By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Exclusive
series
UNITED
NATIONS,
September 2 --
Since the
South Sudan
peace
agreement was
signed by
President
Salva Kiir,
saying that he
had
reservations,
fighting and
re-supply has
continued
through the
closed-down
Juba airport
and barges
then headed to
Malakal.
On both August
31, after an
exclusive
report below,
and on
September 1,
Inner City
Press asked
the UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric to
confirm the
continued
fighting but
he declined,
including
answering who
runs Juba
airport, as
least as to
the UN.
Now Inner City
Press is
informed by
sources in
South Sudan of
bombing of I/O
positions in
Tonga, Owashi
and Werjwok
(West of
Malakal) and of
movement of ammunition
into the
country
through the
Nimule
crossing.
The
sources,
citing
internal
UNMISS
sit-reps like
the one
published
below which
Dujarric
refused to
confirm or
deny, are
questioning
more
insistently
why UN
Peacekeeping
is "covering
up what it
knows about
CPA II
violations."
They note that
UN Peacekeeping
boss Herve
Ladsous has
engaged in
previous cover
up, in South
Sudan, DR
Congo and
elsewhere,
including the
Central
African Republic
even for the
French
Sangaris
force.
Whistleblowing
sources
exclusively
provided Inner
City Press
with this
"Restricted"
UN document:
“RESTRICTED
Ref:
045/SB/28/08/2015
Dear All,
Information
received from
Host
Government
security
organs
indicate that
effective
today SPLA Air
force will
conduct night
exercises at
the Juba
airport,
starting from
2000 hrs. This
exercise is to
continue for
the next few
days
(unspecified).
UN/INGO
Personnel are
therefore
advised to
avoid the
airport
general area
during the
stated period.
End”
These sources
emphasize to
Inner City
Press the role
at the Juba
airport of
ENHAS, Entebbe
Handling
Services and
its links to
the outgoing
President of
the US General
Assembly Sam
Kutesa,
relative of
Ugandan
President
Yoweri
Museveni and
still, as
Inner City
Press
confirmed,
Uganda's
Foreign
Minister while
UNPGA.
Among with the
reported
skirmishes at
Malakal, and
according to
the SPLM/A I/O
in Bukieny,
Ditang, Obuwa
and Lelo and
shelling from
the government
barges as they
proceed along
the Nile,
sources tell
Inner City
Press of
fighting at
the ports of
Adok and
Tayar. "Some
ceasefire,"
said one. But
how long will
the silence at
the UN
continue?
Background:
Inner City
Press published
Salva
Kiir's
12 page
reservation
docuemnt, here,
just as Inner
City Press
earlier put
online the
August 17
Compromise
Agreement, as
first
obtained,
here.
On August 28,
after some
push back, the
Security
Council
adopted a
Presidential
Statement
welcoming
Kiir's signing
but not
referring to
any credible
and effective
mechanism to
seek
accountability.
On the way in,
only the
Permanent
Representative
of Venezuela
spoke - to
confirm that
his country's
issues with
Colombia are
bilateral and
may involved
at the end
UNASUR, not
the UN.
Afterward, no
one else
spoke.
After
publishing
Kiir's 12
pages of
reservations,
Inner City
Press on
August 27 in
front of the
Security
Council asked
the Permanent
Representatives
of Angola and
of the United
Kingdom about
Kiir's
reservations.
Angola's
Ismael Abraao
Gaspar Martins
told Inner
City Press,
when asked one
on one outside
the Security
Council, "I
have seen
them. These
are very
serious
reservations,
I think. This
calls for the
Council to
monitor what
is there, how
it's going to
be implemented
and what
actions we
need to
continue to
do, to make
sure they move
forward, so
the violence
stops. If it
has been
adopted, it
has to be
applied."
Earlier,
on his way
into the Syria
meeting, Inner
City Press
asked UK
Permanent
Representative
Matthew
Rycroft about
Kiir's
reservations,
specifically
the "deletion"
of provisions
to disarm the
SPLM-N, and
groups in
Darfur (on
which the UK
holds the
Council's
pen). Periscope
video here.
The 12-page
reservation
document
says to delete
the provision
about
disarming
Darfur based
armed groups
including JEM,
SLA-Minnawi,
SLA-Abdulwahid,
as well as the
SPLM-North.
It resists
calling the
Army the NDFSS
and referring
to the "Armed
Opposition"
instead of the
SPLM/A-IO. It
says the
National Army
will remain
inside its
headquarters,
and would
delete Juba
from the list
of cantonment
areas. It says
there is a
need to
reconstitute
the Monitoring
and
Verification
Mechanism.
It says to
limit the JMEC
and delete the
word "oversee"
throughout.
The
article on
reparation and
compensation
is to be
removed.
