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UNITED
NATIONS, June 26 --
Amid
UN sexual
harassment,
cover up and
retaliation
charges,
UNAIDS
director
Michel Sidibe
is campaigning
to stave off
mounting calls
on UN
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres and
others for
Sidibe to go.
On June 26 the
call included
a planned
protest in
Geneva at the
entrance of
the World
Health
Organization
headquarters
as UNAIDS
officials and
members arrive
for three days
of Program
Coordinating
Board meetings
at WHO
headquarters.
On June 26,
Inner City
Press asked
Guterres'
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric who
dodged and
then cut off
the folow up.
UN transcript here:
Inner City
Press: There's
been a protest
in Geneva at
the beginning
of a… of a
UNAIDS [Joint
United Nations
Program
against
HIV/AIDS]
meeting with
donors, and
the protests
very clearly
say that they
want Michel
Sidibé to step
down or to be
removed, and
they point to
sexual
harassment,
cover-up,
retaliation.
And I'm just
wondering, has
the… has the
Secretary-General's
thinking, as
he's seen
these protests
go global, has
his thinking
evolved at all
in whether
UNAIDS
appropriately
dealt with the
Luiz Loures
situation?
Spokesman:
Look, there is
an
investigation
that was
reopened at
the request of
UNAIDS that is
being done by
the World
Health
Organization
(WHO).
That needs to
play out, and
the
Secretary-General
fully supports
Mr. Sidibé.
Inner City
Press:
The victim in
that case…
Spokesman:
I'll come back
to you.
I will come
back to
you.
Yes, sir?"
Really. The
day before
statements
were made
by
Martina
Brostrom,
Terri Ford,
AHF Chief of
Global
Advocacy and
Policy, and
former UNFPA
consultant
Prashanti
Tiwari, of
whom Inner
City Press has
repeatedly
asked and
reporting, and
for whom
Guterres has
refused to
lift the
immunity of
Diego
Palacios.
“Every other
person at the
UN became my
prosecutor,
attacking me
and my
integrity,
when I came
forward about
being
assaulted –
this is the
fate of women
who raise
their voices,
while those
who engage in
this
despicable
behavior don’t
face any
consequences,”
she said.
Meanwhile
in New
York Antonio
Guterres
canceled his
already long
delayed June
26 press
conference,
four days
after
Guterres'
security
ousted from
the UN Inner
City Press,
during an
event at which
Guterres
bragged about
his record
with women, video
here,
story here, new
petition here.
But
while Guterres
has cancelled
his question
and answer
press
conference, he
is still
slated on June
26 to cavort
with
handpicked
correspondents
at 6 pm on the
UN's North
Lawn.
Guterres'
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq
refused to
answer
questions from
Inner City
Press about
the somehow closed
event, not in
the UN Media
Alert and for
which timely
RSVPs have not
been responded
to. Relatedly,
Sidibe's and
Guterres'
campaign
include a
recent long
Voice of
America story
which did not
even mention
the scandals,
here.
This is a
trend in the
UN system,
from UNESCO to
the IAEA. UN
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres says
he has a "zero
tolerance"
policy for
sexual
harassment,
and for
retaliation. But
when Inner
City Press
asked
Guterres' deputy
spokesman Farhan
Haq on March
15 about
Michel
Sidibé's reported
threats of retaliatory
investigations
against those
making
and offering
support to sexual
harassment
complaints at
UNAIDS, Haq said
this is entire
a matter for
UNAIDS. Earlier
Inner City
Press story here; exclusive
publication of
whistleblowers'
international
condemnation
of retaliation
and favoritism
in Sidibe's
UNAIDS, below.
Now on June 13
somehow Voice
of America
writes a long
story about
UNAIDS,
quoting
Sidibe,
without even
mentioning the
calls for him
to resign, the
sexual harassment
scandal at
UNAIDS, Luiz
Loures, nothing. The VOA
story is here.
Was not
mentioning the
obvious news a
condition of
the
interview?
Is this
the type of
pro-UN correspondence
the UN rewards
and partnerswith?
We'll
have more on
this. Back
on June
2 it is
reported that
the head of
UNAIDS' board,
Danny Graymore
of the UK, has
said or
admitted that
the agency has "no
appetite"
to pursue
claims of
sexual
harassment.
This is the
case with
Guterres' UN
more widely,
from UNESCO to the IAEA. There should
be
resignations.
For now
this week
Penny
Mordaunt, the
international
development
secretary, should
grill the UNAIDS
board as to
why it was not
going further
and publicly
pushing for a
direct and
truly
independent
probe into
Martina Brostrom’s
and others'
claims. Where
is Matthew
Rycroft on this?
