On
CAR Rapes, UN
Peackeeping
Mission Knew
August 2014 -
Ladsous' Role
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
May 29 --
French
soldiers in
the Central
African
Republic
allegedly
sexually
abused
children, as
exposed in a
UN Office of
the High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights report
leaked to the
French
government by
longtime OHCHR
staffer Anders
Kompass.
The UN did
not, however,
give the
report to the
host country
authorities in
CAR. And
according to UN
documents
-- now on May
29 released in
more detail by
Code Blue
naming Ladsous
directly, here
-- UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous then
urged that the
whistleblower
Kompass be
made to
resign.
The
documents also
implicate a
number of
other UN
officials, and
French
government
inaction. On
July 30, 2014,
Ambassador
Nicolas
Niemtchinow,
Permanent
Representative
of France to
the UN in
Geneva wrote
to
Kompass that
action was
being taken.
But then,
nothing.
On
August 5, 2014
the Human
Rights Officer
in CAR of
OHCHR wrote to
Renner Onana
of the
already-then
UN mission
MINUSCA;
DPKO's SRSG
Babacar Gaye
was
referenced.
So when did
Gaye or
MINUSCA tell
DPKO chief
Ladsous?
We'll have
more on this.
Tellingly,
even the UN's
cover up was
delayed by
High
Commissioner
Prince Zeid
thinking he
heard of
French troops'
sexual abuse
in MINUSMA
(Mali) and not
MINUSCA (CAR).
Zeid
asked his
predecessor
Navi Pillay if
she met with
French
representatives
about rapes in
Mali -- the
answer was no
-- then much
later asked
her if she'd
met with the
French about
CAR (the
answer was
yes.)
It was
Zeid's Deputy
Flavia
Pansieri who
conveyed
Ladsous'
directive to
Kompass to
resign. Zeid
in his
statement
makes much of
Pansieri
meeting with a
Swedish
diplomat in
the street, in
casual
clothes, after
Sweden raised
l'affaire
Kompass at a
dinner in
honor of Ban
Ki-moon's
Deputy Jan
Eliasson. THe
UN's move now
seems to be to
try to lay all
blame on
Pansieri,
whose term was
expiring
anyway. We'll
have more on
this.
"On 12 March
2015 meeting
with the
Deputy High
Commissioner I
was informed
that the High
Commissioner
requested my
resignation
for the way I
dealt with the
reports of
paedophilia in
the Central
African
Republic. I
was told that
the High
Commissioner
had been asked
for my
resignation by
Mr. Ladsous,
Under
Secretary-General
for the
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations in
New York,
during a visit
of the High
Commissioner
to New York."
Inner City
Press: On the
Central
African
Republic,
President
[Catherine]
Samba-Panza is
in Paris, and
she has said
“We regret not
being informed
earlier that
this
investigation
was taking
place”, she
told reporters
after the
meeting with
the
president.
So, I wanted
to know, I…
you… well,
first of all,
is there a UN
response to
that?
Spokesman:
Well, I think,
you know,
obviously, as
I said before,
there is an
internal look
as to how all
these
allegations
were handled
from an
administrative
point of view,
who knew what
and when and
that is being…
what is being
looked at.
Inner City
Press:
Because that
is… that's my
second
question.
I've heard
from people in
OIOS [Office
of Internal
Oversight
Services] that
the terms of
reference of
the
investigation
that you've
repeatedly
referred to
here are
essentially
Mr. [Andres]
Kompass.
There's an
OIOS
investigation
as to why Mr.
Kompass gave
an unredacted
report to the
French.
So, are the
terms of
reference to
which you keep
referring…?
Spokesman:
I've said what
I said.
If I have more
to say, I will
share it with
you
We'll be
waiting.
Follow up
stories in the
New York Times
and on AP
managed to not
mention
Ladsous,
despite
Paragraph 9 of
the UN Dispute
Tribunal
reinstatement
order. On May
26, Inner City
Press asked UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric:
Inner City
Press:
something on
Yemen, but I
wanted to ask
you on that,
to ask you
specifically
on this
because, since
the UN is
mostly saying
that Mr.
[Anders]
Kompass was
suspended
because he
gave the names
of witnesses
and victims to
the French
Government,
the statement
by Ms.
[Flavia]
Pansieri says
that the names
in the report
were fake
ones, and
there was no
risk,
therefore, for
witnesses.
