Pushing for
Next SG, Helen
Clark Saturday
Night Live
from UN,
Questions
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, June
25 --
Helen Clark
did a Facebook
Live Q&A
on Saturday
evening from
inside the UN
compound,
emphasizing
that it would
be 10 am in
her native New
Zealand. Photo
here.
In the
interview,
which did not
ask any
questions
about for
example the
John Ashe
(RIP) / Ng
Lap Seng UN
corruption
case, or
UN sexual
abuse in the
Central
African
Republic or
cholera in
Haiti, Clark
said she
expects the
Security
Council to
forward only
one name to
the General
Assembly.
So, she
said, viewer
should lobby
their
governments to
tell Security
Council
members that
the name
should be
Clark. She was
asked what
Kiwi food she
misses --
marmite -- and
favorite book,
100 Years of
Solitude. It
did not sound
like she would
make any clear
sweep: she
lavished
praise on one
sitting UN
official; she
did, however,
seem to favor
the UN
beginning to
pay its
interns, so
there's that.
Clark was
asked about
Brexit and
dodged; we've
noted that it
may make a UK
veto of Susana
Malcorra less
likely, here.
Since in
retaliation
for corruption
coverage the
UN of Ban
Ki-moon and
DPI's Cristina
Gallach reduced
Inner City
Press'
accreditation
and evicted
its office,
it could not
access the UN
while Clark
was doing this
interview --
was Media
Accreditation
in on it? Will
the ten (and
perhaps
eleven, if
Kristalina
Georgieva
jumps in)
other
candidates do
similar
broadcasts?
Watch this
site.
Back on June 7
when Susana
Malcorra and
Miroslav
Lajcák came to
the UN to
answer
questions on
June 7 in
their bids to
become the
next UN
Secretary
General, Inner
City Press
asked them
both abut the
UN sexual
abuse and John
Ashe / Ng Lap
Seng bribery
scandal, then
asked General
Assembly
President
Mogens
Lykketoft
about the
process. Periscope
video here
and here.
Lajcák replied
on both
scandals with
the same
phrase: zero
tolerance. He
said that as
Foreign
Minister of
Slovakia he
tells his
staff there
will be no
tolerance for
corruption,
because the
acts of one
can tarnish
all the
others. One
wonders, then,
why even the
individuals
identified in
the UN Office
of Internal
Oversight
Services' Ng
Lap Seng audit
have not been
held
accountable.
Malcorra gave
longer
answers,
perhaps
because she
was at the UN,
as Ban
Ki-moon's
chief of
staff, during
the scandals.
On the Ng Lap
Seng audit,
she argued
that it is
about “holes”
in the PGAs
office.
But the audit
says that the
Secretariat's
DGACM modified
a document to
include the
name of Ng Lap
Seng's
company, and
that the Under
Secretary
General for
Public
Information
failed to do
due diligence
before putting
Ban with Ng's
Global
Sustainability
Foundation in
the GA Lobby,
and allowing
GSF to sponsor
the UN's
slavery
memorial. (The
view of
Malcorra, who
left in
November 2015,
on the USG of
DPI February
19 ouster and
April 16
eviction is
Inner City
Press is one
that we will
be seeking.)
Inner
City Press
asked or told
Malcorra that
Anders
Kompass,
retaliated
against for
“moving
forward” with
the seemingly
covered-up
charges of
sexual abuse
from CAR, had
quit the UN
earlier in the
day citing
impunity.
Malcorra said
she hadn't
heard that he
quit; she gave
a long answer
culminating in
that Kompass
had given the
report to “a
member state
unredacted,”
and saying her
focus is on
the victims.
Inside
the
Trusteeship
Council
Chamber, when
asked about
cholera in
Haiti,
Malcorra
seemed to say
she would have
to wait to be
better
informed in
order to
answer.
Really? We'll
have more on
this.
When Lykketoft
spoke, Inner
City Press
asked about
the call that
there be no
acclamation
rubber-stamp
in the GA. He
spoke of
change inthe
balance of
power between
the GA and the
Security
Council, this
when Inner
City Press
asked what he
thought of the
Security
Council doing
its interviews
behind closed
doors.
On May 26,
Inner City
Press asked UK
Ambassador
Matthew
Rycroft about
the Security
Council
process, on
which the
Council met
late on May
25, agreeing
to interview
the candidates
who so
request, video
here:
Inner City
Press: Are
these
interviews
going to be
conducted in
the open and
what can you
say about the
discussion of
timing and
secret
ballots?
