At
UN,
As Ban Gets Sri Lanka Report, He Gives to Government, Misleading on
Meetings, Nambiar Conflict Called "Specious"
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
April 12 -- The UN's long delayed report into accountability
for war crimes in Sri Lanka was handed to Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon on Tuesday, Ban's acting deputy spokesman Farhan Haq
announced on April 12, confirming Inner City Press'
exclusive report
on April 11 that Tuesday would be the day.
But
the report was
not made public. Rather, Ban shared a copy with the government of
Mahinda Rajapaksa “as a matter of courtesy.” This, and the delay
in even handing over the document, were reportedly agreed to in March
when Sri Lankan Attorney General Mohan Peiris, accompanied by
presumptive war crimes defendant General Shavendra Silva, visited the
UN.
At
the time, the
only listed meeting was with Ban Ki-moon. But soon Sri Lankan
government officials were bragging that they also met with Ban's
panel. When Inner City Press asked Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky, he
gave the impression that no such meeting with the Panel took place,
saying, you were there, Matthew, you know.
On
April 12, when
Inner City Press asked Haq to clarify this, Haq denied that Nesirky
said there was no meeting with the Panel. The video will tell the
story: but whether the Office of the Spokesperson for the Secretary
General should be engaging in what many in the press corps see as
games.
Ban depicted in Sri Lanka camp with (Basil) Rajapaksa & gun
Inner
City Press
asked Haq, since Ban in December and January said his Panel could
travel to Sri Lanka due to Mahinda Rajapaksa's “flexibility,” if
the Panel had in fact traveled to Sri Lanka and if not, if they were
blocked. Haq refused to answer, even if they had gone there.
Previously,
when
asked about a filing with the International Criminal Court which,
while primarily directed against Sri Lankan Ambassador Palitha
Kohona, describes the role of Ban's chief of staff Vijay Nambiar in
the so-called white flag killings of surrenderees, Haq told a
journalist on the record that there has been no formal filing with
the ICC. Even now that receipt has been confirmed by the ICC, there
has been no subsequent statement by Haq's or Ban's wider office.
Inner
City Press on
April 12 asked if Nambiar, given his role as described in the ICC
filing, will be recused from Ban's decision making on what to do with
the Sri Lanka report. Haq quickly called this “specious,”
pointing out that Nambiar is not the named target of the ICC filing.
But that is not the applicable standard for a conflict of interest.
Haq
said that Ban
will, himself, make the decision on what to do with the report. We'll
see. Watch this site.
* * *
At
UN, Sri Lanka War Crimes Report To Be Handed to Ban Ki-moon on April
12, Sources Say, Murky
Panel
By
Matthew
Russell Lee, Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
April 11 -- The UN's long
delayed report on accountability
for war crimes in Sri Lanka is now slated to be handed to Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon on April 12, sources tell Inner City Press. The
report will not be made public at that time, they say, and perhaps it
never will.
Inner
City Press
has repeatedly asked Ban's spokespeople to explain Ban's statements
in December and January that his panel could travel to Sri Lanka.
Likewise,
when
Inner City Press asked spokesman Martin Nesirky if the Sri Lankan
delegation in March, including Attorney General Mohan Peiris and
reported war criminal Shavendra Silva, had met with Ban's Panel and
not just Ban himself, Nesirky said no, you know it is no, you were
there.
But
over the
weekend, Sri Lankan Minister of Foreign Affairs G.L. Peiris said that
the denied meeting did in fact take place, including Ban's head of
Political Affairs Lynn Pascoe, who asked that it remain secret.
Inner
City Press
told a senior Ban administration official about the comments of G.L.
Peiris on April 11. “I have very surprised they are saying that,”
the Ban official said.
Surprised
because
the meeting didn't happen? Or because both sides promised it would be
secret?
“I am just
surprised.”
Also
present during the March meeting(s) was Sri Lanka Permanent
Representative, and dual Australian citizen, Palitha Kohona. A filing
now confirmed received by the International Criminal Court names Kohona
as a target for investigation, as well as describing the role of Ban's
chief of staff Vijay Nambiar in the co-called white flag murders of
surrenderees.
Ban's deputy spokesman Farhan Haq sent an email, on the record,
that there has been no formal filing with the ICC. Even now that
receipt has been confirmed by the ICC, there has been no subsequent
statement by Haq's or Ban's wider office.
It is in this
context that the long delayed report will be "tabled." Watch this
site.
* * *
On
Sri
Lanka,
UN's
Haq Insists His Denial Meant Nambiar Isn't Target of ICC
Complaint, Is Only Called a "Co-Perpetrator"
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
March
11
-- On Sri Lanka, a complaint filed with the
International Criminal Court against Palitha Kohona states of UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's chief of staff that there is “a
basis to question whether Vijay Nambiar was in fact an innocent
neutral intermediary or in fact a co-perpetrator within the
negotiation related community.”