So, this… I
understand
there's an
ongoing
investigation,
but this sort
of goes to the
heart of the
apparent
retaliation
against the
whistle-blower.
So, I'm
wondering, is
there no
reaction to
that?
And she also
says that he
felt that the
mission, the
then-UN
mission in
Bangui,
MINUSCA, would
not take any
action.
And there's a
New York Times
report that
says that the
Mission there
did not tell
"his boss", UN
peacekeeping
here in this
building.
So, there…
outside of the
investigation,
can you get a
clear yes or
no whether the
Mission in
Bangui told
DPKO
[Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations],
i.e., Mr.
[Hervé]
Ladsous, who
then reappears
in the UN
Dispute
Tribunal
trying to get
Kompass fired…
Spokesman:
On your last
point, I think
we've gone
through
this.
You're taking
as fact one
side of papers
that were
submitted.
I think Mr.
Ladsous
clearly denied
the accusation
that he called
for Mr.
Kompass to be
fired.
As I said,
there's an
internal
investigation
which will
look at how
the whole UN
system handled
the issue,
including the
peacekeeping
mission.
The report was
handled
through the
human rights
channel in
Geneva, and I
think it's
important that
all these
reports of
sexual abuse
be handled
properly
through the
right channel,
in order to
protect the
victims and
the witnesses.
Inner City
Press:
But, just one
thing.
If you're
using the OIOS
investigation
as basically
the response
to all of
these
troubling
things that
come out, this
seems to imply
that the OIOS
report, when
finished, will
be public,
that there
will be an
answer to
these
questions at
some point.
Spokesman:
I think very
much… I think
the OIOS
reports are
handled in the
way they are
handled, but
we hope to be
able to share,
obviously,
more
information.
I think we
also, very
importantly,
would want to
learn from the
way this issue
was handled
and to improve
the way we
handle these
kinds of
cases.
Also
otherwise
unreported:
on the
afternoon of
May 18 some in
the UN's Ban
Ki-moon
administration
were summoned
into the Fifth
(Budget)
Committee to
answer
questions,
including
about the
investigation
by the UN
Office of
Internal
Oversight
Services.
Inner
City Press:
...Miranda
Brown in
Geneva, she
was a WIPA
whistleblower,
then she
worked with
Mr. [Anders]
Kompass in the
Office of the
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights.
Anyway, she
was terminated
yesterday,
left service
of the UN, the
day before she
was to be
interviewed by
OIOS [Office
of Internal
Oversight
Services]
about the
Kompass
matter.
So she's put
out a
statement
saying she
believes in
part she was
fired because
she has
witnessed
evidence on
Kompass'
matter.
She says he
shouldn't have
been suspended
because there
are… many
countries have
mandatory
reporting of
paedophilia
charges.
This is what
he she claims
that he
did. And
that the
Government
accountability
project has
asked the
Secretary-General
to reinstate
her given if
he's
interested in
getting to the
bottom of the
Kompass/Central
African
Republic
sexual abuse
allegations.
So I wanted to
know, what is
the response
and what's the
interrelation
between firing
somebody
that's a
witness in
what's said to
be a very
important case
for the UN?
Deputy
Spokesman
Haq: I
wouldn't have
any comments
on the Kompass
case while the
information is
proceeding.
We're going to
allow it to
continue to
proceed.
And I wouldn't
be able to
comment at
that point.
Regarding the
case of… that
you just
mentioned, I
believe
Stéphane
[Dujarric]
commented on
it just about
a week or so
ago. I
don't have
anything to
add to what
Stéphane has
said.
Inner City
Press:
Do you still
expect her to
testify?
I've seen the
request from
OIOS for her
to
speak.
It seems like
if you're
firing her
she's not
going to
speak.
Deputy
Spokesman:
I would hope
and expect if
the Office for
Internal
Oversight
Services needs
some of this
information
for their
investigation
that it will
be provided to
them.
But once
terminated,
there is no
immunity.
We'll have
more on this.
Back on May 21
Inner City
Press asked
Haq:
Inner
City Pres: I'd
asked Gordon
Brown about
the alleged
sexual abuse
in Central
African
Republic, and
he said
there's a
report.
So I wanted to
ask you
something.
Become aware
that the
OIOS's [Office
of Internal
Oversight
Services]
director
Michael
Stefanovic has
informed the
Secretary-General
that he's
recusing
himself from
the
investigation.