Amb Rycroft:
So the General
Assembly did
something very
useful, in
particular
which was
these public
hearings for
each of the
candidates and
I think that
in the
Security
Council we
need to do
something
which adds
value to the
General
Assembly
hearings. So I
think that
those contact
between each
candidate who
wishes they
have it in the
Security
Council need
to be private
and they need
to be informal
and they need
to be
interactive.
They won't be
in public and
I think that's
important. Of
course we
favor
transparency,
but this is
about
confidentiality
and it's
possible to
have both at
once. We'll be
completely
transparent
about who is
coming in,
when those
meetings are
happening, but
the content of
those meetings
should remain
private,
informal and
interactive.
And on the
timings, I
think we want
to go ahead as
soon as
possible.
Inner
City Press
asked another
Permanent
Representative,
advocate for
transparency
and for the
General
Assembly, who
said this is
better, "makes
the GA the
main game." So
far,
candidates
Vesna Pusic
and Natalia
Gherman have
requested to
meet the
Security
Council.
On May
20 Susana
Malcorra told
Argentine
media that
President
Macri would
nominate her
later in the
day. She
herself was in
China, after
earlier trips
to other P5
capitals.
Sources tell
Inner City
Press of
attempts to
address in
advance the
Malvinas /
Falkland
Islands
issues, to
"put it in the
freezer," as
one source put
it.
Where
does she stand
on freedom of
the press -
generally and
in the UN?
We'll have
more on this,
and on the
positions of
Lajcak, et al.
How
should the
next UN
Secretary
General be
selected, to
improve the
Organization?
First,
how low has
the UN fallen,
in terms of
corruption,
not stopping
rapes, and
retaliating
against the
Press that
asks the
questions? On
April 16, the
UN evicted
Inner City
Press from its
long time UN
office,
putting five
boxes of its
files out on
First Avenue,
video
here. The
New
York Times of
May 14 is here.
On
May 3, Inner
City Press
asked about
the UN
Development
Program's
audit into
the Ng Lap
Seng bribery
the UN
Secretariat
has yet to act
on, and asked
about UNDP's
Helen Clark's
campaign and
travel. UN
transcript:
Inner
City Press:
Helen Clark
has kicked off
a campaign
trip for next
SG, which is
obviously
within her
rights.
But I wanted
to ask you
again, what
are the sort
of… as
the head of
the UN system,
Ban Ki-moon,
what are his
thoughts on
sitting, you
know,
full-time UN
officials…
kicking off a
campaign…
essentially a
political, you
know,
campaigning
for the next
SG site.
Is she taking
days off to do
that? Is
that…
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric:
I think
that's… I
think the
details are
questions for
UNDP. As
far as
Secretary-General's
concerned, he
would expect
that any UN
official who
is in the
running for
next SG will
completely
separate those
activities
from their
professional
work.
Question:
Who's paying
for the
travel?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I think those
details you
should ask
UNDP.
While UNDP
which
presumably
monitors the
UN's noon
briefing has
yet to answer,
New Zealand's
Mission to the
UN did
response, on
Twitter:
"@innercitypress
NZ Govt
covering full
costs of
#Helen4SG
campaign.
Helen is
taking annual
leave for
campaign
activities."
Inner
City Press
thanked and
replied:
"Thanks. Can
you say what
NZ's budget
for @Helen4SG
is, as Bokova,
Kerim &
others have
done? #NextSG"
But to
that, no
answer, at
least not yet.
UNDP has
issued a
denial that
Clark played a
role in
retaliating
against Lena
Sinha for her
role in
Charles
Petrie's
report on the
UN's failures
in Sri Lanka.
The
underlying
report,
perversely,
makes Ban
Ki-moon and
his
Secretariat,
primarily
responsible
for the
failures, into
heroes; Ban's
"envoy" during
2009, Vijay
Nambiar, is
not even
mentioned.
(Inner City
Press did mention Sinha, back
in 2006, here.)
Could
Team Ban and
the Malcorra
loyalists
within be
trying to put
their thumbs
on the scale?
On the other
hand, Inner
City Press
having been a
target takes
UNDP's denials
with more than
a grain of
salt.
But further as
to (Clark's)
UNDP, where in
the promised
press
conference on
the audit?
Shouldn't
Clark take
questions
about
this audit,
under her
tenure?
