By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, June
25 -- With
Navi Pillay
slated to
leave as UN
High
Commissioner
on Human
Rights on
August 31, on
June 25 she
made an
announcement
about the HRC
Panel on Sri
Lanka.
Meanwhile amid
renewed
Buddhist
extremist
violence in
the country
and
restrictions
on media, on June 24
and June 25
Inner City
Press asked
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
Ban's envoy
Oscar
Fernandez Taranco's
visit.
Dujarric said
Taranco
discussed
"post war
achievements."
Inner City
Press asked,
did he discuss
press freedom
issues?
Apparently
not.
This comes as
many big-wigs
in the UN use
the outrageous
detention of
three Al
Jazeera
journalists in
Egypt to
promote...
themselves.
What did they
say about the
killing of
five
journalists in
Eastern
Ukraine? What
have they said
about Sri
Lanka? Some in
the UN even tried
to censor Sri
Lanka coverage,
here.
Here's from
Pillay
announcement:
"Three
distinguished
experts have
agreed to
advise and
support the
team set up to
conduct a
comprehensive
investigation
of alleged
human rights
violations in
Sri Lanka, as
mandated by
the Human
Rights Council
in March:
Mr Martti
Ahtisaari,
former
President of
Finland and
Nobel Peace
Prize
Laureate, who
has also
served as a UN
diplomat and
mediator and
is renowned
for his
international
peace work;
Ms Silvia
Cartwright,
former
Governor-General
and High Court
judge of New
Zealand, and
judge of the
Extraordinary
Chambers of
the Courts in
Cambodia, as
well as former
member of the
UN Committee
for the
Elimination of
Discrimination
against Women;
Ms Asma
Jahangir,
former
President of
Pakistan’s
Supreme Court
Bar
Association
and of the
Human Rights
Commission of
Pakistan,
previous
holder of
several Human
Rights Council
mandates and
member of a
recent
fact-finding
body into
Israeli
settlements.
The
Investigation
Team with whom
they will work
will consist
of 12 staff,
including
investigators,
forensics
experts, a
gender
specialist, a
legal analyst
and various
other staff
with
specialized
skills. It
will be
operational
for a period
of 10 months
(up to
mid-April
2015).
In March 2014,
the United
Nations Human
Rights Council
adopted
resolution
25/1 [which]
requests the
Office to
present an
oral update to
the Human
Rights Council
at its
twenty-seventh
session in
September
2014, and a
comprehensive
report at its
twenty-eighth
session in
March 2015."
But the
Rajapaksa
government has
already
indicated it
will not
cooperate. In
fact, it has
made threats
to go after
anyone who
does
cooperate.
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon, for
whom many say
inaction on
Sri Lanka has
been a low
point of his
tenure,
nominated
Jordan's
Prince Zeid as
Pillay's
successor, to
begin on September
1.
As Inner City
Press
reported, Zeid
to his credit
was troubled
by the
inclusion of
controversial
military
figure
Shavendra
Silva on Ban's
and Herve
Ladsous'
Senior
Advisory Group
on
Peacekeeping
Operations.
Silva remains
a figure
within the UN,
texting in Sri
Lanka's seat
in the General
Assembly.
The
UN has
entirely
stonewalled
Press
questions
about the new
White Flag
killings
report and the
light it sheds
on current UN
official Vijay
Nambiar and
former UN
official, now
Sri Lankan
Ambassador
Palitha
Kohona.
It was about a
past financial
relationship
between Kohona
and the president
of the UN
Correspondents
Association,
who then
agreed to an
UNCA screening
of a Rajapaksa
government
movie denying
war crimes
that UNCA
tried to
censor.
When
Inner City
Press reported
on the
background to
Kohona getting
the Rajapaksa
government's
denial of war
crimes, “Lies
Agreed To,”
screened in
the Dag
Hammarjkold
Library
auditorium,
the reaction
from the
then-president
and executive
committee of
the United
Nations
Correspondents
Association
are summarized
here. One
wag wondered
whether the
2009 Bloodbath
on the Beach
has now been
echoed as
Blowhards on
the Beach, here.
In Sri
Lanka now the
Rajapaksa
government blocks
websites it
doesn't like.
The UNCA board
asked that
Inner City
Press articles
be removed
from the
internet. This
was refused.
One UNCA board
member claimed
to Google
that his “for
the record”
complaint to
the UN trying
to get Inner
City Press
thrown out was
in fact
private and “copyrighted.”
Here is a
response from
the Electronic
Frontier
Foundation.
This got it
banned from
Google's
Search, under
the US Digital
Millennium
Copyright Act,
which
threatens to
be globalized
through the
Trans Pacific
Partnership.
Who said there
is not
censorship in
the UN, and in
the United
States?
Now
the new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
opposes all of
this, and attacks
on media work both
inside the UN
both further
afield and
as close at
47th Street, west
of First
Avenue. Watch
this site.