A number of
Member States
have questions
on this that
they raised to
Ms. [Carman]
Lapointe, and
I think that
her response
was, "Ask the
Secretary-General."
So I'd like to
know, can you
confirm that
the director
of OIOS, Mr.
Stefanovic,
has recused
himself?
And can you
say why he
recused
himself?
Some say he —
well, I'd just
rather get
your reasoning
for it.
And some say
it makes the
reporting —
how does it
impact the
report that
apparently was
what Mr. Brown
was referring
to as the UN's
response to
these events?
Deputy
Spokesman
Haq: I
believe Mr.
Brown was also
referring to
the fact that
this is being
investigated,
the actual
allegations —
the substance
of the
allegations is
being
investigated
by the French
authorities.
That's where
the
investigation
into the
alleged crimes
is taking
place.
What this
investigation
is about is
about the
handling of
documents, as
you're
aware.
And I wouldn't
be able to
comment on the
[Office] of
Internal
Oversight
Services'
review of this
and its own
investigation
until that
process has
concluded.
So at this
stage, that
process is
continuing,
and we'll have
to wait for
that process
to be ended.
Since the UN
won't answer
this basic
question,
Inner City
Press now
reports more.
Absent from
the UN Fifth
(Budget)
Committee's
May 18 meeting
was not only
embattled
Peacekeeping
chief
Ladsous,, but
also OIOS'
Carman
Lapointe.
In
her stead for
OIOS was
Michael
Stefanovic,
who told the
Fifth
Committee that
he has recused
himself from
the
investigation
and has
written to
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon as to
why.
This is highly
irregular. If
the recusal
was made on a
personal
connection
between
Stefanovic and
the
whistleblower
Anders
Kompass,
Stefanovic
would have
recused
himself from
the earlier
investigation
- but he
didn't. If it
were such a
recusal, he
would have
written to
Lapointe, and
not to the
S-G.
For now we add
this -- if
OIOS Director
Stefanovic has
a conflict of
interest, how
can the UN be
asking others
to rely on an
OIOS
investigation?
Inner City
Press has
asked a
Permanent
Member of the
Security
Council -- not
France -- if
an OIOS
investigation
would be
sufficient,
and has been
told "No."
Now
we have this,
from the Fifth
Committee's
May 20
meeting:
Lapointe,
summoned to
the meeting
via her
Byun-kun Min,
was asked
-When
did OIOS/ID
start the
investigation
into Anders
Kompass?
-Why
did Mr.
Stefanovic
recuse himself
from the
Kompass
investigation?
-In
view of Mr.
Stefanovic
recusing
himself, did
Ms. Lapointe
see any
impediments
for the scope
of the
investigation,
especially as
it appeared to
implicate an
ASG or USG in
misconduct?
Note - this is
a reference to
UN
Peacekeeping
USG Ladsous.
Multiple
sources tell
Inner City
Press Lapointe
replied that
Stefanovic
told only the
Secretary
General, not
her, that he
recused
himself, and
that the
Deputy
Director of
OIOS in Vienna
is now
"overseeing"
the
investigation.
So
those now on
the case are
James Finniss,
Kanja and
Margaret
Gichanga --
who has been
asking to
interview WIPO
whistleblower
Miranda Brown,
who worked
alongside
Kompass for a
time. We'll
have more on
this. It is a
new low for
the UN.
Back
on May 18,
Inner City
Press, staking
out the Budget
Committee
meeting, spoke
with Ban's
chief of staff
Susana
Malcorra when
she left the
meeting. Here
is a
transcript,
followed by an
exclusive
summary of
what happened
inside the
closed
meeting.
Inner
City Press:
How did it go
in there? Are
their
questions
answered?
CdC
Malcorra: Well
I hope, yes.
Some of them
still have
questions that
will be
answered by my
colleague. I
think I’ve
made a point
of what it is
that we’re
discussing
here. This
investigation
is a UN
investigation.
It was led by
the UN in the
field when
they had
allegations
handed to
them. It was
the human
rights cell in
the mission
that led this
investigation.
It looks like
we were
absent, but it
was us...
And
this
investigation
could, at
least prima
facie, there
were places
clear enough
to further
investigate by
the member
state. And as
such, the
information
was provided
to a member
state. On a
separate
front, is how
the
information is
provided. And
we cannot
accept the
irresponsibility
of the names
of the
victims, the
witnesses and
the
investigators
shared with
the member
states ...
it’s
inacceptable.
