On
Libya, Inner City Press Asks
UK's Allen About Slavery, What
UN Is Doing, Resolution
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Vine,
Periscope
UNITED NATIONS,
March 21 – With Libya on the
UN Security Council's agenda
on March 21, Inner City Press
asked UK Ambassador Jonathan
Allen about continued reports
of slavery there. From the UK
transcript: Inner City Press:
On the issue of human
trafficking and even slavery,
migrants: BBC had another
story today about people who
had been imprisoned for months
and who had been sold. Is the
UN doing anything? Is the UN
doing enough? What should be
done about that?
We obviously have passed the
resolution in the Security
Council I think last November
which was really clear about
the expectations the Council
has, and that I know a number
of countries are working with
Libya but also other countries
in Africa, including European
Union projects, including
through bilateral means, to
try and resolve some of the
problems that we’re seeing
because there is a huge
problem that needs to be fixed
and ultimately it will be
fixed when Libya is able to
have political institutions
that work and is able to come
together as a country, which
is what we’re talking about
this morning, of course."
We'll see. At the end of the
open meeting on Libya,
Russia's Ambassador Nebenzia
distributed a video about..
Eastern Ghouta. Inner City
Press Periscope here.
When the Libya sanctions
committee of the UN Security
Council met on February 9 in
the UN basement, only one
media was covering it: Inner
City Press. This is in
contrast to a meeting earlier
in the week in the same room
of the North Korea sanctions
committee, covered by more
than a half dozen media, all
but one of which (Inner City
Press) was Japanese. Libya
despite the UN's role and the
atrocities is no longer in the
attention span of the media
the UN gives full access to.
To his credit, Libya sanctions
committee chair Olof Skoog
nevertheless stopped after the
meeting and spoke with Inner
City Press, saying that while
human smuggling is not
explicitly part of the
sanctions he views it as such,
given not only human rights
but also its potential to fund
terrorism. Full audio here.
He said there are
recommendations not yet agreed
to by all 15 members; he cited
the briefing by Panel of
Experts coordinator Lipika
Majumdar Roy Choudhury. After
she briefed the Committee,
Inner City Press spokes
briefly to her as well; she
was more accessible than her
North Korea sanctions
counterpart. Earlier in the
day the North Korea
committee's briefing for
member states was closed to
the press. After it, Inner
City Press asked the Dutch
chair if the letters granting
exemption as to Choe Hwi are
put on the Committee's web
site; no, was the answer.
Periscope video here.
Amid the disparities in focus,
Inner City Press is ramping up
its coverage - watch this
site. In the Democratic
Republic of the Congo the UN
has little to say when
civilians protesting holdover
President Joseph Kabila are
killed, and speaks only after
questions about their own
peacekeepers killing each
other, it seems. RIP. On
February 12, there will be a
US-sponsored Arria formula
meeting at the UN about DRC
and the elections. On February
9, Inner City Press asked UN
Spokesman Farhan Haq, video here, UN transcript here: Inner
City Press: I wanted to ask
you two things on DRC
[Democratic Republic of the
Congo]. One is just… you
may have read it after me, and
I'm sorry if I missed it, but
the UN has come up with a very
high estimate for the number
of people it believes will be
displaced by this joint DRC in
Uganda operation in the wake
of the killing of the
Tanzanian peacekeepers.
And I just wanted… it seemed…
the numbers seemed so high I
wanted to know. Number
one, is the UN saying anything
to the two countries about how
they… they should be
conducting this? Is
that… is it a fait
accompli? Is there any
UN support to that
operation? And also,
what is the status of the
inquiry by… led by Dmitry
Titov, but apparently… into…
into what went wrong?
There's at least one media
report saying that one of the
reasons, sadly, that… that the
that the peacekeepers were
killed is the lack of air
support, that a helicopter
didn't fly to support them
because there was a lack of
pilots with night
training. So, there are
people that, if that's the
case, said like… how can… how
can… in a country like the
DRC, how can you have
helicopters with people that
can't fly at night if the
bases are being attacked at
night? Deputy Spokesman:
Well, regarding that, the
report by Mr. Titov is being
finalized. I believe it
will be ready to go to the
Secretariat and the
Secretary-General shortly and
he'll have a look at that
point. It has not been
finalized so far, and then
we'll evaluate at that point,
and we'll try to share with
the press the details of that
report once we get that.
Regarding your other question,
we have some information out
today, including what I just
read at the first part of this
briefing, concerning the large
number of displacement of
people from the Democratic
Republic of the Congo. I
would refer you to what UNHCR
has been saying and yes, of
course, we call on all
fighting forces to halt their
activities to cease further
such displacement. Inner City
Press: What's the UN's
position on the Ugandan
Government saying we're going
to take out the ADF [Allied
Democratic Forces] because
they attacked the
peacekeepers? It's kind
of being done in the name of
the UN, no? Should they…
should they… I guess what I'm
saying… Deputy
Spokesman: No, I'm
sorry, it's not being done "in
the name of the UN".
