At
UN
on Cote D'Ivoire, Russia Remains Firm, Sends Note Taker, Test
for Rice?
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 8, updated -- On Cote
d'Ivoire, after Security Council
president Susan Rice and Russian Deputy Permanent Representative
Konstantin Dolgov debated for five hours on Tuesday, on Wednesday
Russia sent a much lower ranked official to the Council's
consultations, described as a Second Secretary.
“The Russians
don't have any new instructions,” Inner City Press was told by the
Ambassador of a Permanent Five member, whose Mission gushed angrily
that “the African members are begging Russia to agree, if Gbagbo
doesn't leave there could be violence.”
Whether
a belated
Press Statement by the UN Security Council would be the determinant
in Laurent “le Boulanger” Gbagbo leaving is dubious. But Russia's
unmoved position is noteworthy.
Recently
China
was similarly unmovable on North Korea, stating upfront that it would
not agree to the word “condemn” in any statement about the
shelling of the Korean island. But, a Western diplomat compared, at
least China saved everybody's time. “Dolgov liked to debate,” the
diplomat said. “And Susan Rice took the bait.”
Lavrov & Hillary Clinton, Russian note taker not shown
Across
First
Avenue in the US Mission on Tuesday, State Department spokesman PJ
Crowley bragged to foreign correspondents about what the US was
accomplishing in the Security Council about Cote d'Ivoire. But what
is being accomplished? Watch this site.
Footnotes:
Inner
City Press has also learned that Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
took part in an emergency meeting with the UN Deparment of Safety &
Security on December 4 about UNOIC and his close ally, Choi
Young-jin. The range of telephone calls Ban may have made to buttress
Choi's position is not yet known.
Also,
the US
Mission has still not answer questions put to it last week and on
Tuesday about murder and bombings in Sudan, including a call by the
SPLM for a Security Council investigation...
Update
of
12:53 p.m. -- the Russian diplomat characterized by her Western
Security Council counterparties as a “note taker” is in fact an
“expert,” for example on Guinea-Bissau. At Wednesday's noon
briefing, Inner City Press asked UN Secretariat spokesman Martin
Nesirky if the lack of any correction below Council President Rice's
final statement in Tuesday's open meeting meant that the Secretariat
had denied Russia's request. Ask the Americans, Nesirky again said,
then after being pressed added that he will see if Security Council
Affairs has any more to say. Watch this site.
* * *
At
UN,
US' Rice Accuses Russia of Quibbling on Cote d'Ivoire,
Claims Neutrality
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December
7 -- US Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice on Tuesday
accused Russia of “quibbling with resolutions” on Cote d'Ivoire
which it had voted for, and responded to Russia's demand for a
“correction” of her statement that the presence in the Security
Council of diplomats selected by Laurent Gbagbo did not “endorse or
refute the results of the election” which the Electoral Commission
and UN envoy Y.J. Choi say Gbagbo lost.
Russian
Deputy
Permanent Representative Konstantin Dolgov earlier told Inner City
Press that Rice had not been authorized by his country, and therefore
not by the Council, to speak on the legitimacy of the Cote d'Ivoire
diplomats in the Council, characterizing Rice's as a political and
not a legal statement.
Inner
City
Press
asked Rice to respond, as she entered the Council for continued
consultation on Cote d'Ivoire and the recent ECOWAS statement (and
decision to suspend Cote d'Ivoire from the group.) Rice first said,
“You heard from Russia, they can speak for themselves.” After
being Pressed, Rice continued that “What I said was completely
neutral and non judgmental.
“It was to
preserve the neutrality of the Council,” she said, “so it wasn't
construed one way or the other as endorsing or refuting the elections
results.. simply to keep us clean on that point.”
Of
Dolgov, Rice
said “He is free to object in his national capacity and make a
point of order. No one else did. I think it was a plain statement of
what is right.”
Susan Rice previously on Darfur, Russian correction not shown
Thought:
It
was
an indirect and procedural way of asserting the position that
Laurent Gbagbo is no longer the legitimate head of state of Cote
d'Ivoire. One can understand why Russia would object -- calling it a
"political rather than a legal statement" -- while
understanding why Rice would make such a point “for the record”
or “to keep us clean on that point.”
Will the record in
fact be
corrected in some way, as Russia requested? Dolgov told Inner City
Press he was
checking with Russia's lawyers. Watch this site.
Footnote:
what
is
not known is why Rice and the US Mission have not spoken out
or called for a Council meeting about first the 10 SPLM soldiers
killed last week -- Inner City Press' request for comment remains
unresponded to -- and now the SPLM's
call
for a Security Council
investigation into Khartoum's continued bombing of Western Bahr al
Ghazal State. Watch this site.
*
*
*
On
Cote
d'Ivoire, Russia Chides Ban's Choi, Reiterates that Susan Rice
Should
be Corrected, Has AU Not ECOWAS Focus
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December
7 -- On Cote d'Ivoire, “Mr. Choi went beyond his
mandate,” Russia's Deputy Permanent Representative Konstantin
Dolgov told the Press on Tuesday.
He
said the UN was to certify
results, not name a winner. Dolgov said that in closed door
consultations, appearing by video from the ECOWAS meeting in Abuja,
Mr. Choi acknowledged as much.
Some
wonder
if
Russia's open critique of Choi Young-jin, a close ally of Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon, might have some bearing on Russia's needed
support for a second term as S-G for Mr. Ban.
Inner
City
Press
asked Dolgov about Russia's objection, first reported
by Inner City
Press, to US Ambassador Susan Rice's statement in the open meeting
that the presence in the chamber of Cote d'Ivoire diplomats named by
Laurent Gbagbo did not imply that they were legitimate
representatives of their country.
Dolgov
confirmed
that
Russia has asked for a correction of Ambassador Rice's
statement. Inner City Press told Dolgov that the US Mission told it
that no correction was needed, even that no procedure exists for such
a correction.
“We will check
with our lawyers,” Dolgov said, calling a correction “necessary.”
Dolgov with Rice's predecessor Khalilzad, correction not yet shown
The
Council
suspended its meeting at 1pm on Tuesday, to be picked up at 3 to
consider the ECOWAS statement. Dolgov when asked by Inner City Press
mentioned a forthcoming African Union meeting, to which Thabo Mbeki
will report. Another African diplomat corrected Inner City Press when
it called ECOWAS a regional organization. “A SUB regional
organization,” he said with a smile. Watch this site.
Click
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deaths
in Sri Lanka.
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on
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Click here for Inner City Press'
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City Press' December 24 debate on UN budget, Niger
Click here from Inner City Press'
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Click here for Inner
City Press' November 25 debate on Somalia, politics
and this October 17 debate, on
Security Council and Obama and the UN.
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National
Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's $200,000 contribution from an
undefined trust fund. Video
Analysis
here
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