It may look
like a
bureaucratic
approach. It’s
not a
bureaucratic
approach...
Inner
City Press:
What about not
telling
Central
African
Republic
authorities?
CdC
Malcora: They
are discussing
that now.
After the
meeting ended,
and Inner City
Press spoke
with numerous
attendees - a
common refrain
was that the
UN leadership
is "in denial"
- we have
pieced
together this
summary of the
meeting, and
the totally
insufficient
answer on UN
Peacekeeping
chief Ladsous'
role, a lack
of recognition
of his UNAMID
mission's
previous cover
up of rapes in
Tabit in
Darfur, which
the US and UK
and other say
they care
about, and
lack of follow
up on
whistleblowers.
Attendees'
summary of Ban
Ki-moon chief
of staff
Malcorra:
"Malcorra
said she had
no idea the
session would
go into the
specifics of
CAR, she
thought it was
to touch upon
general Sexual
Abuse and
Exploitation
policy
(several
attendees were
dubious and
angry about
this
approach.)
Malcorra said
that in the
case of
misconduct by
UN staff the
procedures
were in place.
In this case,
even when it
was not UN
peacekeepers
the human
rights cell in
Bangui was
there and they
were the ones
that initiated
the
investigation.
It is thanks
to the UN that
allegations
were
substantiated
and it was
enough to
decide to
proceed with a
further
investigation.
The wrongdoing
of the UN
staffer Anders
Kompass was to
have shared
the
information
without it
being redacted
putting the
victims,
witnesses and
investigators
lives in
danger. She
repeated many
times this was
a serious
breach and
that she
disagreed with
anyone that
didn’t view
this conduct
wrong.
According to
Malcorra the
UN
investigation
lasted three
months which
allowed them
to
substantiate
the
allegations.
When that
finding was
final it went
to the two
lines of
command: The
head of
mission in CAR
and the
OHCHR.
But, several
asked, why
didn't either
of these tell
the CAR
authorities?
Malcorra
said she would
have preferred
this case
hadn't
surfaced in
the media and
that it is
regrettable
member states
have had to
learn matters
from the
press. But
that, Malcorra
said, member
states have to
be aware that
the press
manipulates
everything.
Several states
talked about
the UN image
and
credibility to
which Malcorra
said she was
very sad with
those comments
because if not
for the UN
these troops
could have
gotten away
with these
disturbing
acts. She also
said this was
a clear case
of damned if
you do damned
if you don’t.
But what about
the cover up?
What about
Ladsous?
Malcorra said
that “no other
element had
been taken
into account”
for Kompass'
firing. But
member states
were aware of
Paragraph 9 of
the UN Dispute
Tribunal
ruling
reinstating
Kompass. As
noted, one
Permanent
Representatives
(and several
other
diplomats)
told Inner
City Press
that Ladsous
should resign.
Tellingly, the
sources say,
Malcorra
claimed didn’t
recall any
UNAMID coverup
allegations.
Tabit?
Malcorra
didn’t even
address the
Otis report on
whistleblowers
- which Inner
City Press has
been asking
Ban's
spokesman
about,
repeatedly --
but assured
member states
that due
protections
are in place
and that an
adequate
policy exists.
Malcorra said
she looks
forward to
working
further on the
UN convention
in paragraph
57 of the SG
report on SEA
and agrees
that there are
systemic
flaws, and
therefore
there will be
a review of
all the
processes.
According to
sources in the
meeting --
Inner City
Press asked
and was told
to inquiry
with member
states --
the
Legal Counsel
and head of
OLA qualified
as excellent
the
cooperation
with the
French
Authorities
and that the
lifting of
immunity so
far hasn’t
been necessary
because at
this stage its
very general
requests of
information
that the UN
promptly has
given to the
French
authorities.
For the sake
of efficiency
hasn’t gone
through the
lifting of
immunity
process but if
a trial or
judge becomes
involved they
will do it
quickly at a
later stage.
Several member
states were
dubious. The
EU, Inner City
ress is
informed, said
“accountability
starts at the
top.”
Malcorra
left
unanswered why
the host
state, the
CAR, was not
involved. She
is said to
have ignored
the specific
question on
the status of
the OIOS
investigation.
She ignored
the complaints
about
under-reporting
saying that
the trend of
decrease was
very clear and
that the USG
of DFS would
go into
details (what
he did,
genially, was
repeat the
Secretary
General's
report).