Please be accurate. Inner City
Press: No, I mean, they're
saying you killed peacekeeper,
therefore, we're going to take
you out. If you're the
UN, you should say, no, don't
take them out, or take them
out in this way. So,
what are you saying to them?
Deputy Spokesman: I
mean, obviously, we're aware
of the constant unrest, and
it's been going on for many
years, as you're aware in the
Democratic Republic of the
Congo and specifically in the
eastern parts. We have
been trying, including through
the efforts of our
peacekeeping mission, MONUSCO,
to find ways to ease the
situation. At the same
time, we are aware that the
activities by military groups
continue. That must be
brought to a halt, but we are
trying to deal with the
situation. And part of
what I've been saying,
including at the top of this
briefing, was the need to
fully fund our efforts to deal
with the massive amount of
displacement. Inner City
Press: But, when Uganda was
firing… because it came up in
this room. They claimed
to have killed 100 ADF
fighters. This was about
a month ago, maybe five weeks
ago. They claimed that
they did it without crossing
the border, but the people
that were killed were at least
100 kilometres inside the
border. Did MONUSCO ever
find out how Uganda was able
to kill 100 people at that
distance? I guess I'm
wondering doesn't MONUSCO have
some kind of monitoring
ability to see… or mandate to
see how these two armies are,
in going after ADF, actually
doing these things? I'm
just saying the UN is more
involved than just issuing
press releases about
displacement, since it was the
attack on the UN that's used
as the pretext or as the
triggering of these two
military actions. Deputy
Spokesman: The fact that
an attack on peacekeepers is
used by different parties to
explain their actions does not
make it a UN operation or
something that involves the
United Nations. Our
operations are done by the
United Nations." We'll have
more on this. On January 23 on
the weekend's crackdown about
which UN Security Council "pen
holder" France has not called
a meeting like it has not on
Cameroon, US State Department
Spokesperson Heather Nauert
has said, "We condemn in the
strongest terms the violence
perpetrated by DRC security
forces on January 21 against
church-led peaceful protests
that resulted in at least six
confirmed deaths, dozens of
injuries, and numerous
arbitrary arrests. We are
appalled that the DRC
government, including
President Kabila, would employ
repressive tactics and
disproportionate use of lethal
force against civilians --
including religious leaders
and children -- exercising
their democratic rights to
call for credible and
inclusive elections. We are
deeply concerned that the DRC
government’s January 21
violence and repression
against its citizens follows
just weeks after the
government’s attacks on
peaceful protesters on
December 31 which the United
States and members of the
United Nations Security
Council condemned and called
for accountability. The use of
lethal force against Congolese
citizens, and the cutting of
internet and SMS service,
undermine the democratic
process, obstruct
implementation of the St.
Sylvestre Accord and
contravene international human
rights norms. We call on
President Kabila to hold
accountable security force
members who fired on civilians
or ordered the use of lethal
force and urge him and his
government to ensure a
peaceful and open electoral
process so that credible
elections are held as
scheduled in December 2018."
On January 5, after three days
of only "internal
appointments," UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres
appointed a long time UN
official to investigate the
most recent killings: Dmitry
Titov, whom Inner City Press
spotted and spoke with in the
UN lobby during the January 4
snow day when it could not
exit and re-enter through the
UN Visitors Entrance. Here's
the full text: "The
Secretary-General today
announced the appointment of
Dmitry Titov of Russia to lead
a Special Investigation into
recent attacks on peacekeepers
and peacekeeping bases in the
Beni territory of North Kivu
province, Democratic Republic
of Congo. This Special
Investigation will include a
focus on the 7 December attack
in Semuliki, in which 15
Tanzanian peacekeepers were
killed, 43 wounded and one
remains missing. The Special
Investigation will examine the
circumstances surrounding
these attacks, evaluate
MONUSCO’s overall preparedness
and response to the events and
provide recommendations on how
to prevent such attacks from
occurring in the future or
when they do occur, from
having such lethal
consequences. The
investigation team will travel
to the Democratic Republic of
the Congo early in January and
will also visit relevant
countries in the Great Lakes
region. In addition to
officials of the United
Nations, the team will also
include two military officers
from Tanzania." On January 5,
Guterres' spokesman did not
answer Inner City Press' noon
question about censorship by
Tanzania. On New Years Eve,
tellingly, the UN mission put
out a photograph
of its personnel smiling and
dancing, about which Inner
City Press asked the UN
Spokesperson on January 3,
below. The UN of today
cares what some think, but not
others. Perhaps relatedly, at
the January 2 press conference
by the month's Security
Council president,
Kazakhstan, not a single one
of the 12 questions taken was
about anywhere in Africa.
Inner City Press near the end
asked loudly about DRC; no
answer. Vine
video here.