UN scribes
promote his
presence in
New York -
but what is his
position and
action? He
who said the
election as SG
of Antonio
"Cover Up"
Guterres was
the high
point of
his tenure
at the UN? Where
is his
successor
Karen Pierce on
this? Watch
this site. On May 10
after yet more
calls for
Sidibe to be gone
from UNAIDS,
Inner City
Press again
asked
Guterres'
spokesman
Stephane Dujarric,
who repeated
praise for
Sidibe, on gender
equity in
hiring. From
the UN transcript:
Inner City
Press: I'll
bet that
you've seen 23
prominent
activists on
sexual
harassment
have asked
that Mr.
Michel Sidibé
be removed of
his powers at
UNAIDS, and
they describe
having
met…
tried to meet
with him,
receiving what
they've
considered by
this Erasmus
Morah, who's
the head of
UNAIDS in
Nigeria, as
sort of what
they
considered an
offensive
request to a
f… as a fair
lady to
protect
Michel.
And I'm just
wondering,
you've said a
number of
times from
this podium
that the
Secretary-General
fully supports
Michel Sidibé
and what he's
done at
UNAIDS.
Is this…
does this
remain the
case?
Does he
support what
these 23
activists are
describing as
essentially a
sexist
campaign to…
to rally
around Michel
Sidibé and…
and what's his
response given
all that
you've said
about…
Spokesman:
Look, civil
society can
and should
express
themselves
freely in
whatever
positions they
want to,
whatever they
want to
do.
Like, I'm sure
there are
people who… I
mean, we've
seen people
calling for
civil society
activists on
different
sides of this
issue
concerning Mr.
Sidibé.
What the
Secretary-General
feels is that
Michel Sidibé
has done a
very good job
at UNAIDS,
especially, in
fact, on
issues of
gender, and he
fully supports
him." The
next day May
11 Inner City
Press asked
Guterres'
deputy
spokesman
Farhan Haq
some more,
including
about OIOS.
From the UN's
May 11 transcript:
Inner City
Press: Beyond
the reopening
and… and
whatever… you
know, OIOS's
reinvestigation
of the Loures
case, there
was the widely
reported
speech by Mr.
Sidibé to
staff, saying
Mr. Loures is
a great man
and those of
you who come
out against
him will be
investigated.
This was
reported in
The Guardian
with direct
quotes, and I
guess, I
think… I
wanted to ask
you, totally
outside… is
OIOS looking
at threats of
retaliation
attributed to
Mr. Sidibé by
many
participants
in that
meeting in an
article
published in
The Guardian,
and what is…
Mr. [António]
Guterres as
the head of
the system,
does he
believe that
was a speech
that's
consistent
with the
non-retaliation
principles
that he
espouses?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Well, it's up
to OIOS to
determine.
The Office of
Internal
Oversight
Services
determines
what they'll
look
into.
I'll leave
that matter in
their
hands.
Regarding the
ability of
people to
speak out
obviously, the
Secretary-General
believes that
all staff of
all the UN
bodies have
the right to
speak out if
they feel that
there has been
any sort of
wrongdoing,
and that they
shouldn't feel
silenced or
impeded in any
way.
Inner
City Press:
But, if the
Secretary-General
is sort of… if
you've just
said that
he'll… he's…
obviously will
defer to the
OIOS's
findings, does
he understand
what the scope
of the review
is? Is
the review of
the… of the…
the abuse
alleged by Mr.
Loures, or is
it of a speech
after Mr.
Loures was
cleared by Mr.
Sidibé to
staff?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Ultimately,
like I said,
it's up to the
Office of
Internal
Oversight
Services
itself to
determine what
avenues it
wishes to
pursue.
We'll provide
information
about the
investigation
once addition
once it's
completed.
...
Inner City
Press: I
guess it's
just a request
to have Heidi
Mendoza, I
don't think,
has done a
press
conference
since she's
been head of
OIOS, and
previous heads
of OIOS have
done this, so
could you
consider this
a request that
she, both on
this this
issue and
generally on
the work of
OIOS, have a
press
conference?
Deputy
Spokesman:
Okay. I
mean, I know
from past
experiences
with past
heads of OIOS,
that they tend
not to comment
on ongoing
cases, but
yes, we can
make a request
for her to do
a
briefing."
