UN
Council
Agrees After 5 Days to Cote d'Ivoire Statement on Ouattara Win
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 8 -- After five days
of negotiations, the UN
Security Council at 6:30 Wednesday night agreed to a Press
Statement,
in light of ECOWAS recognition of Alassane Ouattara as the winner of
Cote d'Ivoire's election. The Statement
also deplores the suspension of non governmental media in Cote d'Ivoire.
Inner
City
Press has heard that the US urged SRSG Choi to declare Ouattara
the winner, even before the Constitutional Council had made its
statement - out of order.
Inner City Press asked African Ambassadors
for their views as they left the Council chamber.
“We wanted the
Security Council to support Africans' decisions,” Ambassador
Rugunda of Uganda told Inner City Press.
“You see?”
Gabon's Ambassador said. “A Russian contribution.”
Russia
had held
out -- several sources told Inner City Press that China supported
Russia too. Chinese Ambassador Li Baodong told Inner City Press that
the two parties should share.
Even
Uganda's
Ruganda said “we are not throwing Gbagbo out. He can stay, as
opposition.”
UN SRSG Choi: he's said he'll stay for legislative elections. Will he?
With
US Permanent
Representative Susan Rice in Washington, Brooke Anderson was picked
to read out the press statement. It was long, and Ambassador Anderson
walked away from the microphone as Inner City Press asked, "Why did
this take so long?"
While
the US was reticent to explain, they pointed to elements in the text
finally agreed, for example the section on free press, and mostly the
inclusion of Ouattara's name. Something, they say, was
accomplished. But what about the bombings in Sudan?
The
US
Mission has still not
answered 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... But
that (apparently) is for another day.
* * *
At
UN
on Cote d'Ivoire, Russian Expert Stood Up to UK & Susan Rice,
No “Note taker”
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 8 -- As the dust begins to settle on the Security
Council's five day standoff over an ultimately bland draft Cote
d'Ivoire press statement, Western countries' characterization of
the Russian
representative at Wednesday morning's session as a “mere” and
even “meek” note taker has been contradicted.
In
the December 8
consultations, after the UK harshly criticized the stance Deputy
Permanent Representative Dolgov had taken the day before, the Russian
expert Diana Eloeva said she “heard what one member said about
[her] country and didn't like it.”
“Which member?”
Susan Rice asked.
“Everyone
heard it and knows who it is,” Ms. Eloeva calmly replied.
Diana Eloeva on Dec 8, showdown with Susan Rice not shown (c) MRLee
She
is Russia's
expert on Guinea Bissau, and traveled with the Council delegation to
Timor Leste. She is from North Ossetia. And now, she has stood up to
the UK and Susan Rice.
* * *
At
UN,
Cote d'Ivoire Deal Mirroring ECOWAS Looms, Battle for Credit
Begins
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 8, updated -- On Cote
d'Ivoire as the Security Council
inched toward a deal mirroring the ECOWAS statement but not
declaring
Ouattara the winner, battles were on for who would claim credit.
Mexico
in morning
consultation put forward the ECOWAS solution. But two African
Permanent Representative were skeptical. “Not only Mexican,” said
one. “We'll take support from anywhere,” the other said,
smiling broadly.
US
Permanent
Representative Susan Rice was present for Tuesday's five hour fight,
and even Wednesday morning's standoff with a lower level Russian. With
a deal approaching she is absent. Cabinet meeting in Washington
was the reason given. Who would read a belatedly agreed to press
statement for the US? Another Ambassador.
UNSC (last Dec) - credit not yet shown
Inner
City Press
directly asked Russian Deputy Permanent Representative Konstantin
Dolgov if he would agree to “mirror ECOWAS.” He replied, “You
are ahead of the Security Council!” We'll see.
Update
of
5:15 pm -- the Security Council has taken a 15 minute break to
print a new version, with sources saying a deal is near. Gabon's
Ambassador, to whom Inner City Press asked about Mexico's role, said
instead, “Russian contribution!” We still see a positive
contribution by Mexico's PR Heller, who will be missed along with
Austria's Ambassador on the Council once the countries leave in
December. But will the Cote d'Ivoire deal be done this evening? UK's
Lyall Grant has left.
* * *
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.
*
*
*
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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National
Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's $200,000 contribution from an
undefined trust fund. Video
Analysis
here
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