As
UN Envoy to
Libya, On
Mitri Replaced
by Leon, UN
Says Not Yet
By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Follow Up On
Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 11 --
To try to
counter
Libya's
lawless power
struggle, the
UN has engaged
in one of its
own.
And unlike
most of the member states
that make up
the UN, and
most other inter-governmental
organizations,
this
UN does not
answer
questions.
From
August 9 to
August 11, the
UN did not
even
acknowledge
receipt of
Inner City Press'
question about
the UK
Ambassador to
Libya
announcing
that UN enovy
Tarek Mitri had
been replaced.
So at the
August 11 UN
noon briefing,
Inner City Press
asked
UN Spokesman
Stephane Dujarric:
Inner
City
Press: the UK
Ambassador to
Libya and a
slew of other
officials
and newspapers
have said that
Bernardino
Leon is the
new Special
Representative
and Tarek
Mitri is out.
And so, as I
asked by email
on Saturday, I
wanted to
know, is that
the case? Has
the
Secretariat
written to the
Council about
that?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I think,
Matthew, you
haven’t been
at the UN as
long as
I have... but
as you know,
when there’s
an
announcement
to be made
of a new
envoy, senior
official,
nothing is
official until
the
announcement
is made. If
there’s a
letter to the
Security
Council,
it will then
become a
document, so,
obviously as,
often, whether
it
was for this
post, or as we
saw it for the
successor to
Mr. [Lakhdar]
Brahimi, there
were a lot of
names floating
around and lot
of people
announce
things. I
would wait for
the official
announcement.
But
five hours
later, the UK
Ambassador to
Libya Michael
Aron
exhibiting
more Digital
Diplomacy and
openness than
the UN tweeted
at Inner City
Press that
"Now
confirmed!"
Inner City
Press thanked
him and asked
Dujarric
again: "On
Mitri being
replaced by
Bernardino
Leon, the UK
Ambassador to
Libya who
announced it
on August 8
had just
tweeted at me
that it's now
“confirmed!”
-- is it?"
Dujarric
replied, "On
Mitri's
successor,
nothing is
official until
it is
announced by
the SG's
office."
So what's
going on here?
Ban tells P5
(or P3)
nations, then
his spokespeople
refuse to
answer, then
answer thusly?
Back
on August 1,
Inner City
Press exclusively
reported
that UN envoy
to Libya Tarek
Mitri was
being "pushed
out" of the
post,
including by
UK envoy to
Libya Jonathan
Powell, and
cited his
brother Lord
Powell's
extensive
business in
Libya through
Magna
Holdings.
The UK
mission,
usually
responsive,
did not
provide
comment on
written Press
questions on
this; at UN
Ambassador
Mark Lyall
Grant's August
4 press
conference
Inner City
Press asked
about Powell's
and Mitri's
relationship,
without
direct answer,
see here.
Now the UK's
Ambassador to
Libya Michael
Aron has announced,
on Twitter no
less,
that Mitri is
out and Ban
Ki-moon has
installed a
new UN envoy,
former
Zapatero
diplomat
Bernardino
Leon Gross.
The UN, at
least at its
August 8 noon
briefing and
in emails
since, has not
announce
anything about
replacing
Mitri, much
less by whom.
Ban Ki-moon's
office said
that for
August 9 and
10,
"Spokesperson
on call:
Mr. Farhan
Haq." So Inner
City Press
wrote to Farhan
Haq, as
well as to
lead spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric:
Hello.
Now that the
UK Ambassador
to Libya, and
others, have
announced that
Ban Ki-moon
has appointed
Bernardino
Leon to
replace Tarek
Mitri as Ban's
representative
to Libya, head
of UNSMIL,
this is a
request on
deadline -
today - that
your Office
confirm that
this
appointment or
nomination has
been made.
Has
the letter
been sent to
the Security
Council?
Is
Leon already
confirmed?
If
not, how it is
appropriate
that P5
countries are
saying he
already has
the job? On
deadline,
today.
Given
many of the ongoing
Afghanistan
leaks are
about UN DSS
and UNAMA,
not UNDP,
there will be
further
questions. But
the above is
on deadline
for today.
Thank you in
advance.
But more than
four hours
later, by
"close of
business" in
New York, the
"spokesperson
on duty" had
not answered,
had not even
acknowledged
receipt of the
question.