An impartial
investigation
was called
for, from both
sides of the
Atlantic and
elsewhere.
There was a
refrain
afterward:
Ladsous should
resign."
A well-placed
African
Permanent
Representative
before the
meeting told
Inner City
Press before
the meeting
that Ladsous
should resign.
But with him
conveniently
absent, would
others be left
holding the
bag, trying to
explain why
he, Ladsous,
appears in the
UN Dispute
Tribunal
ruling as
urging that
the
whistleblower
resign?
Back on May 8,
Inner City
Press asked US
Ambassador
Samantha Power
about both
issues - the
UN's failure
to tell the
CAR
authorities,
and Ladsous'
"surprising"
role, as High
Commissioner
Zeid put it
earlier in the
day. Video
here and
embedded
below. Then
Inner City
Press asked
the UN
Spokesman,
Stephane
Dujarric,
about the
contradiction;
for the first
time, he gave
a timeline.
From the UN
transcript:
Inner
City Press:
Iwant to ask
you about
these alleged
rapes in the
Central
African
Republic.
Prince Zeid
[Ra’ad
al-Hussein]
held a press
conference
today.
Just as an
aside, I would
have liked to
have seen it
announced from
here on this
very
topic.
And he said…
he was asked
directly about
what I've been
asking you
about, the
statement in
the UN Dispute
Tribunal
ruling that
the
Under-Secretary-General
of
Peacekeeping
asked the
whistle-blower
to
resign.
And it was
said, and this
is why I want
to ask you,
because I know
you said you
don't agree
with it, but
this was a
statement that
was not
contested at
the time by
the
respondent.
So, this means
that the UN…
the people
involved saw
the claim and
didn't have
any problem
with it.
I'm not saying
that that
means it's
true.
When you say
you don't
agree with it,
is that a
personal
position or a
UN position?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I don't think
I said I
didn't agree
with it.
I said you're
taking it as
fact.
It's his
position.
Inner City
Press:
Which the UN
didn't
disagree with.
Spokesman:
I'm just
saying it's
his position.
Inner City
Press:
My question on
this is, he
said he'd like
to say more,
but would say
it to some
forthcoming,
apparently,
investigative
commission.
Ambassador
[Samantha]
Power at the
stakeout said
the same
thing, that
all of this
needs to be
looked at
independently.
So, what's the
status of
that? Is
the
Secretariat
having any
role in that?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
There's
obviously the
OIOS [Office
of Internal
Oversight
Services]
inquiry going
on into Mr.
[Andres]
Kompass and
into
everything
related to
that.
You know, I
think the aim
right now is
to ensure
accountability
for the
victims of
these alleged
rapes and
horrendous
abuse [that]
these young
children
suffered at
the hands the
soldiers.
That's… that
should be
everyone's
aim.
Obviously,
there will
come a time I
think when we
will need to
take a look at
how this issue
was handled,
but I will
also add that
there is
obviously an
internal
investigation
through OIOS
and looking at
Mr.
Kompass.
At this point,
I don't have
anything to
add.
Inner City
Press:
The other
thing…
something you
said yesterday
was about
this, there
was no harm to
the French
investigation
by not lifting
immunity
because they
were written
questions that
were
answered.
There's an
article in Le
Monde today
that says
that, yeah,
written
answers were
provided seven
months after
the questions
were proffered
and was
provided on 29
April, which
just happened
to be the date
on which the
exposé was
first
published.
I'm wondering…
you can read
Le
Monde. I
can read it to
you.
But, that's
what they are
saying,
basically.
Spokesman:
You know, I
think that
there are
different
timelines
going on
here.
The prosecutor
in Paris has
his own
timeline.
What I can
tell you is
that on 10
October, the
Permanent
Mission of
France of the
UN sent a note
verbale to the
Secretary-General,
to the Office
of Legal
Counsel with a
request from
the… from a
French
judicial
authority, a
vice-prosecutor,
confirming
they had a
hard copy of
the report,
which
obviously had
gone from Mr.
Kompass,
requesting for
us to waive
the immunity
of the
investigator,
the OHCHR
[Office of the
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights]
investigator,
who authored
the report and
allowed him to
be
interviewed.
