Amid
Spread of
Violence in
South Sudan,
UNMISS
Belatedly
Tweets,
Where's US?
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 16 --
With a crisis
in the UN
Peacekeeping
mission in
South Sudan,
on Monday the
UN Security
Council said
nothing on the
matter.
UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous left
the Security
Council
laughing with
his entourage
after 5 pm,
but not a word
on South
Sudan.
Sources told
Inner City
Press that at
a lunch with
European Union
diplomats
midday Monday,
Ladsous told
them some
11,000 people
are sheltering
with the UN
mission
UNMISS. So why
as of Monday
night no
briefing, no
statement?
And
not even any
tweets from Ladsous'
UNMISS'
mission.
Inner
City Press
and the Free
UN Coalition
for Access
@FUNCA_info
raised
the issue:
how could a $1
billion UN
peacekeeping
mission not
even have a
twitter
account?
Hours later,
UNMISS
belatedly
started
tweeting from
an account,
UNMISSjuba, so
far 11 tweets:
press releases
and photos.
The account
had 17
follows:
tellingly,
most UN, then
UK and US.
The US has the
pen in the
Security
Council on
South Sudan.
So where is
the press
statement?
Inner City
Press has
asked.
Sources also
tell Inner
City Press
that there are
some doubts if
President
Salva Kiir's
description of
events as an
attempted coup
by Riek Machar
is accurate;
"it needs to
be further
investigated,"
one Council
diplomat told
Inner City
Press Monday
afternoon.
Now there are
reports of
Nuer being
"hunted down."
When last seen
in UN
headquarters
in New York,
UN envoy to
South Sudan
Hilde Johnson
answered Inner
City Press'
question about
a tweet by a
UN staffer in
South Sudan
by,
essentially,
saying the
staffer was
told not to do
it again. But
shouldn't
UNMISS itself
have an
account? What
is DPKO's
policy? UNsocial.
In Mali,
MINUSMA has an
account and
has in the
past replied
with answers
to the Free UN
Coalition for
Access. But
yesterday
there was no
response, nor
from Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokespeople,
to basic
questions
about the
background to
the deaths of
two UN
peacekeepers
in Kidal.
The
car bombing in
Kidal of the
Banque
Malienne de
Solidarite has
left not only
casualties but
a number of
unanswered
questions in
its wake.
Reported are
the deaths of
two UN
peacekeepers
from Senegal,
Ousmane Fall
and Cheikh
Tidiane Sarr
-- rest in
peace -- and
the serious
wounding,
according to
Mali's
government, of
three more UN
peacekeepers
and two Malian
soldiers, all
evacuated to
Gao for
treatment.
The question
arose, why
were UN
peacekeepers
guarding this
bank facility,
which some say
has also
become a
military
facility?
Inner City
Press has
asked, both
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokespeople
in New York
and, online,
the UN Mission
in Mali
MINUSMA. Posed
to the
Spokespeople:
Regarding
the
car bombing in
Kidal and the
Secretary
General
statement
(including
calling the
target a
"bank"),
please say
whether the
building was
being used, in
whole or part,
as a military
installation.
(This is a
major event
and there is
no noon
briefing on
Monday.)
Also,
separately,
please explain
the fact that
the UN
Peacekeepers
were guarding
this building,
and the
comparative
role of the
Malian army,
police and
other armed
forces.
Given
what USG
Ladsous said
Friday about
the Malian
police and the
death of a
protester in
Kidal, please
state whether
the UN
continues to
provide
support to
this unit of
the Malian
police and if
so, how this
complies with
the stated
Human Rights
Due Diligence
Policy and how
that policy
will be
implemented in
the aftermath
of the
November
shootings in
Kidal.
Still having
no response,
we note that
Maliactu,
whose
censorship by
the Malian
government
both Ban's
spokesperson
on December 12
and French
Ambassador
Gerard Araud
on December 13
said they had
not heard of,
has reported
that Mali's
soldiers were
not supposed
to guard the
bank, but were
inside.
This raises
serious
questions,
including
about the
accountability
of MINUSMA and
UN
Peacekeeping.
The Kidal car
bomb came a
day after UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous
acknowledged
that the
Malian police
in Kidal shot
protesters in
last November
after UN
peacekeepers
and French
Serval forces
told the crowd
to disperse.
Last weekend
one of those
shot died.
Inner
City Press on
December asked
UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous about
the incident,
and also how
France
obtained a
non-public
Letter of
Assist payment
from the UN
for airfield
services in
northern Mali,
how much it is
for and why it
is not more
transparent.
Ladsous
replied
that "I make
it a policy
not to respond
to you,
Mister," but
then provided
something of
an answer to
the first but
not second,
financial,
question. Video
here, from
Minute 15:45.
Inner City
Press YouTube
here and
embedded
below.
He
said, "I will
respond on
Kidal, because
indeed that
was a very
unfelicitous
occurrence.
Our UN Police
and Serval,
the French
troops,
ordered the
crowd to
disperse. It
appears Malian
police did
shoot, and
yes, three
civilians were
injured, one
of whom died
over the
weekend."
In
many
countries, if
an unarmed
civilian is
shot and
killed by
police the
officer is
suspended and
charges are
brought or put
before a grand
jury or other
tribunal. What
is happening
here?
Ladsous
said,
"We are
looking
further into
the matter. Of
course we have
to say if
indeed it is
established
beyond any
doubt that the
Malian police
did shoot,
that is not a
way to behave,
this is
absolutely
unacceptable."
But to
whom must it
be established
beyond a
doubt? In the
case of the
135 rapes in
Minova by the
391st and 41st
Battalions of
the Congolese
Army, the UN
has continued
to provide
material
support to
those two
units for the
eleventh
months before
any trial
started.
Ladsous
did
not say
anything in
response to
Inner City
Press'
question about
how France got
the Letter of
Assist, how
much it is for
and why it is
not more
public.
The
history
of Ladsous and
the policy he
adopted in May
2012 of not
answering
any of Inner
City Press'
questions,
including
about the
Minova rapes
except once at
the
International
Peace
Institute
across First
Avenue from
the UN, is
long; since
there was on
December 13 at
least this
plausible
interim answer
on the Kidal
shootings to
report, we
still leave it
here for now.
(Longer
form here, on
Beacon Reader.)
But
even on this
there are
questions of
policy -- to
use Ladsous'
word -- which
should
obviously be
answered or
responded to.
Does Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
stated Human
Rights Due
Diligence
Policy apply
to this case
of Malian
police
shooting at
unarmed
protesters?
Is the UN's
MINUSMA
mission still
working with
these Malian
police? If so,
does that make
the UN
peacekeepers
combatants?
These
questions
should be
answered.
Watch this
site.
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