At
the January 3 UN noon
briefing, Inner City Press
asked UN Deputy Spokesman
Farhan Haq, UN transcript here: Inner
City Press: I wanted to ask
something about the DRC
[Democratic Republic of the
Congo]. I definitely saw
the statement by the
Secretary-General, but beyond
the people that were killed in
this crackdown, there was a
period of time in which the
internet, SMS messages, were
all turned off by the
Government as part of its
strategy. There was some
consternation among LUCHA and
other groups in the Congo,
that MONUSCO [United Nations
Organization Stabilization
Mission in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo] was
tweeting out pictures of the
peacekeepers dancing as some
sort of a New Year's greeting,
and people said this was sort
of a bad timing given that, at
that very moment, civilians
were being killed. Does
MONUSCO have its own
internet? Meaning, when
the internet is shut down by
the [Joseph] Kabila
Government, how is it that
MONUSCO is still putting
things out when citizens
facing repression are unable
to? Deputy Spokesman:
Well, MONUSCO has the same
facilities. It doesn't
have Internet independent of
what is available in the
country, but it does have its
own communications
facilities. Obviously,
it does… anything that we put
out for New Year's greetings,
including the New Year's
greetings that the UN system
puts out in countries around
the world, are not meant to be
a disrespect for other events
happening on the ground.
But, at the same time, we have
made clear, including through
the Secretary-General's
statements, our concerns about
the situation in the
Democratic Republic of the
Congo." At the January 2 noon
briefing, Inner City Press
asked Guterres' deputy
spokesman Farhan Haq, UN
transcript here:
Inner City Press: I had been
asking in writing last week
about whether the U… Ugandans
claim that they made these…
they… they took these actions
without any boots on ground
without ever crossing the
border, so they were done with
either artillery or with
airstrikes. And some of
these camps are… are… are far
from their border. So,
I'm just wondering, as I'd
asked last week, was MONUSCO
informed of airstrikes taking
place in areas where they
have, you know,
personnel? I guess it
has to do with the kind of
coordination and also, you
know, whether they think that
the people killed were all, in
fact, ADF fighters or some…
there's some reports locally
that there's civilians
hit. So, I'm just
wondering, what's the UN's
sort of role and foreknowledge
and knowledge of these
airstrikes and artillery
strikes by Uganda into DRC
[Democratic Republic of the
Congo]? Deputy
Spokesman: I'll try to
see what information we can
get. I believe we had
received something just before
I entered here about
casualties from the attack
last week, so we'll try to get
something." Then, nothing.
We'll have more on this in
2018. In the work week of
December 26-29, Secretary
General Antonio Guterres'
spokesmen refused to answer
Inner City Press' formal
questions about the killing of
civilians in DRC. Then on
December 31, two hours before
New Years in New York
(Guterres was in Portugal,
presumably asleep), the UN
issued this in his name: "The
Secretary-General expresses
concern about reports of the
violent dispersion of protests
by national security forces in
Kinshasa and a number of
cities in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo,
resulting in the death of at
least five people, the
wounding of several others and
the arrest of over 120
persons. The Secretary-General
calls on the Government and
national security forces to
exercise restraint and to
uphold the rights of the
Congolese people to the
freedom of speech and peaceful
assembly. The
Secretary-General urges all
Congolese political actors to
remain fully committed to the
31 December 2016 political
agreement, which remains the
only viable path to the
holding of elections, the
peaceful transfer of power and
the consolidation of stability
in the DRC." But that
agreement has been entirely
violated by Kabila. And still
nothing on other protests, for
example in Iran. We'll have
more on this. On December 20,
Inner City Press asked UN
Spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: on the DRC
[Democratic Republic of the
Congo] and the killing of the
two experts, Michael Sharp and
Zaida Catalan, there's a
report by RFI and others that…
that one of the people that
invited them to the town that
they were visiting was, in
fact, a Government
official. So it calls
into question whether the
Government itself can or will
honestly investigate a crime
in which they may be
involved. What's the
status of the UN's
participation in the
Government's investigation?
Spokesman: Well, as you
know, the Secretary-General
sent a Canadian senior judge,
Mr. [Robert] Petit, who I
believe may still be there,
and along with other technical
experts to support the work of
the criminal investigation
that is being done by the DRC
authorities. And we do
hope that the investigation is
done fully and thoroughly and
that justice is found for our
two colleagues who were
murdered. Inner City
Press: But what… if… if
this report is true that a top
AN… an ANR official was
involved in bringing them to
where they disappeared, does
it call into question whether
the UN can… can… whether this
is the best the UN can do in
terms of investigating the
death of its experts?
Spokesman: Well,
obviously, the UN has no
mandate to conduct its own
criminal investigation.
That is clear. On…
following discussions with the
Security Council, the
Secretary-General has
dispatched these staff to
support the criminal
investigation. We hope
that it will be full and
thorough and as transparent as
possible. I think… and
there's… we hope that they
will… the investigation will
lead wherever it needs to lead
to, in order to find justice."
