As
UN
Welcomes Election Haroun Claims, Council Trip Stalls on
Haroun Meeting
By
Matthew
Russell Lee, Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
May 17, updated -- After Ahmed Haroun, indicted by the International
Criminal Court for war crimes in Darfur, declared victory in the
recent election in South Kordofan, the UN Mission in Sudan put out a
statement “welcoming” the election.
Now
in the
Security Council, sources tell Inner City Press, there is controversy
over what to do if Haroun is at the airport when the Council
arrives
on its trip later this month.
At
least one
Council member is pointing at UNMIS' statement as a basis for meeting
with Haroun. Others, including an African member, say it would be
very “difficult.”
There
was a lunch
with the Permanent Five members of the Council, South Africa and
Nigeria. Gabon was supposed to come but didn't, sources say. US
Ambassador Susan
Rice invited US envoy Princeton Lyman. While one of the non-Western P-5
say
that his country and the US are “on the same page about North -
South” issues, the Haroun issue remains a problem.
UNMIS and the UN Secretariat have added to this problem by, at least
twice, flying Haroun to Abyei.
UN air craft near Abyei, UNSC and Haroun not shown
In
New York on May
16, Inner City Press asked UN spokesman Martin Nesirky about the
allegations by the SPLM in South Sudan that Haroun rigged the
election. Nesirky pointed again at the statement, emphasizing that
the UN “urges all parties to remain calm, and encourages those with
complaints regarding the electoral process to address them through
legal means or dialogue.”
On
May 17 Inner
City Press asked Nesirky, in the context of “legal means,” if the
UN had any comment about Khartoum's National Congress Party
government retaining two journalists for their coverage of the
elections in South Kordofan.
Nesirky
merely
said the UN is aware of the reports, and that the Mission, UNMIS, is
checking into it.
But
UNMIS has
repeated said it was checking into killings, mostly of Dinka, in
Abyei and environs, most times without following up. In fact, UNMIS
has at least twice offered free flights to Ahmed Haroun, despite his
history of organizing attacks.
Inner
City Press
also asked Nesirky about a report in Sudanese state media that UNMIS
is already moving out of North Sudan, shifting equipment from
Kadugli, Port Sudan, El-Obeid and Khartoum down to Juba in the South.
Nesirky
responded
that any extension of UNMIS' mission is up to the Security Council. But
shouldn't the Secretariat be able to confirm or deny movements by
the peacekeeping missions it administers?
Update of 7:20 pm --
when UNSC President for May Araud emerged from the Council past 7 pm
Tuesday, Inner City Press asked him about Haroun. After a pause, he
said sever words: "We are not going to meet him." Watch this site.
* * *
As
UN
Confirms
Sudan Arrest of Staff, Council Stalled on Wau Airport for
Abyei
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
May
10 -- The day after Security
Council president Gerard
Araud told the Press the Council's Sudan trip later this month will
definitely go to Abyei, only “which airport” is being discussed,
Sudan continued to maintain that it has not yet given approval, even
that the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations has not yet issued
its final recommendation.
Inner
City
Press
asked top UN Peacekeeper Alain Le Roy about this, and if Khalil
Ibrahim of Darfur's Justice & Equality Movement is still trapped
in Tripoli.
Yes, Le Roy
said, Ibrahim is still there. He could not
or would not explain the UN's response to requests that they
extricate Ibrahim from Libya, as the UN did with its own
international staff.
On
Abyei, it is
explained to Inner City Press that a choice would have to be made
between airports in Kadugli and Wau. (The latter was supposed to be a
stop on the Council's October 2010 trip to Juba, Darfur and Khartoum,
but plane trouble canceled it -- click here
for Inner City Press'
coverage.)
Wau
cannot
accommodate the large plane on which the Council will fly from Addis
Ababa to Khartoum. Kadugli can, but the helicopters needed for
further transport to Abyei are easier staged out of Wau and not
Kadugli.
The
Sudanese,
meanwhile, say the Council was first considering flying to the UN's
El Obeid base. They confirm that DPKO cannot give its final
recommendation until these “logistical” issues are solved.
On
May 9, Inner
City Press asked Ban Ki-moon's acting deputy spokesman Farhan Haq:
Inner
City
Press:
a person active in the [internally displaced persons]
camps, Hawa Abdullah, has been arrested by the Government and charged
with Christianization and being a member of the Abdul Wahid Nur
group. There is some uproar there, and I wonder if UNAMID has any
awareness of this case or comment on it.
Acting
Deputy
Spokesperson
Haq: We’ll check with UNAMID whether they have
any reaction. They haven't disclosed any reaction so far. But we’ll
see whether they say anything down the line.
The
following
morning at 11 am, Haq's office sent the following:
From:
UN
Spokesperson
- Do Not Reply [at] un.org
Date: Tue, May 10, 2011
at 11:14 AM
Subject: Your question on UNAMID staff member
To:
Matthew.Lee [at] innercitypress.com
Regarding
your
question
from yesterday, UNAMID has said the following:
UNAMID
confirms
that
on 6 May a female national staff member was detained by
National Security personnel at her residence in Abu Shouk Internally
Displaced Persons camp. The Mission is in contact with local and
state authorities to determine the cause behind her detention.
Meanwhile,
questions
from
a full week ago have still not been answered. On May 3, Inner
City Press asked Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky:
there
have
been
two separate reports of children dying in IDP [internally
displaced persons] camps in Darfur due to, they say, lack of medical
care, the residents of the camps...And I am just wondering how to
square with this, I saw a recent UN News Centre, UN press release,
about increased humanitarian access. Is UNAMID [African Union-UN
Hybrid Operation in Darfur] aware of people dying in camps due to
lack of medical care and if so, what is being done to gain access to
those camps?
Spokesperson
Nesirky:
I’ll
ask my colleagues in DPKO [Department of Peacekeeping
Operations] to provide an update.
But
there's been no
answer from DPKO or Nesirky's Office. Now the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has been asked. Watch this site.