On
Marie Colvin Default Judgment
Now US But Not UN Comments As
Film Cries Out To Be Seen
Sponsor CPJ Lame on UN
Censorship
By Matthew
Russell Lee, CJR PFT Q&A
NEW YORK CITY,
February 1 – When
the film “A
Private War”
about war
journalist
Marie Colvin
who lost an
eye covering
Sri Lanka, may
she rest is
peace, was
screened near
Lincoln Center
on November 1
Inner City
Press went to
cover it,
review here. Now on
February 1,
this from US
State
Department
deputy
spokesperson
Robert
Palladino:
"The U.S.
District Court
in the
District of
Columbia
determined
that the
Syrian regime
is civilly
liable for the
assassination
of Marie
Colvin.
Marie was
killed in
February of
2012 in Homs
and is one of
the 126
journalists
killed in
Syria since
2011.
The court
found Marie
was
specifically
targeted
because of her
profession,
particularly
for the
purpose of
silencing
those
reporting on
the growing
opposition
movement in
the country,
and that a
breach of
international
law
occurred.
The United
States seeks
to shed light
on abuses
committed by
the Assad
regime,
including the
assassination
of
journalists.
We continue to
advocate
against the
arbitrary
detention of
civilians,
push for
effective
mechanisms to
hold
perpetrators
accountable,
and support
the
documentation
and
investigation
of the Assad
regime's
crimes.
We call on
Russia to
cease
shielding the
regime and to
support
international
efforts for
justice and
accountability."
Of the
film on Colvin,
Inner City
Press wrote
that her
passion came
through,
depicted by Rosamund
Pike,
from capturing
the scene of
selfies with
Gaddafi's
corpse in
Libya to the
end game in
Homs, complete
with a final
word of
caution from
Anderson
Cooper of CNN.
The audience
Q&A was
cut short on
the second
question,
which chided
the director
for showing
Colvin in a
fancy bra and
a PG bathtub
sex scene with
Stanley Tucci.
Afterward
Inner City
Press launched
a Periscope
livestream out
on Broadway,
getting the
thoughts of
CNN's longtime
correspondent
Richard Roth.
Then, more
newsy, CPJ's
Deputy Robert
Mahoney, who
in full
disclosure not
only ignored
Inner City
Press' first
ouster from
the UN in 2016
- after
conferring
with his
compadre Louis
Charbonneau
who lobbied
the UN to oust
the Press then
got it
censored - but
also in 2018.
On this,
Mahoney said
CPJ had not
been able to
determine why
Inner City
Press was
physically
ousted in 2018
and has been
banned 120
days and
counting. Periscope
video here.
He said he
was not aware
that
Guterres
tried to get
Inner City Press
ousted the day
before from
Park East Synogogue,
even though
CPJ entirely
went along
with Guterres'
UNdisclosured
banned list
being used to
exclude
Inner City
Press from a
CPJ event
about Myanmar
in September.
One
might ask: if
a press
freedom group
cannot even
defend a
critical
journalist in
Manhattan from
being roughed
up and
targeted by
the UN to
which CPJ is
accredited,
can they be
trusted? Now
that the
question has
been raised,
on Broadway,
we shall see.
Go see the
film “A
Private War”
-- Marie
Colvin was a
hero. Rest in
Peace. When
the
International
Monetary Fund
held its biweekly
embargoed media
briefing on
November 1,
Inner City
Press asked
four
questions,
including, "On
Saudi Arabia,
what is the
IMF's estimate
of the impact
of l'affaire
Khashoggi on
the country's
economy, as
well as of the
US' call for a
(sequenced)
cessation of
hostilities in
its war on
Yemen?"
IMF
Spokesperson
Gerry Rice,
after reading
out this
"question from
Matthew Lee,"
emphasized
that the IMF
doesn't
do politics.