Who
would be vice
president(s)
would be up to
Kiir: no
reward for
rebellion, or
"gambling" on
who ministers
will be. The
rebels should
not be
governors in
Unity, Jonglei
and Upper Nile
State. Power
sharing should
be 70-20, not
46-40.
Funds should
be with the
Minister of
Finance. As
always, follow
the money --
Inner City
Press would
add, to Kenya
Commercial
Bank and
beyond. We'll
have more on
this.
Before Kiir
signed,
Uganda's
Yoweri
Museveni advised
him to get the
UN out of the
country,
saying having
the UN is is a
sign of
weakness and
that the UN
preserves
terrorism.
Past
5 pm New York
time on August
26, UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon
offered praise
for Kiir
signing,
saying nothing
of the
reservation or
of the UN
being openly
trashed by
Museveni.
It is to
Museveni that
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon has
been deferring
on Burundi,
still not
having named a
UN envoy as
the UN
Security
Council called
"imminent" two
weeks ago.
(Ban was in
France on
August 26,
praising the
country's
ambassadorial
corps without
a single
mention of
French troops'
alleged rape
of children in
the Central
African
Republic,
covered up by
Ban's (French)
head of UN
Peacekeeping,
Herve
Ladsous.)
In fairness to
Museveni, his
reference may
have been in
part to
Ladsous'
MONUSCO
failing to act
on armed
groups in
Eastern Congo
-- including
the FDLR,
which also
impinges on
Burundi. We'll
have more on
this. Here was
Ban's August
26 statement:
"The
Secretary-General
welcomes the
signature
today by
President
Salva Kiir of
the Agreement
on the
resolution of
the Conflict
in the
Republic of
South Sudan.
This is a
critical and
necessary step
towards ending
the 20
month-long
conflict that
has devastated
South Sudan
and subjected
its people to
unspeakable
suffering." full statement
here.
In front of
the Security
Council on
August 26,
there was
loose talk
about Kiir
signing; an
African
diplomat told
Inner City
Press, "He
signed! He was
obliged!" with
no mention of
the
reservations.
The UN had no
noon
briefing
-- it said it
woul only have
one if
something
important
happened, this
was apparently
not important
- here are
answers from August
24 and August
25, Inner
City Press'
South Sudan
questions have
been not been
answered.
On August 25,
Ellen Loj, the
head of the UN
Mission in the
country UNMISS
told the UN
Security
Council that
Kiir is
expected to
sign the
agreement on
August 26.
Inner City
Press asked,
how might that
impact the
pending draft
resolution on
sanctions and
an arms
embargo?
After
consultations
on August 25,
Security
Council
President for
August Joy
Ogwu of
Nigeria
emerged with
Elements to
the Press
including:
“The
Council
members
expressed
concern on the
deteriorating
humanitarian
and security
situation.
They condemned
the continuing
fighting by
the parties
and underlined
the need for a
peaceful
resolution of
the crisis.
“They
expressed
optimism that
President
Salva Kiir
would follow
through on his
commitment to
sign the IGAD
Plus Peace
Agreement
without
reservation.
“They stressed
the importance
of full
implementation
of the
Agreement.
Council
members
underscored
the need to
remain engaged
on the
situation in
South Sudan.
In this regard
they expressed
their
readiness to
act
immediately if
President Kiir
does not sign
the agreement
tomorrow as he
has
undertaken."
Inner City
Press asked
Ambassador
Ogwu about
sending the
draft
resolution's
annexes to the
African Union
and IGAD, as
an African
delegation
told Inner
City Press
about. Ogwu
answered that
speed is
important, but
also that it
be concerted,
a consensus,
like an
orchestra, it
doesn't matter
who writes the
notes,
but...
Here's fast
transcript of
Q&A from
InnerCityPro,
which also has
analysis:
Inner
City Press:
Some members
talked about
sending the
annexes to the
AU or IGAD.
Was there
discussion of
that? When you
say
immediately,
does it
include that?
Amb
Ogwu: We all
understand the
need for
urgency,
because the
situation is
urgent. But
also there is
the need for
concerted
action, for
consensus. It
is a stage and
all the
players must
act as an
orchestra,
play the
symphony, it
doesn’t matter
who writes the
notes but it’s
important to
act in unison,
act with one
voice.
In her
national
capacity,
Nigeria's
Ambassador
Ogwu
emphasized the
need for an
arms embargo,
and to check
where the
weapons in the
country are.
Loj
spoke of
discouraging
some from
entering the
UN's
"protection of
civilian"
camps, without
addressing the
blocking of
civilians
fleeing
fighting from
the UN's
Yambio camp,
which Inner
City Press has
repeatedly
asked about.
Nor did she
address if
UNMISS' radio
station, Radio
Miraya, kept
right on
broadcasting
amid a strike
by media in
the country to
protect the
assassination
of journalist
Peter Julius
Moi.