On
May 4 the UN
bragged
about a
statement by
its Chief
Executives
Board, which
includes none
other than
Michel Sidibe:
"CEB Statement
on Addressing
Sexual
Harassment
within the
Organizations
of the UN
System - Sexual
harassment
results from a
culture of
discrimination
and privilege,
based on
unequal gender
relations and
power
dynamics. It
has no place
in the United
Nations
system. Leaders
of UN System
organizations
reiterate our
firm
commitment to
uphold a
zero-tolerance
approach to
sexual
harassment; to
strengthen
victim-centred
prevention and
response
efforts; and
to foster a
safe and
inclusive
working
environment."
We'll have
more on this. On
April 30
the
Guardian's
Rebecca
Ratcliffe reports
that "Miriam
Maluwa, who
has worked for
the UN for
more than 25
years, was
placed on
administrative
leave from her
post as
country
director for
UNAids in
Ethiopia on 27
March." On
April 30,
Inner City
Press asked
Guterres'
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
Maluwa and more
about the Luiz
Loures case,
and WFP in
Fiji. Video here.
From the UN transcript:
Inner City Press:
at UNAIDS
[Joint United
Nations
Programme on
HIV/AIDS], one
of the
complainants
against Luiz
Loures has
been suspended
from heading
the Ethiopia
office of
UNAIDS and
told not to go
back into the
office.
Many people
see it as
exactly the
retaliation
that was
promised in
Mr. [Michel]
Sidibé’s
speech to
staff, saying
that he will
investigate
all
accusers.
What does
António
Guterres think
of this
suspension?
Spokesman:
We're aware of
the
issue.
Our
understanding
is that this
is completely
unrelated, but
questions
should be
directed at
UNAIDS.
Inner
City Press:
And
also, just, I
guess, in
terms of the…
the extent of
this problem
within the UN
system, over
the weekend,
it emerged and
I'm wondering
if you can…
will confirm
and have… if
he has
anything to
say on it,
that there are
sexual
harassment
complaints
about… in Fiji
on… at UN
World Food
Programme
(WFP).
And have the
staff been
suspended?
And does the
Secretary-General
believe that,
in such cases,
staff should
be
suspended?
And what's the
timeline for
an
investigation?
Spokesman:
My
understanding
is that WFP's
fully aware
and is
starting the
procedures.
I think WFP,
under the
leadership of
the new
Executive
Director, has
been extremely
forward-leaning
on these
issues.
They will
handle them
according to
procedures.
I'm not going
to get into
detail,
because I'm
not aware of
the details in
the
investigation.
Inner
City Press:
But
is there a
UN-wide policy
under António
Guterres of
suspending…
suspending
pending
investigation…?
Spokesman:
I think each
case… I think
cases
vary.
One of the
things that
we're looking
at the CEB is,
obviously,
some
harmonization
and
understanding
across the
system.
But,
obviously,
each…
especially
when it comes
to specialized
agencies have
their own
governing body
and their own
rules and
regulations...
Inner
City Press:
just
one more on
UNAIDS, and
then I have
some other
stuff, but I'm
sure you've
seen that…
that Ms.
[Cristina]
Brostrom, the…
the alleged
victim in the
Luiz Loures
case has
written to say
that she
entirely
rejects the
re-opening and
has no
confidence in
it. I'm
just
wondering, is
there a UN
response?
She's also
said…
Spokesman:
Well, I think…
go ahead.
Inner
City Press:
No, no.
She's said
that a
toothless UN
investigation
could impact
her ability to
pursue the
case outside
of the system,
so she act… is
actively
requesting
that this not
take place and
views it as a
cover-up.
What's your
response?
Spokesman:
Well, I think
my response is
in what I just
read, which is
— and I'll
read it again
— that the
complainant
called for an
investigation
to be
conducted by
an external
independent
investigation
entity outside
of the
UN. The
General
Assembly, as
you know, has
mandated OIOS
to have
operational
independence
to conduct
investigations.
OIOS has been
requested to
conduct it and
re-open the
investigation
by WHO.
They've agreed
to do
so. I
think we are
all hoping
that… we all
want to see
what comes out
of this
re-opened
investigation."
The UN is
failing.
On
April
16, mid growing
requests for
Sidibe to
resign, Inner
City Press
asked
Guterres' led
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, who
reiterated
Guterres has
full
confidence in
Sidibe. So much for
zero
tolerance.
Video here,
UN transcript
here:
Inner
City
Press: I
wanted to ask
you about
UNAIDS.
As I'm sure
you've seen, a
number of… a
number of
groups have
asked for an
investigation,
but the AIDS
Healthcare
Foundation,
which does
work on AIDS
in 39
countries, has
reportedly
written to
António
Guterres
asking that
Mr. [Michel]
Sidibé step
down in light
of his alleged
retaliation
against staff,
in light of a
staff member
having, in
2015, told him
that Luiz
Loures was a
sexual
predator.