He said,
however, that
the IMF is
concerned about the
humanitarian
situation in
Yemen and
stands ready
to re-engage
although there
are no
operations
there now due
to the
conflict. On
Khashoggi's murder he
said it is too
early
to estimate how
much it will
impact confidence
in the Kingdom
- it already has -
and, in what
others may
take as news,
he answered
that the impact for
now is modest.
(Inner
City Press also asked
about the
"coup" in Sri
Lanka which
Rice said the
IMF is
monitoring and
remaining in
contact with
its counterparts
on a technical
level - but that's another
story.) The
Saudi kingdom
is still
dodging about
the death of Jamal
Khashoggi. And Czech
President
Miloš Zeman,
who's clung at a personal
adviser to Ye
Jianming,
controlled of
UN bribery
indictee
Patrick Ho
through the
China Energy
Fund
Committee, has
now said, “I
love
journalists,
that’s why I
may organize
a special
banquet for
them this
evening at the
Saudi embassy.”
It's this
Zeman who's
played a role
in Guterres
having China
Energy Fund
Committee
still accredited UN
ECOSOC, while
Guterres has had
Inner City
Press banned since
July 3. On May
17,
Inner City
Press'
reporting that
day, as
before,
included the
non-response
since November
2017 of the UN
Mission the
the Czech
Republic,
which holds
the presidency
of the UN
ECOSOC to
which CEFC
continues to
hold
consultative
status, while
CEFC's Ye
Jianming was
and remains an
adviser to
Czech
President
Zeman. Even as
the Mission in
New York
refused to
answer, on for
example 28
November 2017
and 6 February
2018, Inner
City Press'
reporting has
been picked up
in the Czech
Republic, on
12 January
2018 here,
then on 28 May
2018 here.
On June 4, a
belated
response from
the Czech
Mission to the
UN, published
by Inner City
Press in full
below along
with the
Press' follow
up questions
on June 4,
still not
answered as of
4 pm on June
5. Inner City
Press is also
informed that
Marie
Chatardova has
reached out
with the same
answer to the
Czech Press
Agency; some
say she is
under
consideration
by Zeman to
become the
country's
foreign
minister and
that this
Press question
unresponded to
by the Czech
Mission since
November could
be a problem.
Suddenly on
June 5,
Antonio
Guterres'
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric read
out an answer
(he rushed off
the podium so
follow up
question have
not yet been
possible).
Video here.
Then on June 22 and July
3 Guterres'
Security roughed up
Inner City
Press and have
banned it
since, while
blathering
about freedom
of the
press.
After
belatedly
and conflicted
statements
about
Khashoggi
from
Guterres, who
earlier this year
took a $930
million check
from Saudi
Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman,
now as
speech by
Turkey's
Erdogan, which
over-promised
(the "naked truth") and
under-delivered,
with its
presumption
that the King
is not involved.
It is noted
that Erdogan
has a record 73
journalists in
jail, without
due process like
Guterres'
dis-accreditation
and banned from
the UN list. Others
compromising
connections
are being revealed. Guterres'
Envoy on Youth
Jayathma
Wickramanayake
announced a
partnership
with MBS'
Misk
Foundation,
as recently as
September
26, 2018
(after
school bus bombing)
- and it
remains in
place...
(The IMF's Lagarde,
we note,
canceled on
Davos in the
Desert.) At
the October 10
Press-less UN
noon briefing
at which
Guterres'
spokesman Stephane
Dujarric by choice
had only two
questioners, one retired,
Dujarric
said Guterres
had
not spoken
to the Crown
Prince he took
the money
from. Now as
some banks
pull out of
Davos in the
Desert,
notably two
French banks
both with
operations in
the United
States are
still planning
to go:
Societe
Generale CEO
Frédéric Oudéa
and
BNP Paribas
Chairman Jean
Lemierre;
also a French
arms
manufacturer
Thales CEO
Patrice Caine.
We'll
have more on
this. On
October 15,
with Inner
City Press still
unable to
attend and
ask, included on
Guterres "banned"
list along
with political
activists,
thankfully the
Khashoggi
question was
asked, by Richard Roth: "Now that he's
home, is the
Secretary-General
planning to
meet or has he
met with the
Saudi UN
Ambassador?
