Amid
Gadhafi's
Crackdown, UN Council to Consult, Formal Meeting Uncertain
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
February 21 -- Amid the killing and bombing in Libya, there was buzz at
the UN during the holiday Monday about Ibrahim Al Dabashi, until now
the country's Deputy Permanent Representative, calling on Colonel
Moammar Gadhafi to step down, and asking the Brazilian President of
the UN Security Council for February to hold an emergency meeting.
It
was reported
that the Security Council “will” meet formally Tuesday on the situation
in
Libya and “will make a decision” about imposing a no-fly zone
over Libya.
But
this may not
be the case. The Security Council's schedule already included a
meeting Tuesday morning, about Timor Leste. Sunday night it was
announced that the Council will hold consultations on Libya at 9 am on
Tuesday. But, it has been multiply confirmed to Inner City Press, this
is to decide how to proceed on Dabashi's letter.
But
it is possible that the issue will be raised whether Al Dabashi's
letter
is in fact the type of request from a member state which requires, at
least over time, the Council to meet.
Even
when Cambodia
asked the Council to meet on its cross border conflict with Thailand,
it took the Council a week to hold a formal meeting -- and then they
referred the
matter back to the regional organization ASEAN.
The
Council has
not held a formal meeting on Tunisia or Egypt. In part this is
because a number of Council members do not want to set the precedent
of the Council meeting about repression within a country -- for
example, theirs or their allies'.
Many say this
is not how the UN Security Council should operate. But until now, it is
how the Council has in fact worked -- or not worked.
With reports
of Gadhafi importing mercenaries to attack the protesters, this could
be raised at the Security Council, given how the UN raised it recently
about Cote d'Ivoire's defiant leader Laurent Gbagbo.
Ban
Ki-moon as
Secretary General could request a formal meeting of the Council, under
Article 99 of the UN Charter. But Ban Ki-moon will apparently be
traveling to Hollywood in California on Tuesday.
UN's Ban and Gadhafi, Goodwill Ambassador daughter not shown
Inner
City Press
wrote to Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky, and his deputy Farhan Haq,
on the morning of Sunday February 20 asking
In
the
wake of the gunning down of 46 democracy protesters in Libya’s
second largest city, Benghazi, by security forces under the command
of Colonel Gadafi, is the UN reassessing its relationship with Col
Gadhafi’s daughter, Aicha, who the UN has designated a “Goodwill
Ambassador?
http://www.libyaonline.com/business/details.php?id=10374
Has
the
Secretary-General sought to use the UN’s special relationship
with its Goodwill Ambassador Dr Aicha Gadhafi to persuade her father
not to use such excessive force against peaceful demonstrators?
A
full day and a
half later, no response at all from the UN. Inner City Press also
asked Ban's spokesman Nesirky “in this context, the
Secretary-General's planned trip to California to meet and greet 'the
entertainment industry,' how much is this trip costing, and is it
funded by the Regular Budget of the UN -- and if not, what is the
funding source?” Again, no answer.
In
the interim,
sources inform Inner City Press that that Gadhafi's daughter Aicha
has a UN Laissez Passez travel document that runs through 2013. Watch
this site.
* * *
As Libya UN Deputy
Slams Gadhafi,
Murabak
Rep Remains, Bahrain to Decide?
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
February 21 -- Even as Mubarak fled Egypt, his Ambassador at
the UN Maged Abdelaziz kept his job, even though he was a quasi
Cabinet member. But with Colonel
Moammar Gadhafi teetering but still
in Libya, his Deputy Ambassador at the UN Ibrahim Al Dabashi called
for him to step down.
First
he was
quoted "After we have seen what is happening in Libya and after
the kind of declaration of war against the Libyan people which has
been declared by the son of Qaddafi yesterday, we find that it is
impossible to stay silent and we have to [convey] the voice of the
Libyan people to the world. First let me say that we state clearly
that the Libyan mission is a mission for the Libyan people."
What
about Yemen's
mission? The Yemeni Permanent Representative to the UN is known to be
looking for a UN job. Or the mission of Bahrain, where a protest is
scheduled for
February 22?
Dabashi previously at UN
Al
Dabashi is well
known to the UN Press, from when Libya was on the Security Council.
But if the UN still recognizes Gadhafi, as made clear by Ban
Ki-moon's belated telephone call to him, who now represents Libya at
the UN? Watch this site.
* * *
As
Libya
Kills Protesters, Gadhafi Daughter is UN Ambassador, UNDP Silent
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
February 20 -- As in Libya the forces, including
mercenaries, of Colonel Moammar Gadhafi shoot and kill peaceful
protesters, the UN has been nearly entirely silent.
On
the morning of February 20, Inner City Press asked UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon's spokesman Martin Nesirky:
In
the
wake of the gunning down of 46 democracy protesters in Libya’s
second largest city, Benghazi, by security forces under the command
of Colonel Gadafi, is the UN reassessing its relationship with Col
Gadhafi’s daughter, Aicha, who the UN has designated a “Goodwill
Ambassador?
Has
the
Secretary-General sought to use the UN’s special relationship
with its Goodwill Ambassador Dr Aicha Gadhafi to persuade her father
not to use such excessive force against peaceful demonstrators?