What does it
mean to be the
UN's
"spokesperson
on duty"?
Isn't it for
Ban Ki-moon to
make this
announcement?
In fact, in
2011 when
France had
already gotten
its Jerome
Bonnafont in
place to
replace its
Alain Le Roy
atop UN
Peacekeeping,
Bonnafont's
bragging about
it in India,
where he was
French
Ambassador,
led to Ban
rescinding the
"offer."
France
countered
with three
time loser Herve
Ladsous,
Inner City
Press reported
each step --
including Bonnafont
in July 2011
being tapped
for the post,
and even congratulation
cards to
Bonnafont, here,
and threats
from AFP
then the UN
Correspondents
Association --
and the rest
is, well, a
type of
history (coverage
in UK New
Statesman,
here).
Ladsous
refuses all
Inner City
Press
questions, video compilation here; Ban
Ki-moon's
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq on
August 8,
alluding to
Ladsous and now
UNDP, said it
is because of
"people
skills."
Or reporting?
So Ban has
accepted or
done nothing
to stop this
P3 power grab
to oust Mitri.
But can "his"
successor be
pre-announced
and Ban accept
that too?
Footnote:
Inner City
Press is
exclusively
informed that
UNSMIL deputy
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
also has
business,
literally:
fisshing
business. Ban
and those in
control of
this play
accept that
too? Watch
this site.
Background:
Inner City
Press on
August 1 asked
UN spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric what
UN envoy Tarek
Mitri is
doing;
Dujarric said
he was not
aware but
would check.
Inner City
Press had
reported that
Mitri, unlike
the other UN
international
staff who
relocated to
Tunis, went
back to his
native
Lebanon.
Sources in the
region
exclusively
told Inner
City Press
that Mitri had
been hoping
for a
government
post in
Lebanon,
describing him
as less than
committed to
remaining with
the UN.
Now we can
report more.
These
knowledgeable
sources say
that Mitri is
being "pushed
out," mostly
they say by
the UK's envoy
to Libya,
former Tony
Blair aide
Jonathan
Powell.
"Mitri was
expected to
take on a
mostly support
function," one
source told
Inner City
Press. "He
stood up and
said no,
headquarters
didn't back
him up and now
he's being
pushed out."
We'll have
more on this.
It was nine
days after
Libya's
foreign
minister
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz at the UN
Security
Council
stakeout told
the Press
his country
wanted
international
help to
protect oil
fields and
ports,
including
airports, that
the US
announced it
had relocated
its Tripoli
embassy staff
out of the
country to
Tunisia.
Inner City
Press asked,
where is UN
envoy to Libya
Tarek Mitri?
He briefed the
Security
Council from
Beirut --
sources tell
Inner City
Press he has
been on
vacation
there, and
this deputy,
too, was out
of the
country.
Back on July
17 when
Libya's
foreign
minister
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz emerged
from the UN
Security
Council to take
questions from
the media,
Inner City
Press asked
him to be more
specific about
what type of
“support”
force he is
asking for.
Mohamed
Abdel
Aziz replied
that the
request is not
for a
“military”
force -- but
then went on
to say say the
force should
protect oil
fields and
ports. If
that's not
military, what
is it?
Inner
City Press
also asked
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz for
Libya's
current
position on
the US
arresting Abu
Khatallah.
Compared to
the complaints
of others,
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz said that
even though
under
international
law it is
unacceptable,
since Libya
can't protect
witnesses,
maybe it is
okay.
Given
the current
state of
affairs, what
is “Libya's”
position?
Meanwhile
on
July 17 the
UN's envoy to
Libya Tarek
Mitri told the
Security
Council -- by
video from his
native
Lebanon, while
other UN
international
staff are in
Tunisia --
that the
fighting has
“cast a shadow
over the
election on 25
June of the
200 member
Council of
Representatives.”
Ya don't say.
Mitri
said
that barely
forty percent
of the 1.5
million
registered
Libyans went
to the polls.
He said 12
seats will
remain vacant;
41 candidates
were
disqualified
under the
post-Gaddafi
Law on
Political and
Administrative
Isolation.
Final results
are supposed
to be
announced on
July 20. Watch
this site.
* * *
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