Iran and Guinea But Not Yemen Discussed by Five New
Members
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, January 5 -- In the UN's nearly empty building, 2010 dawned
at the Security Council with January's president China serving
breakfast and giving photo albums to the other Council members, five
of them new this month.
One
of the five
outgoing countries pointedly asked, at the Council retreat for the
new members, what is the function of the ten non-permanent members,
other than to legitimize the decisions of the Permanent Five?
Croatia, to pick one example, accomplished nearly nothing during its
two year
stint. (Perhaps explanatory, its Permanent Representative left in
scandal,
diverting Mission funds for gambling in Las Vegas.)
Of
the incoming
members, many are watching Brazil, given its rising power and the
outspokenness of President Lula. In late 2009, Brazil wrote a letter
to the Council about the safety of its embassy in Honduras, into
which the deposed Manuel Zelaya took refuge.
A
Council source
told Inner City Press on Tuesday morning that this will have to be
reviewed, along with other outstanding items from 2009.
Amid
the clanking
of breakfast dishes, various Council members spun the Press on their
topics of interest. A Presidential Statement is in the works about
the September massacres in Guinea, a "hot issues, on the hot
burner," the PRST's drafter gushed.
On
Iran, a well
placed Council member said the country's failure to be responsive to
the Sanctions Committees letter was helping to build the case for
further sanctions. "If there's no regime change before then,"
quipped another member.
Around the Horseshoe Table, one perm perm rep and
reform not shown
The
critical
outgoing member has questioned why the Council's Committees are only
chaired by non-permanent members. Is it a mark of respect, or of the
P-5 trying not to dominate? Or, because the work is large
administrative and conducted by lower level bureaucrats, is chairing
the committees beneath the P-5 Permanent Representatives?
Of
these five,
only four were seen on Tuesday. Missing was the U.S.'s Susan Rice.
The U.S. has, some say, thus staked out a position above the over
Permanent Four. Now in 2010, will the U.S. which says it wants to use
the UN be raising the issue of Yemen? Watch this site.
Also on the
U.S. Mission, at the UN barely a word has been said about the flame out
in scandal and withdrawal of the nomination of former Goldman Sachs
executive Jide J. Zeitlin to head the
Mission's UN reform efforts. Who's next?
Media
footnote: while the Council is usually off-limits to the UN press
corps, on Tuesday morning the bureau chief of China's state owned
Xinhua came smiling out of the breakfast. With human rights issues
like Myanmar, Iran, Sudan and Guinea on the Council's agenda, some
wonder how China can be an honest broker. We'l be covering this, and
secondarily any honest brokering with the press.
Click
here
for an Inner City Press YouTube channel video, mostly UN Headquarters
footage, about civilian
deaths
in Sri Lanka.
Click here for Inner City
Press' March 27 UN debate
Click here for Inner City
Press March 12 UN (and AIG
bailout) debate
Click here for Inner City
Press' Feb 26 UN debate
Click
here
for Feb.
12 debate on Sri Lanka http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/17772?in=11:33&out=32:56
Click here for Inner City Press' Jan.
16, 2009 debate about Gaza
Click here for Inner City Press'
review-of-2008 UN Top Ten debate
Click here for Inner
City Press' December 24 debate on UN budget, Niger
Click here from Inner City Press'
December 12 debate on UN double standards
Click here for Inner
City Press' November 25 debate on Somalia, politics
and this October 17 debate, on
Security Council and Obama and the UN.
* * *
These
reports are
usually also available through Google
News and on Lexis-Nexis.
Click here
for a Reuters
AlertNet piece by this correspondent
about Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army. Click
here
for an earlier Reuters AlertNet piece about the Somali
National
Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's $200,000 contribution from an
undefined trust fund. Video
Analysis here
Feedback: Editorial
[at] innercitypress.com
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Other,
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