On
April 13,
Inner City
Press asked
candidate
Vesna Pusic
what she would
do to avoid
corruption;
she said keep
an eye on
everything
coming in and
going out, and
keep the rules
simple.
Inner
City Press
also asked
Danilo Turk if
journalists in
the UN should
have due
process
rights, which
they do not
now (he said
yes) and about
the Haiti
cholera case.
He said he
thought Ban
Ki-moon is
working behind
the scene on
compensating
the victims.
But when Inner
City Press
asked, Ban's
spokesman only
spoke about
trying to
improve
sanitation
going forward.
On April 14,
Inner City
Press asked
Vuk Jeremic
what he would
do to clean up
the ongoing
corruption
shown in the
John Ashe / Ng
Lap Seng case
and the audit
Inner City
Press
exclusively
put online,
here.
Jeremic
replied he
would require
UN officials
to make public
financial
disclosure
(unlike Ban
Ki-moon),
would
strengthen
OIOS (whose Ng
Lap Seng audit
lets Ban off
the hook) and
protect
whistleblowers.
Inner City
Press asked
Jeremic, as it
has asked the
other
candidates, to
disclosure his
campaign's
funding.
Jeremic said
he won't take
money from
countries,
including
Serbia which
nominated him;
he'll
"fundraise"
and disclose
it.
(Luksic told
Inner City
Press he will
disclosure;
Danilo Turk
disclosed in a
tweet his
40,000 Euro
limit).
The UN
of Ban Ki-moon
moved to evict
Inner City
Press, which
is asking the
question. It
happened on
April 16, video here and here
(Periscope);
the New
York Times of
May 14 is here.
On May 10,
Inner City
Press asked UN
General
Assembly
President
Mogens
Lykketoft,
just before
his thematic
debate on
Peace and
Security, what
the General
Assembly is
doing about
peacekeepers'
sexual abuse
and
exploitation,
and about UN
Peacekeeping's
Herve Ladsous
saying it
would take 18
months to
deploy 3,000
troops to
Burundi.
Lykketoft
acknowledged
that 18 months
is too long --
some think
Ladsous
overstated it,
to take the
option off the
table -- and
on sexual
abuse he said
beyond the GA
punishment is
up to the
Troop
Contributing
Countries.
Even
getting to the
stakeout to
ask Lykketoft
this question
was hindered
by Ban
Ki-moon's and
Cristina
Gallach's UN.
Now Inner City
Press can only
access the
Conference
Building's
second floor
with a Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit minder or
escort. But on
May 10 there
was none
available.
Inner
City Press,
needing to
cover the
stakeout,
asked the UN
Spokesperson's
office, which
had just
announced the
stakeout over
the same
public address
system it
announced the
January 29
event in the
UN Press
Briefing Room
for which
Inner City
Press was
thrown out.
But UN
Security said
only MALU
minders can
escort Inner
City Press.
This is called
targeting, and
is UN
censorship.
On
February 19,
Inner City
Press was
thrown out of
the UN on two
hours notice.
Audio
and petition
here. On
February 22
Inner City
Press was told
it was Banned
from all UN
premises.
After three
days reporting
on the UN from
the park in
front of it,
and stories in
BuzzFeed
and Business
Insider,
Inner City
Press
re-entered the
UN on a more
limited
"non-resident
correspondent"
pass, under
which on March
10 UN Security
ordered it to
leave the UN
as it worked
in the UN
lobby at 8 pm.
Video
here; UN
Spokesman Stephane Dujarric's March 11
justification
here.
The
underlying UN
rule only says
that
non-resident
correspondents
can only come
into the UN up
until 7 pm.
But the UN's
goal, it
seems, is to
prevent or
hinder
coverage of UN
corruption,
which usually
doesn't take
place in the
UN Press
Briefing Room.
(January
29, 2016
and September
8, 2011 --
Frank Lorenzo,
UNdisclosed
-- are notably
exceptions.)
Lobbying the
deciding UN
official,
Under
Secretary
General for
Public
Information
Cristina
Gallach, were
the honchos of
the UN
Correspondents
Association,
including
France 24 and,
as in 2012,
Voice of
America.
Freedom of
Information
Act documents
here and here.
The UN needs a
FOIA. But who
would actually
do it? Watch
this site.
* * *
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reports
are
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News and on Lexis-Nexis.
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for Sept 26, 2011 New Yorker on Inner City
Press at UN
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