UN Ocean Conference
Ends on River Balcony, Guterres
On Junket, New Envoy in the
Works?
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Photos
here
UNITED NATIONS,
June 9 – As the UN's week-long
Ocean Conference finally ended
on the evening of June 9 with
a reception on the Delegates
Lounge balcony over the river,
complete with a Fiji band, the
Colonel and Ambassadors
galore, including Dominica's
Italian Deputy Ambassador
Paolo Zampolli, the question
arose where this is all going.
In terms of the Ocean, perhaps
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres will create a new
Special Representative
position on Ocean, and perhaps
Fiji will fill it. Periscope
video here
and here.
Guterres himself wasn't
present, on a week-long junket
to Central America. Numerous
attendees marvels, Where are
the promised reforms? Or is it
just more of the same? During
the week-long conference there
were few answers on fisheries
subsidies and the substance of
Marine Protected Areas.
Throughout the week Inner City
Press, often as the only media
in the UN Press Briefing Room
or the only one asking questions,
pursued the issue with
ministers from Indonesia, Palau
and the Maldives, and UN
agencies which claimed not to
know of widely reported scams
right in their host countries.
At the end, Inner City Press
asked the accessible President
of the General Assembly Peter
Thomson of the push for the
creation of a new job, Special
Representative of the
Secretary General for Ocean,
and he seemed to acknowledge
it. Photos
here. Inner City Press
and the Free
UN Coalition for Access complained
how money was spent on
exhibits in the UN lobby and
then the public banned for the
whole week. This is today's
UN. On June 7 when Monaco's
Prince Albert II held a press
conference at the UN, Marine
Protected Areas were mentioned
and Inner City Press went to
ask him about the MPAs which
offer little to no protection,
see below. But as it turned
out at the press conference,
the questions were given to a
group which the Prince gives
money to - this was not
disclosed - and the questions
not surprisingly were
softballs, repeated requests
to defend the Paris Accord and
sing the praises of the
Prince's relatives and diving.
To this has the UN descended:
faux press conferences by
royals, with the fact that
those called on for questions
are fundees not disclosed. To
those the Prince - or his
subjects - funds, an embargoed
copy of his self-promotion was
provided (a disgusted member
of the group provided it to
Inner City Press). The group,
as the Prince should know,
operates to get thrown out of
the UN investigative Press.
There was giggling, and some
embarrassing wire service
pick-ups, when the Prince "got
naughty" and ostensibly stood
up to power. At the end no
question about Marine
Protected Areas was permitted.
There was applause, and the
question, We'll see you
tonight, won't we? There will
be more faux prizes. To this
has the UN descended. When
the Montreal-based
Executive Secretary of the
Convention on Biological
Diversity Cristiana Pasca
Palmer held a press conference
at the UN on June 5 about
Marine Protected Areas, Inner
City Press as the only media
to ask a question raised
criticism about Canada's
proposed Laurentian Channel
Marine Protected Area. It was
shrunken to avoid key fishing
grounds, it allowed oil and
gas exploration. But Palmer,
and the first expert they
referred to, weren't aware of
it. Another more voluable
responder from the back of the
room said maybe oil and gas
exploration weren't bad, or
the purpose of the Marine
Protected Area. Apparently
not. But shouldn't UN agencies
be aware of such controversies
in their host countries? As
the Ocean Conference started
at the UN there were corporate
exhibits including a large one
by Suez Environmental, a firm
much protested for its role in
water privatization. Inner
City Press asked the UN
Department of Public
Information, which is
sponsoring press conference
complete with corporate
moderators asking softball
questions to supermarket
chains, who in the UN is
vetting these corporate
commitments. You'll have to
wait until the end of the
week, was the answer. But the
corporations are already
getting blue washed in the UN
website and hallways, just as
UN Secretary General Antonio
Guterres reflexively offered
praise to Citigroup last week,
while his Global Compact
covered up for a company
exploiting the natural
resources of Western Sahara.
Meanwhile another topic Inner
City Press started asking
about last week, fisheries
subsidies, will not be acted
on in the Ocean Conference but
rather, if at all, in the
World Trade Organization at
the end of the year. We'll
have more on this.
***
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
Past
(and future?) UN Office: S-303, UN, NY 10017 USA
For now: Box 20047,
Dag Hammarskjold Station NY NY 10017
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other,
earlier Inner City Press are listed here, and some are available in
the ProQuest service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright
2006-2017 Inner City Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
for
|