UN
Waffles on "Apparent
Deliberate
Downing of a
Civilian
Aircraft”
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
July 18 -- In
the UN
Security
Council just
after 10 am on
July 18
Jeffrey
Feltman,
former a US
official now
UN political
affairs chief,
read-out a
four page
briefing.
Feltman said
“the UN has at
this point no
independent
verification
of the
circumstances
regarding the
tragic crash.”
But, he added,
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon
“strongly
condemns this
apparently
deliberate
downing of a
civilian
aircraft.”
This gave rise
to a question:
is Feltman or
Ban Ki-moon
saying the
shooters-down
of the MH17
plane KNEW it
was a civilian
aircraft?
Inner City
Press went to
the day's UN
noon briefing
and asked UN
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq. Video here and embedded below.
Haq said that
he doesn't
speak for
Feltman --
strange --
then read from
Ban Ki-moon's
statement.
Inner City
Press asked
why while Ban
had planned to
speak with
Poroshenko on
July 18, it
would now by
July 19. Haq
cited
logistics, and
said there was
still hope for
July 18.
On the Dutch
Ambassador's
request for UN
assistance in
returning
victims'
remains to the
Netherlands,
Haq said he
was aware of
the request,
but not of any
UN response.
Feltman
recited that
“on July 13,
the Ministry
of Foreign
Affairs of the
Russian
Federation
issued a
statement
noting that
one Russian
national died
and two were
seriously
injured when a
Ukrainian army
shell hit a
residential
house. Ukraine
has rejected
this claim.”
The news, such
as there was,
in Feltman's
briefing was
that Ban has
asked him to
travel to Kyiv
and Moscow. Is
he viewed as
impartial? At
this point,
perhaps the UN
thinks, does
it matter?
Earlier
on July 18 the
Security
issued a Press
Statement;
here is the
text, now as
sent out by
the Rwandan
presidency of
the Council,
still not (as
of 10:42 am)
by the UN
Spokesperson's
Office:
"The
members of the
Security
Council
expressed
their deepest
sympathies and
condolences to
the families
of the
victims, and
to the people
and
Governments of
all those
killed in the
crash in
Eastern
Ukraine on 17
July of
Malaysia
Airlines
Flight MH17
from Amsterdam
to Kuala
Lumpur.
The
members of the
Security
Council called
for a full,
thorough and
independent
international
investigation
into the
incident in
accordance
with the
international
civil aviation
guidelines and
for
appropriate
accountability.
The
members of the
Security
Council
further
stressed the
need for all
parties to
grant
immediate
access by
investigators
to the crash
site to
determine the
cause of the
incident"
Meanwhile
earlier on
July 18 tthe
Syrian
Coalition
rebels put out
a press
release that
they should be
given
"advanced
weapons."
Here is what
the Syrian
Coalition,
until recently
headed by
Saudi backed
Ahmad Al Jarba
and now headed
by Saudi
backed Hadi Al
Bahra, said:
“Louay
Safi,
spokesman for
the Syrian
Coalition,
said earlier
that the
connection
between the
Assad regime
and ISIS has
never been so
intimately
interwound as
it is today
with the
progress being
made by regime
forces near
Aleppo and
that of ISIS
in Deir Ezzor.
These
advancement
have not been
interrupted by
a single clash
between regime
forces and
ISIS, which
proves the
existence of
full
coordination
between them.”
Safi
attributes the
setbacks
suffered by
Syrian rebels
to the
reluctance of
the friends of
Syria group to
provide the
rebels with
the advanced
weapons that
can tip the
balance on the
ground.”
What
about, “in the
air”? The
Syrian
Coalition
continues:
“Furthermore,
Safi
agrees with
the former
U.S.
ambassador to
Syria Robert
Ford, who
blames the
rise of
extremist
groups in
Syria on the
Obama
administration’s
hesitation to
support the
moderate
opposition
forces. The
military
situation is
very critical,
as regime
forces are
about to laid
siege on
Aleppo. But
even if
Assad’s forces
recapture
Aleppo, the
crisis will
not be over.
(Source:
Syrian
Coalition)”
So,
what of the US
announced plan
for $500
million to
“vetted”
Syrian rebels?
Also
on Syria, on
July 14 when
the UN
Security
Council
adopted a
resolution on
humanitarian
access to
Syria, its
Operative
Paragraph 11
said the
Council
“affirms that
it will take
further
measures in
the event of
non-compliance
with this
resolution or
resolution
2139 (2014) by
any Syrian
party.”
Afterward,
Australia's
Permanent
Representative
to the UN Gary
Quilan
emphasized at
the media
stakeout that
resolutions
are binding,
that the
Council had
affirmed that
it will take
measures if
not complied
with by the
parties. Video
here, from
Minute 2:10
Inner
City Press
sought to ask
a question
about a
statement
inside the
Security
Council by
Russia's
Vitaly
Churkin, and
Quinlan agreed
to take the
question.
Inner City
Press asked
Quinlan to
respond to
Churkin saying
that the
resolution
“doesn't plan
for
automatism” in
sanctions or
the use of
force, that
any such steps
would require
the specific
consideration
of the
Security
Council and
“convincing
evidence.”
Video of
Churkin's
statement here,
from Minute
25.
Quinlan
replied
that what
Churkin said
was correct,
then said that
while there
would have to
be a further
decision by
the Security
Council about
what measures
to take, the
decision that
some measures
would be taken
has already
been made. Video
here from
Minute 18.
Readers
can
draw their own
conclusion how
meaningful it
is to claim
that a
decision to
definitely act
has been made,
if another
vote including
veto powers is
required.
Footnote:
Asking
this question
was not easy.
The first
question was
given to Voice
of America;
the second
taken by the
whip of the UN
Correspondents
Association's
president,
sometimes
writing for
the Huffington
Post. She then
tried to keep
the UN
Television
boom
microphone
operator for
giving the
microphone to
Inner City
Press -- even
as Ambassador
Quinlan said,
“Matthew...
what
Ambassador
Churkin said
was correct.”
This UNCA,
becoming the UN's
Censorship
Alliance,
seems to
believe it can
block
questions (as
well as having
tried to get
Inner City
Press thrown
out after its
reporting
about Sri
Lanka, here).
The new (and
resulting) Free UN Coalition for Access opposes
this.
To
come full
circle,
acknowledging
deft diplomacy
by Australia
and its
co-leads
Jordan and
Luxembourg on
this
resolution, it
is sometimes
hard not to
note the
contradiction
of Australia
returning
asylum seekers
from Sri Lanka
after only
“reviewing”
their claims
on a ship.
Inner City
Press has
asked
Ambassador
Quinlan about
this, and we
hope to have a
story on the
topic soon.
Watch this
site.
* * *
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Press at UN
Click
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