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UNITED
NATIONS, April 6 --
UN Secretary General
Antonio Guterres
lavished praised on
Saudi Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman
on March 27, with
not a word of the
Saudi led bombing
campaign that has
killed civilians and
caused cholera in
Yemen. The occasion
was Guterres
accepting a $930
million check for
the 2018 Yemen
Humanitarian
Response Plan. Call
it blood
money. Now in
France, a legislator
in Emmanuel Macron's
party is calling for
an investigation of
French arms sales to
the Coalition, while
Macron's minister
assures it's all
good. Sebastien
Nadot and 15 other
co-signatories are
pushing for a
30-member commission
"to study France’s
compliance with
international
commitments
regarding arms
export licenses,
munitions, training,
services and
assistance that our
country has granted
during these three
years to the
belligerents of the
conflict in Yemen."
Spinning prior to
the Paris visit of
Crown Prince MBS,
compliant wires
quoted an anonymous
Macron flack that
"there is a very
strict control of
arms exports ...
which obeys very
precise criteria,
including the
concern for
situations in which
civilian populations
may be endangered."
Really? Killing
children with
airstrikes? On April
4, Inner City Press
asked the new UN
Ambassador of the
UK, Karen Pierce,
about the recent
Saudi airstrike
which killed 12
civilians, among
them seven children.
She replied that the
Saudi government
adheres to
international
humanitarian law.
Video here,
Vine here.
From the UK
transcript: Inner
City Press: On
Yemen, have you seen
the news of the air
strike that killed
12 including 7
children. I am
wondering if the
Council, do you feel
that the Saudi
Coalition is being
careful enough in
how it bombs?
AMB PIERCE: I
haven’t seen the
news of that. I
think that is is
apparent and we have
discussed this with
our Saudi friends
that there needs to
be a political
solution to the
conflict in Yemen.
We support Martin
Griffiths the new
Special Envoy and
his work. I do know
that in respect of
Coalition
operations, the
Saudi government
adheres to
International
Humanitarian Law. We
talked to them
bilaterally about
that and we have
offered them
training to enhance
their own efforts to
that end but the
obvious route
forward is an
inclusive political
process. We will be
discussing Yemen
later in the Council
in April and we will
look forward to
hearing from the new
Special Envoy about
that." We'll have
more on this. Given
that UNSG Guterres
did not mention the
bombing or the
Children and Armed
Conflict list that
the Saudi led
Coalition is still
(barely) on, Inner
City Press on March
28 asked Guterres'
spokesman Farhan
Haq, who said what
Guterres said, is
what he said. Asked
how was in the
meeting to following
up on children and
armed conflict
listing, there was
no answer - and no
Virginia Gamba was
seen. Blood money
works, at the UN.
On
March 27 the Crown
Prince -- MBS as he
is known -- arrived
a full hald hour
late, with Guterres
and his outgoing
head of Political
Affairs Jeffrey
Feltman pacing
around but not
complaining.
(Feltman whose last
day at the UN is
March 29 when asked
if Trump might hire
him laughed and said
he didn't think so.
This was after the 5
pm listed start time
for the MBS photo
op, but Inner City
Press in an
abundance of caution
after repeated UN
censorship threats
was not yet
Periscoping.) Alamy
photos here.
Inner City Press on
March 28 asked Haq
why no Feltman press
conference and was
told there will be
one on March 29,
Feltman's last day.
Watch this site.
When
MBS did arrive,
there was a fast
photo op then the
media was ushered in
to wait in the
conference room of
Guterres' absent
Deputy Amina J.
Mohammed, delivering
equally craven
statements in her
native Nigeria.
Although the UN
Department of Public
Information run by
British Alison Smale
had said no
shoulder-held video
cameras in the
conference room,
exception was made
for "Saudi official"
media - just as
Smale's DPI has
purported to award
Inner City Press'
long time work space
S-303 to "Egypt
official" media
Sanaa Youssef of
Akhbar al Yom, who
has not asked the UN
a question in a
decade. Exceptions
are made.
Guterres' speech is
here,
along with MBS'
claim he never
violates
international law
notwithstanding
bombing funerals and
wedding parties.
Guterres made a
special category for
the Saudi-led
Coaltion: the
so-called "good
child killers" list.
This invention was
paid back on March
27 -- only half of
the money comes from
Saudi, the rest from
the UAE -- and the
killing is such to
continue. The
Security Council is
being asked,
however, to speak
solely on missiles
the Houthis have
launched. One might
ask, which came
first. But
exceptions are made.
Back on March 15 as
in the US Senate a
bill attempting to
end support to the
Saudi-led
Coalition's bombing
of Yemen was
proceeding toward
its 55-44 failure,
Inner City Press
asked Saudi
Ambassador to the UN
Abdallah Y.
Al-Mouallimi if he
is concerned at loss
of support in the US
for the bombing,
which is killing
children and
spreading cholera.
Video here.
Al-Mouallimi called
the bill an internal
matter of the US, at
an early stage; he
said the US fully
supports what his
country is doing. He
blamed all death of
civilians on the
Houthis. Earlier
Inner City Press
asked Sweden's
deputy ambassador
Carl Skau if the
day's Security
Council Presidential
Statement had been
agreed to be the
Coalition and the
Houthis. He said non
Council members find
their way to have
input. But how do
the Houthis?
The UN,
under Antonio
Guterres, his Deputy
Amina J. Mohammed
and it turns out his
Global Communicator
Alison Smale, have
made their position
clear. Mohammed and
Smale sent a long
time the night
before at a Saudi
event on women's
rights.
Smale,
who is responsible
for restrictions on
Inner City Press
which she refuses to
explain or
reconsider, was at
the event; on March
15 her restrictions
resulted in Inner
City Press unlike
no-show state media
from Egypt and
others being
initially unable to
reach the Council
stakeout. The glass
door was
inexplicably locked
despite Guterres'
spokesperson's
office announcing
that the Saudi
ambassador would
speak. Once he
began, a UN Security
officer nevertheless
at the turnstile
Inner City Press'
pass no longer opens
demanded that it
have a minder or
“sponsor.” This is
UNacceptable, as it
the continued death
in Yemen. Watch this
site.
The United
Kingdom's murky role in the
killings in Yemen persist even
in the face of a Freedom of
Information Act request from
Inner City Press.
More than five
months ago on 15 August 2017
Inner City Press asked the UK
government for records
concerning Yemen. The UK sells
weapons to Saudi Arabia, and
has now implanted a UK citizen
as UN envoy on Yemen in the
person of Martin Griffiths
(Inner City Press story and
questionshere.)
After repeatedly extending the
time to response, now the UK
has denied access to all
responsive records, letterhere,
saying that "the release of
information relating to the
UK’s discussion on UN business
could harm our relations and
other member states of the
United Nations (UN)."
Hereon
Patreon is the full denial
letter, from which Inner City
Press is preparing an appeal,
on Cameroon as well - it has
40 working days.
This is shameful
- the UK is also exiting
transparency.
As
Inner City
Press pursues
these
questions at
the UN, it
remainsrestrictedto
minders by the
head of the UN
Department of
Public
Information
Alison Smale,
who it is
noted is
British - and
functionally a
censor. A
retaliator,
too? Smale has
not explained
why Inner City
Press' long
time work
space is
assigned to
no-show,
no-question
Egyptian state
media Akhbar
al Youm.
Your
support means a lot. As little as $5 a month
helps keep us going and grants you access to
exclusive bonus material on our Patreon
page. Click
here to become a patron.
Feedback:
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