We'll see. On December 7 the
worst attack yet happened,
killing 14 UN peacekeepers and
five Congolese soldiers. Inner
City Press asked for
information, without response,
from UN Secretary General
Antonio Guterres' spokesman Stephane
Dujarric and DPKO chief
Jean-Pierre Lacroix. Later
Lacroix spoke at the noon
briefing and Inner City Press
asked him about the ADF, see
below). After the Security
Council met and Japan's Deputy
Permanent Representative read
out a press statement, Inner
City Press asked him if
Lacroix in the closed door
briefing said it was the ADF.
We still have to investigate,
he said. Periscope here.
A week later on December 14
Inner City Press asked UN
Spokesman Farhan Haq, UN
transcript here,
Inner City Press: with Mr.
[Jean-Pierre] Lacroix in
Tanzania, there's been a
request by the Government
there for an investigation of
the death of their 15
peacekeepers. In terms of the
slowness of the response from
Beni and elsewhere and the
communications breakdown. I
guess I'm wondering, beyond
just investigating, are you
closer to saying it definitely
was the ADF [Allied Democratic
Forces]? And has there
been anything found out, why
it took as long as it did for
the reinforcements to arrive?
Deputy Spokesman: Well,
this is a matter that we're
looking into. Regarding
the question of the Allied
Democratic Forces, you heard
what Mr. Lacroix had to say
about that. But we'll
continue to look into the
matter, and if we have
anything further to announce,
we'll make that at that
point." Right. Back on
December 8 Haq's and Stephane
Dujarric's office squawked
that Guterres would speak
about the peacekeepers at 10
am in UN Conference Room 1.
Inner City Press ran there but
found Guterres glad-handing
with ambassadors from Uganda
(named in the recent UN
bribery indictment) and
others. Periscope video here.
A film was shown, about CERF.
Guterres read remarks, then
said CERF funds would go,
among others, to Cameroon,
where his approach and team
are failing. Guterres left for
a private spinning session; he
has said he won't held any end
of the year press conference,
as even Ban Ki-moon did. This
is today's UN. DPKO's Lacroix
came to the noon briefing with
a map; Inner City Press asked
him if those killed were part
of the Force Intervention
Brigade. Yes, he said, saying
that Nepal has been added to
the FIB. Minutes later Inner
City Press asked UN spokesman
Stephane Dujarric, UN
transcript here:
Inner City Press: you
said earlier on another attack
on UN personnel that the UN is
trying to, I guess, co-operate
in investigating the killing
of the experts [Michael] Sharp
and [Zaida] Catalan. It
was said that an UN team is
going there to work with them?
Spokesman: Yes. Inner City
Press: Have they gone yet?
Spokesman: Yes. We
confirmed it, I think.
There is Judge [Robert] Petit,
a Canadian judge who was
dispatched, I’m not sure if he
is still there but he went
there about a week ago, and
we’ve also dispatched a number
of technical experts to
support the investigation
being done, the criminal
investigation being done by
the DRC authorities. Inner
City Press: And relatedly,
there was… in September there
was an attack by the Congolese
military forces themselves on
Burundian refugees, 36
Burundian refugees were killed
in I think it’s Kamandola and
I’m wondering, it was said at
the time that the UN was going
to follow-up? Spokesman:
"Yeah, I think we announced an
inquiry. I’ll have to
check what the status is of
that investigation." On
November 16, Inner City Press
asked UN Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric what if any thing SG
Antonio Guterres is doing to
follow up on the murders of UN
experts Zaida Catalan and
Michael Sharp, UN transcript here: Inner
City Press: on the issue of
Michael Sharp and Zaida
Catalan, the… the Swedish
public prosecutor, Sara
Nilsson, has said that the DRC
[Democratic Republic of the
Congo] authority are not
cooperating with her office,
that they have not shared the
video of the murder. And
she says that there may be…
those involved in the killing
may be closely related to the
regime in the DRC. And
so I wanted to know, what's
the status of the
Secretary-General's moves to…
to collaborate or work with
this DRC? Spokesman: As
the… I think as the SG
said in his letter to the
Security Council, there will
be a UN team, I think,
traveling in the first half of
December. When I have
more… Inner City Press: Would
they expect to see this video
that the Swedish prosecutors
have said…? Spokesman:
They have their mandate as
laid out in their letter to
the Council. Thank you."
On November 7, on the
country's multiply delayed
elections, Inner City Press
asked UN Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric, UN Transcript here:
Inner City Press: on the DRC,
I wanted to ask you
this. The US has put
out… the State Department put
out a press release saying:
"The US notes the importance
of President Kabila [Kabange]
abiding by the DRC's
Constitution, reaffirmed in
the St. Sylvestre accord, that
he will not seek a third term
and will step down following
elections." So, is that…
is that the UN's… is that your
understanding as well, that
that is what is required?
Spokesman: I think my
understanding is the fact that
I used every word that I could
think of in answering..."
