By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, May
20 -- After
fighting in
Kidal in
northern Mali,
former
colonial power
France
convened a UN
Security
Council
meeting on May
20. Together
on a big
screen from
Bamako, UN
envoy Bert
Koenders and
Mali's foreign
minister
spoke, the
latter urging
the Council to
denounce the
MNLA as the
sole
aggressors,
calling them
narco-terrorists.
Mali's
minister
showed the
Security
Council
photographs on
a tablet and
urged the
Council to
condemn only
one aggressor.
The aspiration
for
independence
for Azawad has
not gone away,
and it is
entirely
unclear if the
intervention
has made the
government in
Bamako under
Ibrahim
Boubacar Keita
more or LESS
likely to
address the
concerns of
those in
Kidal.
Neither
Koenders nor
it seems
France at the
UN has
followed even
the
International
Monetary Fund
in questioning
Ibrahim
Boubacar
Keita's
purchase of a
new Boeing 737
jet for $40
million. So
what did the
UN
peacekeeping
mission, Bert
Koenders and
Herve Ladous,
know and when
did they know
it?
As Inner City
Press reported
last week,
despite not
having
required
Security
Council
approval,
Ladsous has
been
soliciting
drones or
"unarmed
unmanned
aerial
vehicles" for
Mali. Inner
City Press has
twice asked
UN spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric to
explain the
solicitation
without
approval, but
no answer has
been given.
Despite
speeches by
Annick
Girardin, the
French
secretary of
state for
development,
what did
France's
outgoing
ambassador to
the UN Gerard
Araud do or
say about
these issues
during the Security
Council trip
to Mali that
he led?
Actually,
France has
stealthily
lined up to
get paid by
other UN
member states
for "air field
services" in
northern Mali
through a
letter of
assist
regarding
which Araud
refused to
answer Press
questions in
December (then
stopped
answering
Press
questions
altogether).
So as one wag
put it, France
could get paid
to service Air
IBK -- if
IBK ever
visited and
negotiated in
northern Mali.
Back in
January
regarding gang
rape charges
against UN
peacekeepers
in Mali the UN
told Inner
City Press,
"the
Government of
Chad has
further
advised the
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations
that it has
completed the
national
investigation."
On April 9,
Inner City
Press asked
DPKO chief
Herve Ladsous
what
the results of
the completed
investigation
had been, but
he refused to
answer, click
here for that.
And so on
April 23 Inner
City Press put
the question
to the UN's
Mali envoy
Bert Koenders.
More than
three months
after the DPKO
told Inner
City Press the
investigation
was completed,
Koenders said
it will only
be finished in
"two or three
weeks." Video
here, from
Minute 3:39.
Even though by
his account
the
investigation
is not
finished, he
said "we have
found very
little
evidence of
sexual
violence by
Chadian
troups... at
first glance
some of the
accusations
have not bee
proven."
While Koenders
unlike Ladsous
at least
purported to
respond to
this question,
and one about
Dutch attack
helicopters
bound for
Mali, there is
a lack of
clarity.
Beyond the
"completed"
investigation
by Chad, is
there another,
UN
investigation?
Are there
preliminary
findings based
on which
Koenders said
what he did?
As with the
rapes in
Minova in the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo by
DPKO's
partners in
the Congolese
Army, we will
continue to
pursue this
issue.
Inner City
Press also
asked about
the five Dutch
helicopter's
Mali's foreign
minister
Abdulaye Diop
had told it
about earlier
in the
morning.
Koenders said,
"We welcome
contribution
of Dutch
government,"
specifying
three Apache
attack
helicopters in
May, and two
transport
helicopters in
September or
October.
Koenders cited
all
information
fusion, being
the ears and
eyes on
extremist
groups.
Earlier, Inner
City Press
asked Foreign
Minister Diop
if such
information
will be shared
with his
government, or
only within
MINUSMA and
its troop
contributing
countries.
Diop said he
didn't know.
So this, too,
will require
clarification
As an aside,
later on April
23 the UN's
envoy to
Somalia
Nicholas Kay
complained of
the lack of
helicopters
from the
AMISOM
mission. It
left one
wondering
about how the
UN is run: did
the
Netherlands
give the
copters to
Mali because
one of its
nationals is
the UN's envoy
there? We hope
to have more
on this.
On April 23
when Inner
City Press
asked Malian
foreign
minister Diop
for an update
on dialogue in
Kidal, and on
the stated
investigation
of the
shooting of
civilian
demonstrators
there, he
replied that
he is too new
in the
position to
answer on the
probe. He said
there is a new
chief
negotiator for
the armed
groups and
what he
called, in a
Nixonian
phrase, the
"silent
majority."
Where did the
last ten weeks
go?