What is the
Secretary-General's
comment
regarding
President
Trump's remark
this morning
that the Saudi
King said that
there were
rogue killers,
rogue actors
who were
responsible?
And it might
be nice if the
Secretary-General
stopped after
his Security
Council
appearance
tomorrow
morning
considering
some of the
events that
have happened
while he was
gone.
Just a
suggestion.
Thank you.
Spokesman Dujarric:
I’m always
happy to take
the
suggestions on
board.
You know, I
think the
Secretary-General
was very clear
in the
comments he
made, I think,
to some of
your
colleagues in
Indonesia, is
that he thinks
it's very
important for
the truth to
come
out. Our
understanding
is that,
obviously, the
Turks… Turkish
authorities
are
investigating.
I think we,
like everybody
else, would
like to know
what happened
to Mr. [Jamal]
Khashoggi.
And as the
Secretary-General
said, as we've
said from
here, we've
had… there
have been
contacts
between the UN
and the Saudi
authorities." At
what level? As
Inner City
Press showed,
Guterres
seemingly slept
in
on October
15. It was his
chief of staff
who presented
in the Fifth
Budget
Committee. And
this? On
October
14 from US Senator
Dick Durban,
this:
"Yesterday,
Khalid bin
Salman bin
Abdulaziz Al
Saud, Saudi
Ambassador to
the United
States, called
Durbin
directly from
Riyadh about
Khashoggi’s
disappearance. 'In
my call with
Ambassador bin
Salman, he
admitted to
knowing Mr.
Khashoggi and
even said he
counts him as
a
friend.
However,
Ambassador bin
Salman gave no
credible
explanation
for Mr.
Khashoggi’s
disappearance.
He refused to
comment
directly on
the video
showing Mr.
Khashoggi
entering the
Istanbul
consulate but
not exiting,
would not
respond to
reports of
intelligence
showing a plan
to lure Mr.
Khashoggi back
to Saudi
Arabia, would
not respond to
a request for
a third party
to
investigate,
and gave me no
timetable on
the Saudi’s
investigative
report.
I told
Ambassador bin
Salman that he
should expect
a very
negative
response from
both sides of
the aisle in
Congress if
Mr. Khashoggi
was in fact
kidnapped and
murdered.
And if that is
the case, I do
not believe
the U.S.
should
continue to be
party to
supporting the
Saudis in the
bloodshed in
Yemen -- a
halt that is
long overdue
given the
humanitarian
disaster
resulting from
that
conflict.
This recurring
theme of the
Saudi
government and
royal family
silencing
their critics,
such as the
case with Raif
Badawi and
Waleed
al-Khair,
along with the
fact that they
continue to
turn a blind
eye to the
export of
Wahabbi
extremism
makes it
increasingly
difficult to
accept Saudi
Arabia as
trusted ally
of the United
States.
Since Saudi
arms are being
used to ravage
Yemen and they
are apparently
complicit in
the
disappearance
of Mr.
Khashoggi, I
cannot support
President
Trump’s
proposed arms
sale.
Secretary
Mnuchin should
immediately
cancel his
upcoming trip
to Saudi
Arabia and
after a two
year delay,
the Trump
Administration
should finally
nominate a
U.S.
Ambassador to
Saudi
Arabia.'"
Earlier
Dujarric's
deputy
emailed
this to Inner
City Press: "Regarding
Mr. Khashoggi,
we have said
the following: The
Secretary-General
is very
concerned
about recent
reports of
violence
against
journalists,
including the
most recent
cases - the
reported
disappearance
of Jamal
Khashoggi and
the murder of
Victoria
Marinova in
Bulgaria. Both
publicly and
privately, the
Secretary-General
has often
raised this
issue with
Member States. It’s
also important
to note that
that there’s
also been a
very worrying
increase
increasing
violence,
sexual and
otherwise,
against women
journalists.
