Alleged
War
Criminal Silva
of Sri Lanka
Is At UN
Adviser
Meeting,
"Doesn't
Speak,"
Statement
Promised
By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
February 22 --
Twenty six
days ago Inner
City Press
began asking
the UN and
then various
countries'
missions to
the UN how
they could
accept as a
member of the
UN "Senior
Advisory Group
on
Peacekeeping
Operations"
General
Shavendra
Silva, whose
Division 58 is
repeatedly
named in
connection
with war
crimes in
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
Panel of
Experts report
on Sri Lanka.
In
the
past week,
multiple
Ambassadors
have told
Inner City
Press that
there is a
"fix." But to
see if this
was true,
Inner City
Press went on
February 22 to
cover the
meeting of the
Senior
Advisory
Group. It was
not listed in
the UN
Journal, nor
on the
electronic
sign boards in
the UN North
Lawn building.
Update
of 3:34 pm --
after this
story, the
following was
sent to all UN
press:
Press
Statement
Louise
Fréchette
Chairperson of
the Special
Advisory Group
to consider
rates of
reimbursement
to troop
contributing
countries and
other related
issues
In its
Resolution
65/289, the
General
Assembly asked
the
Secretary-General
to establish a
Senior
Advisory Group
(SAG) to
consider rates
of
reimbursement
to troop
contributing
countries and
other related
issues.
Following
careful
consideration
and
consultation
with other SAG
members, the
Chair, Louise
Fréchette,
has advised
Major General
Shavendra
Silva of Sri
Lanka, that
his
participation
is not
appropriate or
helpful for
the purposes
of this Group.
He will not
participate in
its
deliberations.
New York
22 February
2012
Inner
City
Press sent a
formal
question to
the UN
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations,
about where
the meeting
was and who
attended,
which DPKO did
not answer or
respond to
during the
morning and
after.
Mid-morning,
however,
Inner City
Press learned
that the
meeting was
taking place
in five blocks
west in 380
Madison
Avenue, a
building that
UN is renting
while its
headquarters
is renovated.
Inner City
Press went up
to the 16th
floor, to the
area outside
the meeting
room, and
prepared to
cover the
meeting.
Soon
there
are arrived
two and then
three
representatives
of the Sri
Lankan Mission
to the UN,
including one
who appeared
to function as
Silva's
bodyguard
during a
recent meeting
in the North
Lawn building.
It is rare at
the UN for
Permanent
Representatives,
much less
Deputy
Permanent
Representatives
like Silva, to
have their own
body guards.
A
woman from the
Sri Lankan
mission glared
at Inner City
Press and went
down to the
lobby. He
returned with
a UN Security
officer, who
asked,
"Matthew, are
you covering
this meeting?"
After
an affirmative
answer, the
officer went
into the
meeting room.
He returned
and said that
"they" said
the press
should not be
allowed even
outside the
meeting room,
in this
building paid
for by the UN
and thus by
publics. "Do
you want them
to speak to
you?" Inner
City Press was
asked. Of
course.
But
no
one would come
out to
explain.
Rather, the UN
Security
officer said
that the "UN
staff" of the
Senior
Advisory
Committee, one
Amy Maung
Maung Kyaw,
had made the
decision.
While
being
escorted from
the hallway
outside the
meeting, Inner
City Press
asked the
woman from the
Sri Lankan
mission who
was inside the
meeting for
the Asia
Group, Silva
or Kohona?
"Silva,"
the
woman
responded.
Down
on
the sidewalk
in front of
380 Madison
Avenue, a UN
senior staffer
told Inner
City Press it
was "shocking"
a UN
correspondent
was ousted at
the request of
Sri Lanka. A
UN
Peacekeeping
deputy showed
up, but he was
looking for
the so-called
Teachers
Building some
two blocks
away.
Finally
attendees
began to
leave. One
told Inner
City Press
that Silva had
been
admonished,
and had not
said a single
word during
the two hour
long meeting.
Also exiting
were among
others the
Permanent
Representatives
of India and
Egypt, as well
as the "Number
Three" of
Japan, Jun
Yamazaki.
Earlier on
Wednesday US
Ambassador
Susan Rice
said she
wasn't on the
Senior
Advisory
Group, it was
another
American
diplomat "not
from the
Mission." The
UK said it
sends a
diplomat who
has
represented it
in Sweden.
Another
prominent
Ambassador
told Inner
City Press
that the
chairwoman of
the Senior
Advisory
Group, Louise
Frechette, was
issuing or had
issued a press
statement.
Inner City
Press
immediately
wrote to Ban
Ki-moon's two
top spokesmen
to ask for the
statement on
this issue it
has been
asking about
for more than
three weeks.
For an hour
and counting,
there was no
answer.
Silva
did
in fact come
out,
accompanied by
the body guard
and two other
staffers. Grim
faced he got
into a BMW --
a source tells
Inner City
Press it costs
"$100,000
while Sri
Lankans who
served their
country aren't
be paid their
pensions" --
and drove
away. Video here and below:
The body guard
and another
staffer
remained right
next to Inner
City Press on
the sidewalk.
Finally at
1:42 pm the
two men left,
and soon
thereafter
Inner City
Press did as
well,
returning to
the UN to
write this.
Prior
to these
developments,
the Sri Lankan
Mission's
action was to
send a letter
of complaint
to Inner City
Press, sending
a copy to
Ban's
spokesman
Martin Nesirky
as well as to
some in the UN
press corps.
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