We'll have more on this, and
on the UN's MONUSCO mission
often called MON-USELESS. On
October 30, Inner City Press
asked UN Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric, UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: about the
Democratic Republic of the
Congo. One is, there's a
report of a UN peacekeeper
being killed allegedly by
another UN peacekeeper.
And I wanted to know… I
didn't… if you can confirm
that. And, also,
there've been at least one
civilian killed in Goma in
protests against the continued
holdover presidency of Joseph
Kabila [Kabange]. Is
that something that MONUSCO
[United Nations Organization
Stabilization Mission in the
Democratic Republic of the
Congo] is operating on?
Spokesman: Yes, I mean,
I think they're monitoring the
situation. I don't have
any details as to exactly on
the demonstration that took
place in Goma. We are
aware of the tragic incident
that took place in the living
quarters of a MONUSCO base in
Sake in North Kivu, I think,
on 27 October, in which one UN
peacekeeper was found dead and
another injured. The
wounded peacekeeper has been
transferred to Kampala for
further medical care.
The Mission is conducting an
investigation currently. Inner
City Press: I hate to say it,
but if it does turn out to be
manslaughter or murder of one
peacekeeper by another, does
immunity still apply? Is
it a matter of military
justice in South Africa?
How does it work?
Spokesman: I think it's
a matter of the contingent
taking the right… taking the
decision, investigating it
and, obviously, if there's
foul play, for the person to
face justice." On justice,
Inner City Press on October 30
asked Swedish foreign minister
Margot Wallstrom what's being
done to hold accountable those
responsible for the murders of
UN experts Zaida Catalan and
Michael Sharp. She said the
Secretary General, whom she
was meet later in the day,
photos here,
has put UN personnel within
the Congolese investigation,
and that Swedish will not
rest. Back on October 11,
Inner City Press asked the UK,
UN and UN Security Council
president Francois Delattre.
From the French Mission
transcript: Inner City Press:
The killing of the two
experts, Michael Sharp and
Zaida Catalan was it discussed
in consultations? And also the
killing of the Burundian
refugees, the SRSG said there
is some kind of an inquiry
about, at least as I
understood, the U.N’s role,
protecting or not protecting.
What can you say about these
two sets killings in the DRC?
On this, and I speak on my
national capacity here, the
topic was indeed mentioned
during the discussion we just
had. With respect to France’s
position, we have repeatedly
called for an in-depth
investigation to identify the
perpetrators of the crimes and
to bring them to justice. The
Secretary General has
committed to shedding the
light on these barbaric
murders and to holding
accountable those responsible.
So we renew our call to
establish a special
investigative mechanism to
enable the competent legal
authorities to effectively
prosecute these crimes and to
achieve the justice we need."
The UK answer by Matthew
Rycroft is here
on video - it seems the UK
Mission no longer transcribes
and sends out what Rycroft
says or answers. The UN
transcript is not yet out, as
of 4 pm. When US Ambassador
Nikki Haley took questions on
August 25, Inner City Press
asked her about the UN's
whitewash report on the murder
of UN experts Michael Sharp
and Zaida Catalan, and the UN
referring the case to... the
Democratic Republic of the
Congo. Haley replied that that
would not be an appropriate
investigation and that she is
working with the UN in this
regard. Video here.
Two weeks later on September 8
Inner City Press asked UN
spokesman Stephane Dujarric
and found that nothing, it
seems, is taking place. From
the UN transcript:
Inner City Press: some serving
the UN's cause that have
fallen include, for example,
Michael Sharp and Zaida
Catalán. So I wanted to
know… and there's criticism,
whether he calls it from
critics or not, saying that
maybe the UN itself could have
done better, should learn from
that in terms of how to
protect its experts in the
field. So I wanted to
know, factually, with the
upcoming week coming up, when
does the Secretary-General
expect to actually make a
decision about a follow-on
mechanism that's been much
discussed? Is he going
to use, I guess, that week to…
to get more support for it?
Spokesman: No one more
than the Secretary-General
wants to see justice for our
two fallen colleagues. I
think he has expressed it
directly. He's met with
the families. The
responsibility, the primary
responsibility to find those
responsible, lies with the
Government of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo.
There's a discussion going on,
on how to best create a
follow-on mechanism, and that
will be addressed as soon as
possible. I think the
Secretary-General, through the
Board of Inquiry, we made very
clear what could have been
done differently, what could
have been done better.
And, of course, there are
lessons to be learned from
that horrendous… the
horrendous murder.
Inner City Press: Two
things. Was it ever
determined… I read that
report, was it ever determined
whether these security
management system regulations
did apply at the time to
experts or apply now?
That was one thing…
Spokesman: Well, I think
that was one of the issues
that is very much a lesson
learned on how to better
integrate the experts into
that situation. Inner City
Press: And can you see
why, if it's possible that the
DRC [Democratic Republic of
the Congo] Government or its
affiliates or affiliated
militia may have played some
role in the crime, why there
are people…Spokesman:
"No one is debating that."