The
Secretary-General’s
position is
clear: a free
press is
essential for
peace, justice
and human
rights for
all. He
reiterates his
call on all
governments to
strengthen
press freedom,
including
ensuring that
there is
justice and
accountability
for crimes
committed
against
journalists." This
while
Guterres
himself has
roughed up and
banned the
critical Press - and
is now exposed
as putting it
on his
secret banned
list
that
includes
"political activists."
And so
too the story
about the
Saudi foreign
minister Adel
Ahmed
Al-Jubeir's
speech in
the UN General
Assembly that
Guterres
banned Inner
City Press
from, by his
state media
"UN News
Centre" run by
Alison Smale.
This story
merely
runs lines
from Al-Jubeir such as, "On
the conflict
in Yemen, the
Saudi Minister
said that
Houthi militia
continue to
manufacture
missiles and
carry out
activities
that
destabilize
the region.
Underscoring
the need for a
political
solution to
the crisis,
Minister
Al-Jubeir said
that Saudi
Arabia will
continue to
facilitate all
humanitarian
efforts to
alleviate the
suffering of
the Yemeni
people." This
story does not
mention the
Saudis bombing of
children in a
school bus. One
might think
Smale is just
wasting public
money, as
usual, by reproducing
the flat
coverage of UN
Meetings
Covering. But
it's worse:
the lack of analysis
or presenting
the other side
is selective.
Smale's UN
News Centre's
write
up of the
Myanmar speech
includes a
description of and
link to a
report on the
government's
killings.
Smale also
barred Inner City
Press from attending the
Reuters and
CPJ event on
Myanmar's
jailing of two
journalists, here.
We'll have more
on this - due
to Guterres
and Smale's
lawless censorship
Inner City
Press has had
to cover UNGA
73 from the
streets and is
only now
reviewing
Smale's
shameful
production.
Watch this site.
On
September 25,
after
meeting the Saudi
foreign
minister,
Guterres
gushed, "The
Secretary-General
met with H.E.
Mr. Adel
Al-Jubeir,
Minister of
Foreign
Affairs of the
Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia. The
Secretary-General
and the
Foreign
Minister
discussed
regional
issues of
mutual
interest,
including
Yemen and
Syria. The
Secretary-General
expressed
appreciation
to Saudi
Arabia for its
support to the
ongoing
reconciliation
process in the
Horn of Africa
and United
Nations youth
initiatives."
Not
a word on the
bombing of
school bus. Earlier
on
September 25
the UK Mission
to the UN
closed to the
press - all
press, apparently
- its event on
Addressing
Malnutrition
in Yemen. To his
credit, ICRC's
Peter
Maurer
released his
remarks, here,
including
calling for
"ceasing the
transfer of
weapons if
there is a
clear risk of
violations of
international
law." That
should mean
the host of
the meeting
would stop
such sales - and, as
didn't
happen this week,
incoming UN
Security
Council member
Germany would as
well. We'll
have more on
this. On
September
14 the NRC's
Saleem
Al-Shamiri in
Hodeidah said,
"Stability
within
Hodeidah is
becoming worse
and fear about
what might
happen
continuing to
increase.
Those
remaining in
Hodeidah know
they could
lose
everything,
including
their lives,
but for many,
it is not a
simple
decision to
leave. To
leave is to
abandon
everything
people know
and have
worked for,
with no
certainty
about the
future. If
people leave,
they don’t
know where
they will go,
how they will
find shelter,
what they will
eat. Many fled
here already
and the war
followed.
They’re tired
of running. One
of our
colleagues
here is
expecting her
baby any day.
These are
terrifying
circumstances
for her
delivery. She
says it is now
too late, too
uncertain and
too expensive
for her family
to leave. No
baby should be
born into a
situation like
this.”
The weekend of
7-9 September
marked one of
the deadliest
in Yemen’s war
so far, with
more than 84
conflict-related
fatalities
reported
within
Hodeidah
health
facilities
alone,
according to
reports
received from
Safer Yemen.