Following
consultations
internally,
which
obviously
involve the
Mission in the
Central
African
Republic,
which involved
OLA [Office of
Legal
Affairs],
which involved
UNICEF, which
involved the
Office of High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights, we
wrote back,
saying that we
will fully
cooperate,
that we are
offering to
send them a
copy of the
redacted
report.
And again,
here, I can't
stress enough
the importance
of shielding
the identities
of the
victims.
I mean, there
are a number
of countries
in Europe, for
example, where
it is illegal
to share the
names of rape
victims or of
minors who
have gone
under child
abuse, so I
think that the
issue of
protecting the
names of the
witnesses and
those who have
been abused is
primary.
We also told
them that the
chief
investigator
was right now
serving in a
post in Chile
and will
provide
responses in
writing to any
questions put
forward by
French
investigators.
We stressed
that this
cooperation
was done on a
voluntary
basis without
any prejudice
to the issues
of privileges
and immunity.
That was a
letter that we
wrote to the
French
authorities on
5
November.
On 6 February
of 2015, we
received a
letter from
the French
mission
transmitting,
obviously,
documents that
had gone from
their own
judicial
authorities,
the written
questionnaire
and which was
for the
investigator
and
reiterating
the request to
lift the
investigator's…
the
investigator's
immunity.
That was on 6
February.
On 30 March,
we reiterated
our full
cooperation to
the
French.
We provided
them with a
copy of the
redacted
report.
We transmitted
to them the
copies of her…
the questions
and answers,
with the
answers
provided by
the
investigator.
We confirmed,
yet again,
that there was
no need to
lift immunity
because this
cooperation
would be done
on a voluntary
basis without
any prejudice
to the
investigation…
to our
immunities.
I think it
serves to
remind people…
you know, the
issue of
immunity, I
think, is one
that is not
always fully
grasped by
those that
don't cover
the UN on a
regular
basis.
The UN lifts
the immunities
of its staff
members in a
number of
cases when
they need to
testify in
front of
judges, in
front of
courts.
We do
that.
The immunity
is not there
to stand in
the way of
justice being
served.
At this point,
if there's no
need to lift
the immunity,
it's not
lifted.
If there is a
need to lift
the immunity
to provide
testimony
before a judge
or a court in
a legal
proceeding, it
is
studied.
It is very
often done.
So, I think
we're looking
at different
timelines.
I think
different
bureaucracies
have different
timelines.
I've given you
ours.
The prosecutor
clearly has
his or her
own; I don't
know the
gender of the
prosecutor.
That's where
we are.
Inner City
Press:
Just one
follow-up.
I appreciate
that.
This will be
the… there's
one date you
didn't mention
there, which
is 12 March
2015, in which
the
whistle-blower
was summoned
in and told to
resign.
He said and
was
uncontested by
High
Commissioner
of the Office
of Human
Rights at the
request of the
Under-Secretary-General
of
Peacekeeping.
So, my
question is,
what was the
problem… I
understand
everything
about
protecting
witnesses.
If the
information
presumably is
provided to
prosecutors,
like there are
rules against
it, but it's
not illegal
for one
investigative
authority to
share the
information
that could
bring about a
prosecution
with that
prosecuting
authorities;
what's the
problem with
that?
Spokesman:
I think,
again, on Mr.
[Hervé]
Ladsous, I
think he spoke
to it… he
spoke to it at
the
stakeout.
I've said what
I've had to
say about Mr.
Kompass's
allegations.
I think the
High
Commissioner
spoke at
length and
eloquently
this morning,
so I have
nothing to
add. I
think it is
vital for the
work of the
human rights
organs of this
Organization
that, when
people give us
testimony with
the
understanding
that it will
be kept
confidential,
that it is in
fact kept
confidential.
I think the
High
Commissioner
said clearly
that the
investigative
responsibility,
the criminal
investigative
responsibility,
is in this
case with the
French
soldiers with
the French
authorities.
It is with
national
authorities.
The human
rights
mechanisms in
this
organization
conduct a lot
of commissions
of
inquiry.
We have ones
going on on
Syria, on the
[Democratic
People’s
Republic of
Korea], to
name just
two.
People give us
testimonies
with the
understanding
that we will
be… we will
guarantee that
this… their
names will be
kept
confidential.
I think that
is exactly the
issue here, is
that when
people give us
testimony with
the
understanding
that it be
kept
confidential,
we have a
responsibility
to keep that
confidential.
The handling
of Mr.
Kompass' case
administratively,
what was said,
what was done
is being
reviewed
internally.
