UN
Ging Felt No
Vilification
in S. Sudan,
Arms Echo, No
Access in Blue
Nile
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, March
25 --
Returning from
South Sudan
and Darfur
John Ging,
the Operations
Director of
the UN Office
for the
Coordination
of
Humanitarian
Affairs and
his
Emergencies
colleague
Yasmin Haque
spoke
movingly of
the need to
reduce the
number of
checkpoints on
aid
convoys in
South Sudan.
Inner
City Press
asked Ging if
this increased
checking
wasn't a
result of
what even the
UN has said
was a mistake,
the trucking
rather than
flying of
weapons to the
Ghanian
peacekeepers
in Bentiu.
Ging
acknowledged
that this was
the
government's
rationale for
the checks
but said, "We
do not accept
it."
Time
did not permit
but there is
an obvious
follow up
question: if
the UN
wants to put
the
arms-shipment
scandal behind
it, shouldn't
it be
more
transparent?
It has said
its probe is
finished, but
no written
report has
been made
public.
UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous,
speaking to
the Security
Council on
March 19,
chose instead
to complain
of a
"vilification
of the
UN" including
in "media
articles."
Inner
City Press
asked Ging and
Haque if they
had witnessed
such
vilification
during their
trip to South
Sudan. No,
Ging said,
this
was not
directed at
the UN's
humanitarian
side. So it's
either
limited to UN
Peacekeeping
of Ladsous and
Hilde Johnson,
or Ladsous
has a lower
threshold of
getting angry
at media
coverage.
At
the third
question,
Inner City
Press on
behalf of the
Free
UN
Coalition for
Access
thanked Ging
for doing
Q&A when
he comes back
from trips,
and expressed
hope that this
becomes a
trend or
expectation. Ladsous
refuses to
answer Press
questions,
video
here - but
even
Jeff Feltman,
back today
from Ukraine,
is said not to
plan any press
availability.
Why not?
The
first question
was given to
Pamela Falk of
CBS as head of
the old UN
Correspondents
Association,
which rather
than push for
example for
Ladsous to
have to answer
has in fact come to his
defense,
grilling
Inner City
Press about an
article about
Ladsous until
Inner City
Press quit
UNCA (and
co-founded
FUNCA).
Now,
will Falk with
this automatic
first question
get a story
about South
Sudan onto
CBS? If not,
and even
leaving aside
UNCA becoming
the UN's
Censorship
Alliance, how
is this
automatic
first question
justified?
Having been
given the
first
question, she
left the
briefing room
while others
were still
waiting to
ask. There wa
a
scheduled
stakeout by
the UN's
Lebanon envoy
Plumbley,
which Inner
City Press and
others
interested had
to miss.
UNmiss.
Inner
City Press
also asked
Ging about
Southern
Kordofan and
Blue Nile; he
said the UN
still has no
access to
opposition
held areas. He
cited
Jebel Marra in
Darfur.
Ladsous,
in Pakistan,
was quoted
that the
UNAMID mission
in Darfur will
shrink.
Inner
City Press
asked UN
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq
about it and
was
told that if
Pakistan's
number of
troops goes
does,
something will
be
said. But that
wasn't the
question. And
while Ladsous
was reportedly
seeking women
police and
peacekeepers
in Pakistan,
when
a woman who
served in
UNAMID in
Darfur was
disciplined
for it, UN
Peacekeeping
has no
comment, and
has it seemed
done nothing.
UNmiss.
The
briefing ended
with Ms Haque
saying that
more important
than "donor
fatigue" is
the fatigue of
children
without food
in South
Sudan.
Now that, is
true. Watch
this site.