Fighting is
now pressing
in on Hodeidah
city from
several sides,
including
heavy ground
clashes and
sustained
aerial
bombardments.
Civilians in
Hodeidah
reported
airstrikes in
close
proximity to
the city’s
southern and
eastern
borders,
including up
to fifty
strikes on the
city fringes
on Wednesday
alone.
Houses, farms,
a flour mill
and a soft
drink factory
were among
civilian
buildings hit
by airstrikes
across
Hodeidah
governorates
over the last
fortnight.
We are highly
concerned
about the
security of
the Hodeidah
Port complex,
including
milling
facilities
housing enough
to feed 3.5
million Yemeni
people.
Aid agencies
in Yemen have
identified
close to
500,000 people
that had fled
homes in
Hodeidah
between June
and August. So
far in
September,
55,000 people
have been
displaced from
across the
governorate,
leaving more
than half a
million at
heightened
risk of hunger
and exposure
to diseases,
including
cholera.
ECHO reports
that the
number of
suspected
cholera cases
in Yemen has
now increased
for the
12thweek in a
row, to 9,245
suspected
cases. This
number adds to
more that
133,000 cases
of suspected
cholera
through 2018
thus far.
By 13
September,
seven vessels
were berthed
at Hodeidah
port, carrying
a 79,000
metric tons of
food and over
30,000 metric
tons of
critically-needed
gas oil. An
additional
three vessels
are queued to
deliver food
and fuel in
the coming
days. Food and
fuel
deliveries
through
Yemen’s Red
Sea Ports have
held steady
since June but
any disruption
or threat to
the safety of
shipments
could strangle
the Yemeni
economy and
impact access
to food for
more than 20
million
people." Inner
City Press, which
previously
at the UN
Security
Council
stakeout asked US
Ambassador
Nikki Haley
questions
about Jeffrey
Feltman and Cameroon
has now been
banned from
the UN for 70
days and
counting and
so asks like this,
on September
11.
We'll have more on
this. On
September 10 the new
UN High
Commissioner
for Human Rights
Michelle Bachelet
has had this to
say on Yemen
in her
opening speech: "Regarding
Yemen, I urge
all parties to
take stock of
the gravity of
the findings
of the Group
of Eminent
Experts. They
have
identified a
number of
individuals
who may be
responsible
for
international
crimes, and
that
confidential
list is now in
the Office. It
is crucial
that there be
continued
international
and
independent
investigations
into all
allegations of
violations of
international
humanitarian
law and war
crimes –
particularly
in light of
the apparent
inability of
the parties to
the conflict
to carry out
impartial
investigations.
Last month's
shocking
strike on a
bus carrying
schoolchildren
was followed
by another
horrific
series of
airstrikes
which left
dozens of
civilians and
children
killed and
injured in Al
Hudaydah. I
note the
recent
statement by
the Coalition
acknowledging
mistakes over
the airstrike
on the school
bus in Sa’ada,
and I will be
closely
following what
steps are
taken to hold
the
perpetrators
accountable
and provide
remedy and
compensation
to the
victims. There
should be
greater
transparency
over the
coalition’s
rules of
engagement and
the measures
taken to
ensure that
such tragedies
are not
repeated. The
recent Saudi
royal order
which appears
to provide a
blanket pardon
to members of
the Saudi
armed forces
for actions
taken in Yemen
is very
concerning." So
why has
Guterres done
a favor to
Saudi Arabia
putting it on
the "good child
killer"
list? We'll
have more on
this, and on
Bachelet's
response
(or not) to
the evidence
provided to
her on and
since her
first day
about shameful
censorship
of the Press
at and by the UN
Secretariat as
it pursues
the UN's role in
Yemen,
deferring to the
Saudis and
their armers.