And I'm
wondering,
what does the
Secretary-General
think now
that… that…
basically, it
doesn't seem
that Mr.
Sidibé is
going to
self-resign.
What does he
make of… of a
member of
the…?
Spokesman:
I think it’s
always
important to
hear from our
partners.
Mr. Sidibé
continues to
have the
confidence of
the
Secretary-General.
Inner
City Press:
And… and the
investigation
[inaudible] of
Luiz Loures
meets António
Guterres'
standards of
zero
tolerance…?
Spokesman:
I think we've
spoken about
the
investigation."
On
March 29
when
Inner City
Press
audibly asked
Guterres, if
he had even
yet spoken to
Sidibe,
Guterres did
not answer.
Vine video here.
Present
was Guterres'
Global
Communicator
Alison Smale,
who
orders UN
staff to
"speak with
one voice" -
hers - on
allegations of
sexual harassment.
She has
continued to
restrict Inner
City Press,
declining for
monthes to
even answer
what
the rules are.
Inner
City Press has
been receiving
detailed complaints
about mismanagement
and harassment
in UNAIDS, but
the UN refuses
to answer. So
below
are
some more
of the
complaints.
Tellingly, the
day after
Guterres
refused Inner
City Press'
question
about UNAIDS,
here
are Loures' victims
speaking publicly,
in their own
names:
Martina
Brostrom, a
policy advisor
at UNAIDS, said of
Loures at
a conference
in Bangkok,
Thailand in
2015: "I
was pleading
with him, and
I was just
bracing with
all that I
could just to
not leave the
elevator."
Guterres? No
answer -
and no action.
Where is
Guterres on
this? Where is
Guterres?
Malayah
Harper, who
used to run
UNAIDS'
programs in
Uganda and
Kenya, on
Loures
a year
earlier, also
at a hotel: "He
got into the
lift with me,
and then kind
of lunged
forward to --
you could call
it -- kiss me,
but I thought
a kiss had to
be
consensual."
We'll have more on
this, and on retaliation. Some
more of the
complaints
exclusively
published by
Inner City
Press: "Michel
Sidibé
has established
this 'boys
club'
culture where
qualified
women are made
to feel less
worthy, are
openly
ridiculed by
male
colleagues
except those
women who are
providing
favors to him
and his 'boys,' he
continues to
give perks
to his boys
who serve as
his connectors
to presidents,
prime
ministers etc
by appointing
them to
important
positions as
well as even
when they
retired
bridging them
back on
special
assignments
for them to
make easy
money. People
such as Fritz
Lherisson,
Georges Shaw
and more
recently
Abdoul Dieng."
There are the
Mali connections,
beyond
what Inner
City Press
reported about
Burundi on March
23, here:
"Ben
Wahab - A
Malian
recently
appointed as
UNAIDS Country
Director for
Burundi with
no country
level and no
management
experience. He
came in as a
P4 Adviser and
very quickly
in 3 years he
rose to his
present
position of
UNAIDS Country
Director.... Theresa
Poirier, a
Malian
Canadian,
UNAIDS Country
Director for
Malawi .Also a
relatively new
comer to
UNAIDS
appointed by
Michel as
Director in
Mali and now
serving in
Malawi as
UNAIDS Country
Director... Fode
Simanga a
Malian serving
as senior
adviser in
Geneva but
graded at
Director level... Dado
SY Kagnsssy a
Malian before
UNAIDS Country
Director for
Djibouti, very
little
experience,non
articulative
and a fairly
new comer to
UNAIDS who was
appointed to
this position
whilst many
longer serving
staff members
are over
looked and now
posted to
Guinea as
UNAIDS Country
Director.. Amakonde
Sande (moved
from
consultant to
P4 in short
order to
P5 as UNAIDS
Country
Director in
Malawi and
then sent to
Uganda a
D1 position
where she
stayed only
for 3 months
only to be
appointed to
China as
UNAIDS Country
Director... Bridgitte
Quenum
recently
appointed as
UNAIDS Country
Director but
she has no
leadership,
management
experience and
was appointed
over other
more
senior
persons. It is
reputed that
her family
is/was a great
friend of
Michel Sidibe
and that is
how she
entered UNAIDS
and now gained
this
distinguished
position." But
note - not
only has
Antonio
Guterres
bragged
recently that
now at the
UN "we have
some Portuguese
things" - he
also has his
own hiring and
traveling
patterns.