Nine
hours later,
no response at all from the UN. Inner City Press also asked Ban's
spokesman Nesirky “in this context, the Secretary-General's planned
trip to California to meet and greet 'the entertainment industry,'
how much is this trip costing, and is it funded by the Regular Budget
of the UN -- and if not, what is the funding source?” Again, no
answer.
On February
17,
Inner City Press had asked Nesirky
Inner
City
Press: Is there any thought of using the existing UN programs on
the ground, whether it is UNDP or
otherwise? There was some
criticism of this training of police in Egypt
prior to the — there
was criticism by NGOs that it didn’t bring in human rights
activists but rather Government people. Is there some thinking of
how — the UNDP website about Libya hasn’t been updated now in
several months, I guess — it seems to some, due to the turmoil. What
about these UN…?
Spokesperson
Nesirky:
Who might that be? Who is it, these people who think it
might be?
Inner
City
Press: People that look at it and have seen that it was updated
all the way, until suddenly there was turmoil in the country and then
it is not updated any more.
Inner
City Press: What’s the role, according to the
Secretary-General, of the existing UN programmes in countries like
Libya and Yemen, where Helen Clark visited and didn’t say anything
about democracy?
Spokesperson
Nesirky:
Well, there are lots of, as you know, across the region,
there is a UN presence in different constellations; country teams
with different components, whether it is UNDP or other UN agencies,
funds and programmes. Of course, given that they are already on the
ground, given that they have been working there in different
capacities on different projects, they are well placed to be further
involved. But this is part of a bigger picture, and it is being very
carefully coordinated.
Inner
City
Press: Is there any change of policy? I guess I am saying,
given that the announcement today that the UN is sort of taking
cognizance of all this, is there, is that…?
Spokesperson
Nesirky:
Well, Matthew, it’s hardly an announcement today. This
is something that has been said consistently for a number of weeks
now. And indeed, further back, as you know, the Human Development
Reports on the Arab world have been saying this for the best part of
a decade. So, okay, thank you very much.
But
what had the UN
been doing about Libya? Watch this site.
* * *
As
Egypt
Ambassador
Dismissing Web Crackdown, His UN Job Search Continues, Yemen
& Tunisia Perm Reps Compete?
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
February
8 -- Amid continuing protests and crackdowns on
media in Egypt, the Mubarak
government's Permanent Representative to
the UN Maged A. Abdelaziz spoke to the Press on Tuesday. Inner City
Press asked him about the blocking of the Internet and social
networks and whether these attacks on freedom of expression would
continue.
“I'm sure you
know better than that,” Abdelaziz said. “Now everything is
working -- social networks, Internet, Twitters... you have contact
with your people back there, you see everything.”
But
the fact that
television networks can work around restrictions and threats does not
answer the question. Abdelaziz said that as Ambassador to the UN in
New York, there were questions he could not answer.
Earlier
on
Tuesday,
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon was asked about complaints
by Abdelaziz, first to Ban's chief of staff Vijay Nambiar, about
comments about Mubarak stepping down. Ban said
“I
think that there was some misunderstanding about my statement. I hope
that there will not be much misunderstanding on that. What I said was
that the Government leaders should listen more attentively to the
genuine aspirations of the people and there should be a transition,
and the sooner the better. And the future of their country and
transition process should be something which should be decided by the
people.”
Less
than
an
hour later, Abdelaziz seemed pleased when he said that what Ban
Ki-moon had just said “is the UN position.” Abdelaziz met with
Ban on Monday.
Maged
Abdelaziz makes point to
Ban: UN job offer not yet shown
Abdelaziz'
and
the
Egyptian Mission's spokeswoman commented to Inner City Press on
Tuesday about its reporting
that Abdelaziz is seeking a job. She
denied he is seeking an IMF job -- which Inner City Press never
reported. But there are many sources for his UN job search.
Also,
the
Permanent
Representatives of Yemen and Tunisia are said to be seeking UN jobs
-- one effect of what's sweeping the region. But it is like musical
chairs. Watch this site.
Click
here
for an Inner City Press YouTube channel video, mostly UN Headquarters
footage, about civilian
deaths
in Sri Lanka.
Click here for Inner City
Press' March 27 UN debate
Click here for Inner City
Press March 12 UN (and AIG
bailout) debate
Click here for Inner City
Press' Feb 26 UN debate
Click
here
for Feb.
12
debate
on
Sri
Lanka http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/17772?in=11:33&out=32:56
Click here for Inner City Press' Jan.
16, 2009 debate about Gaza
Click here for Inner City Press'
review-of-2008 UN Top Ten debate
Click here for Inner
City Press' December 24 debate on UN budget, Niger
Click here from Inner City Press'
December 12 debate on UN double standards
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.
* * *
These
reports are
usually also available through Google
News and on Lexis-Nexis.
Click here
for a Reuters
AlertNet piece by this correspondent
about Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army. Click
here
for an earlier Reuters AlertNet piece about the Somali
National
Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's $200,000 contribution from an
undefined trust fund. Video
Analysis
here
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