Really? Back on August 25
Inner City Press ran to the UN
noon briefing and asked the
Spokesman what Secretary
General Antonio Guterres was
doing. UN transcript
here: Inner City Press:
Just now at the
stakeout, I asked Nikki Haley
about this Michael Sharp and
Zaida Catalán and the UN, the
report to date, and she seemed
to say that, that relying on,
on the DRC [Democratic
Republic of the Congo] to
investigate is not acceptable
to at least one of the
countries of the two
deceased. So, what… I
mean, I know that you've been
asked, and I'm not sure I
understand the answer.
What exactly, does the
Secretary-General intend to
have there be an investigation
that is not DRC run?
Spokesman: There needs
to be a, there needs to be
some sort of a follow-up
mechanism. Those issues
are currently being discussed
within the house and with the
Security Council.
Obviously, there are also
issues of, of sovereignty and
of the Security Council that
need to be taken into
account. But I think the
Secretary-General is, first
and foremost, wants to make
sure that justice is done for
these two young people who
were doing work on behalf of
the United Nations, on behalf
of the Security Council, to
try to bring light to illicit,
onto illicit activity.
And so we are, we are
dedicated to ensuring that
there is accountability and
that justice is done."
But is that an investigation?
After the issuance by the UN
of whitewash report, on August
17 the UN Security Council met
about the DRC. In attendance
were John E. Sharp and Michele
M. Sharp, and Maria Moresby
and Elizabeth Moresby. Photos
here.
Before the meeting began,
Inner City Press asked UK
Deputy Ambassador Jonathan
Allen, as transcribed by the
UK: Inner City Press: The
security management system has
said it was unclear if the
experts are subjects to its
regulations, do you think they
are or should be and if they
were at the time they were
murdered, who should have told
them they were actual subjects
to it? It’s paragraph 24.
Amb Allen: I’ve read the Board
of Inquiry report. I think
there are a number of
questions there are to be
followed up with the UN system
and we will be doing that.
Inner City Press also asked UN
Deputy Spokesman Farhan Haq,
who would not say if the
regulations applied and who,
when Inner City Press asked
for report lead author Greg
Starr to hold a press
conference said Starr is not a
UN person. The buck-passing is
extensive. If the UN cannot
rule out that the murders
involved the Congolese
government, how is counting on
them to investigate
acceptable? We'll have more on
this. Inner City Press on
August 10 asked UN
Spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: on the
Democratic Republic of the
Congo, the report into the
killing of the two experts,
Michael Sharp and Zaida
Catalán, I noticed that the
Deputy Secretary-General met
with the perm rep of DRC
[Democratic Republic of the
Congo] this week? Is
that report, in fact… I think
you'd said it was coming out
quite soon.
Spokesman: "Yeah, I
expect a, it is coming out
quite soon. I also made
sure not to box myself in with
a… with a date promise, but I
think we should have… we
should be able to announce
something either late this
week or early… early next
week." And now on August 16,
the day before the Security
Council meets on its, Inner
City Press is publishing the
summary of the report, here.
It is a whitewash.
Specifically, it is another
whitewash by the UN Department
of Safety and Security of
itself. Earlier this year
Inner City Press published a
leaked complaint of another
alleged cover up by the head
of DSS Peter Drennan, here.
But in this summary,
paragraphs 23 and 24 are
particularly shameful. The
Starr report states that the
Board of Inquiry named by
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres "found that the
United Nations had a fully
functional, in-depth security
program in place that was
adequately staffed and
resourced to perform required
security functions." Really?
The report states that
"members of Groups of Experts
do not believe that the United
Nations Security Management
System regulations pertain to
them." But did they, in March
2017? And if they did, whose
responsibility was it to have
told the experts? Do they
now? What actions, or
factors, regarding the lack of
implementation of the UN
Security Management System
contributed to their deaths?
This is not answered. It is a
whitewash.
On August
8, Inner City Press asked
Dujarric, video here,
UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: in the DRC
[Democratic Republic of the
Congo], and this is not about…
this is about the Government
itself announcing two telecom
companies to slow down the
internet so that images cannot
be transmitted by Twitter or
other…
Spokesman: I'm not aware
of the situation.
Inner City Press: I guess what
I'm wondering on that —
there's an article on it, so
you could be aware of it —is,
does the UN, as much as you
might seem like you don't
monitor Twitter, given that
photographs are one of the
ways in which human rights
violations in the Kasais are
being documented.
Spokesman: I
understand. I'm aware of
the situation. I can
check.
Eight
hours later, nothing - but UN
Deputy Secretary General Amina
J. Mohammed, who met with a
Cameroon trio on August 8 with
Dujarric not despite Press
requested providing the
attendees list, is set to meet
with the DRC on August 9. We
hope to have more on this. On
August 4, Inner City Press
asked Dujarric about a UN
report, UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: there's a
due-diligence and vetting
process. So, one side of
the UN has found that there
may be Government units
supporting these. Are
you saying that these units
are not being supported… the…
the supervisors or whoever the
UN is aware of…?
