On Kosovo, UN's Ban Takes Only Two Questions, then
Rostrum Taken from Serbia Too
Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at
the UN: News Analysis
UNITED NATIONS, February 18 -- The UN
Security Council's debate about Kosovo on Monday was predictable, with the U.S.
and European members favoring recognizing independence and Russia, China and the
president of Serbia calling it a dangerous precedent and asking
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to deem it illegal under the Council's Resolution
1244 of 1999. It ended without output and was the Council's third meeting on
Kosovo in five days, Inner City Press stories on previous meetings
here,
here
and
here.
For Monday, we turn to... rostrum-gate, or another symbolic Serbian loss.
While the president of Serbia on Monday
fruitlessly pleaded with the UN Security Council member and Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon to declare Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence illegal,
outside the Council chamber a dark-wood rostrum was rolled up to the stakeout,
for Mr. Ban to speak at. Other speakers at the stakeout, including Ban's
predecessor Kofi Annan, have simply used the stand-up microphone. But last year
Ban deployed a music stand to put his notes on, and now a full rostrum has been
custom-built. Inner City Press asked the staffers who rolled it in when it was
made, and was told five months ago. "It is only for the Secretary General," one
of the staffers said. This would prove to be true. Left unanswered for now is
whether, if built outside of the UN, the lowest bidder was sought and selected,
a small but perhaps telling detailed. This rostrum is larger than any previous
one at the UN stakeout.
Sunday, Inner City Press asked
Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, about his legal argument that Kosovo's
declaration is illegal, who is Russia asking to rule on the issue? Ban Ki-moon,
was the answer. Video
here.
But Monday was Ban was asked, as the second of only two questions allowed, if
Kosovo's move was legal or not, Ban said he was not here to say if it is legal
or not. Then his deputy spokesperson said, that was the last question, claiming
that the president of Serbia was waiting. Video
here.
Ban Ki-moon and the rostrum: two
microphones, and only two questions
As it turned out, it was
Serbia's young foreign minister Vuk Jeremic who came to speak. He stood behind
the rostrum and prepared. Then they tried to pull the rostrum away from him. He
clung to it. From the journalists' side of the stakeout, one wag -- okay, this
one -- said that the rostrum belongs to member states. Another joked that it must
be a virgin rostrum, or at least monogamous. Serbia's foreign minister, twenty
five seconds into his presentation, said he needed a microphone. Video
here.
The Serbs lost not only Kosovo but even the lectern. Call it rostrum-gate.
* * *
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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