Inner
City Press
on February 21 published a story containing that quote, and this
paragraph from the complaint:
"NAMBIAR
again
through
the
United Nations-24 hour dispatch center in New York.
NAMBIAR replied to COLVIN that MAHINDA RAJAPAKSE, GOTABAYA RAJAPAKSE,
AND PALITHA KOHONA had assured NAMBIAR that the LTTE members would be
safe in surrendering to the SLA and treated like “normal prisoners
of war” if they “hoist[ed] a white flag high.”
Days
later Ban's
Deputy
Spokesman
Farhan
Haq sent a reporter an on the record
statement that
“The
Inner City Press story is inaccurate; there has been no complaint
formally filed at the International Criminal Court.”
Inner
City Press
asked Ban's lead spokesman Martin Nesirky to explain Haq's statement,
but Nesirky refused, saying that Haq had sent it to another
journalist, not Inner City Press. But it was an on the record
response. Still, no answer, including from Nambiar.
On
March 11, for
the first time in weeks Haq and not Nesirky took questions at the
UN's noon briefing. Alongside questions about the vetting of Ban's
envoy to Libya and UN actions in Sudan, Inner City Press asked Haq to
explain his statement.
After
attempting
the evade the question by calling it "all of your personal
things" and saying it could be
addressed outside of the briefing room -- Inner City Press has asked
outside of the briefing, without answer -- Haq now argued that he had
been asked if the ICC complaint named -- that is, was against --
Nambiar.
But
Haq's
statement in his e-mail, which Inner City Press published
on February 23 and is reproduced in full below, did not refer to
whether Nambiar was the named target, which he couldn't be as a
citizen of India, which is not a member of the ICC. (Kohona is named
because he is a joint citizen of Australia, which IS an ICC member.)
UN's Haq in briefing room, belated e-mail spin not shown
Rather,
Haq's
statement called inaccurate “the Inner City Press story,” which
quoted directly from the ICC filing, as set forth above. The story
was not inaccurate.
It appears,
including to the journalist who
received the e-mail from Haq, that the goal was to convince other
media to ignore any link between Nambiar and the ICC complaint, and
the underlying killing including “white flag murders” in Sri
Lanka.
Even
many of those
closest to Ban Ki-moon have questioned why Ban sent to Sri Lanka
former Indian ambassador Nambiar, given India's interest in Sri Lanka
especially after the murder of Rajiv Gandhi, and with Nambiar's
brother Satish writing publicly in praise of the Rajapaksas military
campaign in Northern Sri Lanka which has given rise to the war crimes
charges.
One Ban
insider says, “It's not really Nambiar's fault,
Ban should just never have made him the envoy to Sri Lanka.”
But
the mistakenly-given role of Nambiar for the UN in Sri Lanka has so
distorted the
Ban administration's and the UN's response to the events in Sri Lanka
that the spokespeople act as described above, and won't even answer
with whom Ban's Panel on Sri Lanka met. It is a low point in Ban
Ki-moon's tenure as UN Secretary General.
From
the
UN's
transcription
of
its March 11 noon briefing:
Inner
City
Press:
there
was a filing with the International Criminal Court
(ICC), admittedly not by a Government but by a private group, naming
the Sri Lankan Ambassador here, but also having two paragraphs
concerning the Chief of Staff of the Secretary-General, Vijay
Nambiar. And I, it has come to my attention that you wrote to a
journalist saying that this is inaccurate; that there is no complaint
filed with the ICC. And I wanted to know what the basis of that
statement was, since they claim it was filed and they have proof of
filing?
Acting
Deputy
Spokesperson
Haq:
Again, you know, this briefing is not for
me to discuss all of your personal things. We can always discuss
this outside. The basic point is a reporter — and I don’t know
what his exchange with you was, but his exchange with me was whether
a complaint had been filed naming Mr. Nambiar. That is not the case.
But here is
what Haq sent out:
From:
Farhan
Haq
[at]
un.org
Date: Tue, Feb 22, 2011 at 7:16 PM
Re:
Question about Nambiar, ICC and Burma envoy role
Yes,
he
is
still
the
acting Special Adviser on Myanmar.
The
Inner City Press story is inaccurate; there has been no complaint
formally filed at the International Criminal Court. Please ask
the
ICC for anything more on that.
As
for
a
full-time
Special
Adviser, Ban Ki-moon has been considering
that idea; there is nothing to announce for now.
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
Feedback: Editorial
[at] innercitypress.com
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Other,
earlier
Inner
City
Press
are
listed
here,
and
some are available
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Copyright
2006-08
Inner
City
Press,
Inc.
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