As to
UNAIDS and
Sidibe, there is
talk of mining
business; there
are harassment
complaints
and findings
that Sidibé
refuses to act
on. Of
Girmay Haile,
the current
UNAIDS country
director in
Zimbabwe, whistleblowers
tell Inner
City Press
that a recent
internal
investigation
came
unanimously to
the conclusion
of severe
bullying and
intimidation
just two weeks
ago - but Sidibé
has refused to
move him. This
followed a
previous
investigation
against
Girmay Haile Girmay
HaileGirmay
HaileGirmay
Hailein
Kenya;
Sidibe
refused the
recommendation
of the
internal team
and promoted
him to country
director
Ghana. Girmay
Haile
has reportedly
said
he knows too
much and if he
falls they all
fall. We shall
see.
Back
on March 15 when
Inner City
Press asked
about the UN
Secretariat's
own investigation
of
whistleblowers,
for the second
day in a row,
Haq again
defended it,
as somehow
benefiting
member states.
From the UN transcript:
Inner City
Press: I'm
sure you've
seen the
article in The
Guardian
quoting Michel
Sibidé [sic]
of UNAIDS
[Joint United
Nations
Programme
against
HIV/AIDS].
What I wanted
to ask you is,
he seems to be
attacking
those who came
forward in the
sexual
harassment
case against
Luiz
Loures.
He's attacked
them.
He's said that
Loures is a…
is… made a
courageous
decision.
And, of his
detractors, he
says, we know
these people
are taking
their golden
shan…
handshakes
from us here
and knowing
they have a
job and then
attacking
us. We
know all about
that. We
know every
single
thing.
Time will come
for
everything.
When I hear
anything about
abuse of our
assets, I ask
for an
investigation.
Maybe these
investigations
are going
on. And
so, many staff
and many
people in the…
in the
“#MeToo”
movement see
this as a
direct threat
against those
who came
forward.
And I wonder,
what does
António
Guterres… who
I'm… I… I
would assume
is a reader of
The Guardian,
what does he
think of these
comments?
Deputy
Spokesman:
We're aware of
this
article.
Obviously,
it's for
UNAIDS and
Mr.
Sidibé to
explain what
the comments
attributed to
him are.
At
UNESCO in Paris
there are cover-ups
and retaliation in
the wake of the
two-step firing of
Assistant Director
General Frank La Rue
for sexual
harassment.
But
when Inner City
Press on March 20
asked Guy Berger,
the grandly titled
Director of Freedom
of Expression and
Media Development at
the United Nations
Educational,
Scientific and
Cultural
Organization, if he
thought reporting on
l'affaire La
Rue, which has
included Inner City
Press' exclusive
report that after
his suspension he
was still getting
paid and now
questions about
UNESCO Ethics
Adviser Rebecca
Trott, Berger said
he was unaware of
the specifics of the
case and to ask
UNESCO's press
officer.
Since Inner City
Press published the
video
of the Q&A, it
has heard from
UNESCO staff in New
York that Berger
"lied - he was among
the best friends of
La Rue, defended him
at every turn, while
also trying to take
his job." This is
how the UN works -
work with
collaborators like
Berger's former
student, to cover up
abuse, while seeking
mutual advancement.
It is disgusting. So
too on Rebecca
Trott, UNESCO's
"Ethics" adviser. As
question mount about
cover up, it will be
interesting to know
who is still
protecting her
within the
organization. We'll
have more on this.
Likewise,
after Berger has
spoken and joked
with a former
student (given the
first question)
about the importance
of independent media
and even holding
power in check, when
Inner City Press
asked about the UN's
FAO and WIPO going
after the press, he
said he was unaware
but implied it might
be justified.
When
Inner City Press
asked about the UN
Department of Public
Information's
continuing lack of
content neutral
media access rules,
despite Inner City
Press' repeated
requests to DPI boss
Alison Smale, both
his student and the
UN moderate looked
surprised, as if
they didn't
understand.
OK:
Inner City Press was
evicted from its UN
work space for
pursuing the Ng Lap
Seng UN bribery case
in the UN Press
Briefing Room - an
event of the group
headed by Berger's
student - and has
been a non-resident
correspondent
requiring DPI
“minders” to cover
the UN General
Assembly and its
President. Meanwhile
its office was given
to a no-show
Egyptian state
media, Akhbar al
Yom's Sanaa Youssef,
who has not ask the
UN a question in ten
years.
Media
that rarely come in
and ask anything
have arrived since
Inner City Press'
eviction and have
been given UN office
space. Inner City
Press has been told
it is not even on
the list, and Smale
has not answer a
single email. No
rules. We'll have
more on this
(charade) - and on
UNESCO. Watch this
site.
***
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