And on this: On
September 8
Guterres' envoy
Martin
Griffiths
lavished
praise on the
government /
Hadi
delegation he
spent three
days with
in Geneva, in
a press
conference
featuring
qestions cut
off by the UN
and
from which though
in Geneva
Inner City
Press was banned
from by New
York-based,
Moscow
junketing Alison
Smale for
Guterres, soon
to be Lisbon
bound. After
Griffiths,
Hadi's Foreign Minister
Khaled Al
Yahami took
over the UN room to
denounce coup
plotters
and deny that
Sudan and Egypt
wouldn't open
their air
space. What
about the
injured
being able to
get to Oman?
Griffiths,
vetted by the Saudis before Guterres
gave him the
post
ostensibly for
the Brits,
wouldn't say.
He said every
action has a
repurcussion.
We'll
have more on
this. On
September 7,
with
the UN declining
to answer
basic
questions from
banned Inner
City Press
including
"September
6-3: On Yemen,
what is the
SG's response
to that the
Yemeni
government is
considering
not extending
the UN teams’
missions in
the country
after they
have proven
their bias,
Yemen’s human
rights
minister
Mohamed Askar
said on
Thursday,"
this from NRC
protection
and advocacy
adviser in
Yemen Suze
van Meegen: “This
week was due
to mark a
turning point
in Yemen’s
conflict as
parties
convened in
Geneva to
chart a way
forward.
Instead, we
have passed
another week
full of
violence and
devoid of
promise. While
parties to the
conflict
continue to
operate on the
basis of
differences,
Yemenis are
united in
their
experience of
violence,
deprivation
and grief.
Yemenis I met
this week all
tell me that
they are
losing hope in
the
possibility of
any solution
to the current
situation.
They are
exhausted,
People are
reaching their
tipping
point.”
The situation
in Hodeidah
city remains
exceptionally
fragile. Heavy
fighting is
currently
taking place
at the city’s
western and
southern
outskirts,
closer than at
any other
point since
the offensive
on Hodeidah
commenced in
June,
including
around
Hodeidah
airport, on
the city’s
southern
border.
Airstrikes and
helicopter
attacks have
been reported
across several
districts
south of
Hodeidah city,
and missiles
launched from
Yemen at
targets in
both Saudi
Arabia and the
Red Sea.
Reports
indicate that
jets have been
hovering over
Hodeidah city
for up to 16
hours a day.
Citizens in
Hodeidah
described
increasingly
militarised
conditions
inside the
city this
week, with an
increasing
number of
checkpoints,
trenches and
jersey
barriers
installed
across the
city. Most
residents stay
inside their
houses to try
to protect
themselves.
Tension in and
around the
city continues
to keep
prevent tens
of thousands
of city
residents from
returning.
People
remaining in
Hodeidah
report that
more than half
of all
businesses,
shops and
services have
closed,
including
whole blocks
of shopfronts
locked up
following the
departure from
the city of
owner-operators.
A shopkeeper
selling fabric
and clothing
told NRC staff
that he had
not sold a
single item
since the
second week of
August.... On
September 4, with
the UN declining
to answer
basic
questions from
banned Inner
City Press
about the previous,
non-Saudi
approved UN
envoy, this:
"UN Special
Envoy For
Yemen Affirms
Commitment To
Southern
Participation
In The
Political
Process: Amman,
4 September
2018 - Since I
assumed my
role as
Special Envoy
in March this
year, I have
consistently
affirmed that
there will be
no peace in
Yemen if we do
not listen to
a broad
cross-spectrum
of Yemeni
voices,
including
southern
groups, and
make sure that
they are
included in
the efforts to
reach a
sustainable
political
settlement. In
the past few
months, I have
consulted with
numerous
southern
groups to
reach a
consensus on
their
meaningful
participation
in the
political
process. I
have been
encouraged by
their openness
to dialogue
and to a
peaceful
resolution for
their
concerns. I
remain
committed to
reaching a
consensus with
them on their
participation
in the
political
process, and
look forward
to continuing
our
discussions in
the coming
weeks. I
urge all
Yemeni
stakeholders
to work
together to
create a
conducive
environment
for
negotiations
to end the war
and for the
stabilization
of the economy
and delivery
of basic
services to
the Yemeni
people."
We'll
see.
***
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