Spokesman: I think, as
you know, we've said in the
past and we do due
diligence. There are
some units we've worked with
and others we have not, and
we've been very open about
when we've refused to work
with certain units.
Inner City Press: And although
this report doesn't
specifically name, but seems
to show some knowledge of, who
in the Congolese governmental
system is supporting these
militia units, has that
information been turned over
for the… for purposes of
vetting? And are there
any people actually being
vetted?
Spokesman: I'm sure
that, in drafting the report,
it was shared with the
Congolese authorities.
On
August 2 he returned to say
more than 100 had been
arrested, including
journalists (he himself evicted
the Press from the Briefing
Room and UN);
Inner City Press asked him, UN
transcript here:
Inner City Press: Thanks for
the, I guess, the numbers on
DRC [Democratic Republic of
the Congo]. I wanted to
ask you about another report
from there which is that the
press there is reporting that
the Gregory Starr report into
the death of the experts,
Zaida Catalán and Michael
Sharp, exonerates the
Government. That’s what
the media in the DRC is
saying, is the report
finished?
Spokesman: The report is
still in its final stages of
being finished. I think
anybody who claims to know the
conclusions of the report is
speaking on, not based on any
knowledge or facts.
Question: Sure.
Well, I mean Gregory Starr
presumably would know?
Spokesman: I'm saying in
any press reports to that
effect.
Question: What is going
to be the logistics and the
timing of actually people,
because, given the interest in
this in of knowing of the
report being made public or a
summary being made public?
Spokesman: I think there
will be some type of executive
summary that will be made
public. After 17 years
in this Organization, I try
not to be too tied down by
timeframes, but we do expect
it either this week or next
week.
Question: And do you
think that one or more of the
authors could…?
Spokesman: I wish I
could predict that.
From the UN's
August 1 transcript:
Inner City Press: now more
than 100 people were arrested
in the DRC in the protests of
the passing of the time, so
yesterday you said you didn't
have it?
Spokesman: No. We,
obviously the Mission is aware
of it. We understand a
number of people have been
released and the human rights
component of the [UN] Mission
is monitoring the situation.
Already
downplaying it. From the UN's
July 31 transcript:
Inner City Press: anything on
the Democratic Republic of the
Congo? There have been
major protests there
today. This was the day
people were supposed to be
registered to vote for the
election. There have
been arrests and the use of
tear gas in Kinshasa, Bukavu,
Goma. Given that the UN
has a billion-dollar
peacekeeping mission there, do
they have some statement on
it?
Spokesman: I have not
gotten anything from the
mission on that today.
And eight
hours later, nothing. After
the UN belatedly focused into
the murder of UN experts
Michael Sharp and Zaida
Catalan, unprotected by the UN
in the DR Congo, on July 10
Inner City Press asked UN
Spokesman Stephane Dujarric
what it is, exactly, that the
UN is investigating. UN
Transcript here
and below. Then on July 11
Inner City Press asked the
Under Secretary General for
Peacekeeping Operations
Jean-Pierre Lacroix what is
being done. Periscope video here.
Lacroix answered that he
raised the issue "at the
highest levels" in the DRC, as
of concern to the UN and to
the countries of origin of the
experts. (In fact, Sweden's
Olof Skoog has called for a
more rigorous investigation
that those current underway.)
Lacroix noted the current DRC
cases and said the UN has
shared detailed information
with the authorities there.
We'll have more on this. Back
on July 10, Inner City Press
asked UN Spokesman Dujarrric:
on DRC. There's been a
letter by ten US senators,
pretty much bipartisan about
the killings of Michael Sharp
and Zaida Catalan. And I
wanted to ask you about this
sentence in it. They
said that they've heard of the
UN Board of Inquiry [BOI], but
they understand, quote, it
will not seek to identify
perpetrators or what happened
to Mr. Sharp's and Ms.
Catalan's Congolese
interpreter and drivers.
So, they're asking for a more
serious investigation.
One, I wanted to know, what's
the status of that Board of
Inquiry given the interest and
what happened. And is it
true that the Board of
Inquiry, as these senators are
saying, will not look at all
at what happened into the
UN-contracted interpreter and
driver?
Spokesman: No. The
BOI is under way. We… last I'd
heard, we expect it for the
end of this month. As
we've said, we would effort to
make some of its findings
public. The BOI was
appointed to establish the
facts and, if possible,
identify the perpetrators
around the killings.
We'll submit a report with
recommendations as to the next
step. We're also looking
at further options that may be
available to us.
Obviously, first and foremost,
the responsibility lies on the
Congolese authorities.