Here
is the video
of Inner City
Press
questions to
US Ambassador
Power:
Inner
City Press:
One issue that
has arisen
that may not
even need to
wait for an
investigation
is that the
Central
African
Republic says
that they were
never told of
this, and
given that
these were
their
citizens, I
wonder if
you—does the
U.S. think
that when the
UN system
becomes aware
of charges
such as these,
that the host
country should
be told?
There’s also
this issue, in
the UN Dispute
Tribunal
ruling, that
the Under
Secretary
General of
Peacekeeping
was reported,
and the UN
didn’t seem to
dispute it, to
have said that
the
whistleblower
should resign
or be
suspended. And
I wonder, this
seems like a
pretty serious
charge. What
do you think
of that? Do
you think that
that is
appropriate?
What do you
think of the
treatment of
the
whistleblower
who brought it
to light?
Ambassador
Power: "I
think, on a
lot of these
issues, we’re
all going to
be better off
if we allow an
impartial
investigation
to take hold.
And, I think,
you raise a
really, really
important
issue about
host country
involvement,
and we’d want
to, again, get
the facts on
that.
Certainly, it
is the case
that the host
country
itself, of
course, has
the sovereign
responsibility
for the
protection of
its citizens,
and so,
looking at
what role
Central
African
Republic
authorities
played or
didn’t play
has to be part
of this.
"And then, in
terms of the
individual who
disclosed the
allegations,
who worked for
the Office of
the High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights, again,
it’s extremely
important that
any individual
who comes into
possession of
allegations of
this gravity
acts swiftly.
It is also
extremely
important that
victim and
witness safety
be a very
significant, a
primary
consideration
as well. And
so again, the
impartial
investigation
will look at
the handling
and how both
the issue of
speed and the
issue of
victim and
witness
protection—how
those issues
were handled."
It is an
answer that
may move
things
forward.
Ladsous, it
should be
noted, just
this week
snubbed a Joe
Biden-linked
Hemispheric
peacekeeping
conference in
Uruguay,
wasting an
$8,000 first
class plane
ticket and
angering many
troop
contributing
countries. He
refuses to
answer Press
question, for
example on
rapes in
Minova, DRC
and Tabit in
Darfur.
As noted, on
May 8, High
Commissioner
Zeid held a
press
conference,
and twice
refused to
comment on why
Ladsous was
said to have
pressured to
fire or
suspend the
whistleblower.
Inner City
Press has
covered
Ladsous' role
from the
beginning, and
highlighted
his appearance
in Paragraph 9
of the UN
Dispute
Tribunal
ruling
reinstating
Kompass. On
May 7, Ladsous
told Inner
City Press, "I
deny that" -
then refused
to take
questions.
Zeid
was asked, and
first time
said he should
first give his
view of the
pressure to
the
investigator,
not the media.
The
second time,
he said he was
surprised to
read it -- his
Office did not
contest that
part of the
ruling,
effectively
admitting it
-- and that
the head of UN
Peacekeeping
should not
have been
intervening
about a non-UN
force. Video here.
Neither
he nor the
questioners in
the room in
Geneva said
the obvious:
Ladsous is a
longtime
French
diplomat; it
is not rocket
science to
read Paragraph
9 as him
(inappropriately)
still working
for "his"
country.
Zeid
said other
things we'll
report later;
he alluded to
the need for a
Commission of
Inquiry. Some
ask, will
Ladsous quit
before then?
Or after?
Early on May
8, UN system
staff
complained to
Inner City
Press that UN
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights Prince
Zeid of
Jordan, in a
closed staff
meeting on May
8, tried to
downplay the
scandal, going
so far as to
blame imams in
Bangui for not
playing their
role.
But it was
OHCHR which
didn't even
give the
report of the
rape of CAR
children to
CAR
authorities,
only to the
French.
In places,
Zeid appeared
to try to use
his record ten
years ago on
sexual abuse
to shift the
blame to
imams.
Inner City
Press has
shown a
failure by his
Office to act
on past
leaking, to
Morocco. We'll
have more on
this.
On May 7,
Inner City
Press asked
more questions
about this -
including to
Herve Ladsous
himself.
After a long
closed-door
consultation
meeting of the
Security
Council,
Ladsous
emerged. Inner
City Press
asked him,
based on
Paragraph 9 of
the UNDT
ruling, Why
did you ask
Kompass to
resign?"