We cannot substitute ourselves
for a national criminal
investigation unless, of
course, there is a Security
Council mandate. I think
I would urge you to wait and
see what the findings are, and
then we can take it, next
step. My understanding
also is that the letter was
addressed, from what I saw in
the press reports, to
Ambassador [Nikki] Haley, not
to the Secretary-General.
Inner City Press: What I
wanted to know is, one, I
remember at the time, there
was some dispute about whether
the… in fact, the interpreter
of the two experts had also
been found dead. Is
that… is your understanding
that he has?
Spokesman: My… I don't
have an understanding into
that. I think we have to
wait for the BOI and see what
facts they would have been
able to clear up.
On June 5 US
Ambassador Nikki Haley said
"they and their families
deserve justice. We owe it to
their legacy to end the human
rights abuses being carried
out by armed groups and the
DRC government against the
Congolese people. We hope
other nations will join us"-
she called for a Human Rights
Council and a UN Secretary
General investigation. On June
16, Haley added: "reports of
the Congolese government’s
campaign of murder and rape of
women and children should
shock us into action. These
allegations must be
investigated and those
responsible held accountable.
It is past time for the Human
Rights Council to take
decisive action and launch an
independent investigation into
the human rights violations
and abuses in the DRC. This is
the core mission of the HRC.
If they can’t act in a
situation this horrifying, why
bother having one." On June 6,
Inner City Press asked the
SG's holdover spokesman
Stephane Dujarric, UN
transcript here:
Inner City Press: Nikki Haley
has called on the
Secretary-General, António
Guterres, to initiate a
special investigation into the
murders of Michael Sharp and
Zaida Catalan. I saw you
were quoted, something about…
I want to understand your
position, something about
using maximum authority.
Doesn't he have the authority
to investigate the murder of
UN staff members?
Spokesman: Well, I
think, you know, first of all,
we, obviously… you know, the
call from Ambassador Haley and
we've seen calls from the…
from Sweden, as well. We
take the requests very
seriously. I think they
echo our own concern.
The Secretary-General has
consistently said that he and
the Secretariat would do
everything they could to make
sure justice was done in this
case while recognizing first
and foremost that the
responsibility for a criminal
investigation rests with the
Government of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo
(DRC). We cannot
substitute ourselves… the
Secretary-General, the
Secretariat, cannot substitute
himself… ourselves for the
criminal justice system of a
sovereign State. We're
cooperating… actively
cooperating with national
authorities conducting
criminal investigations, but
we're also ready to implement
any Security Council decision
on this matter. As you
know, there is a Board of
Inquiry (BOI) that was
appointed. They are
fully at work. We expect
their conclusions of that work
to be done by the end of
July. They're there to
establish the facts and, if
possible, identify the
perpetrators. And they'll
submit a report with
recommendations to the
Secretary-General. We're
also looking at further
options that may be available
to us. But that review,
the work of the BOI, should
provide a good basis for
putting together a set of
possible next steps for the
Secretary-General Member
States to consider in the
murder of… to find out what
happened… not only find out
what happened to the murder…
to our two murdered
colleagues, but also to ensure
that justice is done and those
who killed them are brought to
justice.
Inner City Press: Since often
these Board of Inquiries are
not… not made public, can you…
is the intention, at a
minimum, to at least make it
public…
Spokesman: We will… as
we've done in certain cases,
we will share with you what we
can and make public what we
can of the Board of Inquiry,
in a way that doesn't
jeopardize any future
investigations that may take
place.
We'll stay on this. Earlier on
June 6, Inner City Press asked
UK Ambassador Matthew Rycroft:
Inner City Press: Does
the UK think that the
Secretary-General should do
his own inquiry to the death
of the two experts in the DRC?
Nikki Haley has called for
that, as well as for the Human
Rights Council to do it. Which
do you think should happen, or
either?
Amb Rycroft: Well, we want to
just get to the truth. We want
those who are responsible for
the devastating murder of the
two UN officials to be held to
account. So whichever way will
get to the truth, we support.
Meanwhile, as Inner City Press
has reported, the UN
Department of Safety and
Security's alleged burying of
reports should not itself be
covered up. After Inner City
Press exclusively
reported that UN Department of
Safety and Security's top
officer Peter Drennan -- to
whom the Board of Inquiry
report on Sharp and Catalan
would be filed on July 31 --
ordered that a security report
on UNESCO chief Irina Bokova
be “buried” last year due to
the personal political
implications for Drennan if
Bokova instead of Antonio
Guterres became UN Secretary
General, the UN's response was
to attack the leak. (On May 23
they insisted a Garowe,
Somalia Board of Inquiry
report was shared with
interested parties). Also on
May 23, when Inner City Press
asked about criticism of the
UN in the DRC, the response
was to defend everything. From
the UN transcript:
Inner City Press: I'm sure
you've seen the editorial in
The New York Times saying,
“astoundingly irresponsible
approach by the United Nations
to an obviously dangerous and
unusually important
task”. They also
question what's been
accomplished for the billions
spent in the… in the DRC.
***
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