Sudan
Blocking
Malnutrition Data, Allowed by UN, Raised to Right to Food
Rapporteur
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
October 21 -- On Darfur, first the UN stopped producing its
Humanitarian Report, then it stopped producing any Global
Malnutrition Data. In August 2010, Inner City Press asked why and was
told the data would be available “in one or two days.” It wasn't.
In
mid September,
new Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs Valerie Amos
told Inner City Press that the delay
was due to attempts to do “joint
assessments” with the Sudanese government, whose President Omar al
Bashir has been indicted by the International Criminal Court for war
crimes and genocide.
On
October 21, with
data still not released and the UN - African Union Mission in Darfur
now refusing to answer questions from Inner City Press about the data
and other collaboration with the al Bashir government, Inner City
Press asked the UN's Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food Olivier
de Schutter about both the blocking of release of malnutrition data,
and Sudan's blockade of food from internally displaced persons camps
like that in Kalma. Video here,
from Minute 32:02.
Olivier
de
Schutter told Inner City Press that he will investigate the
complaints if provided with sufficient prima facie evidence. Video
here,
from Minute 37. This has now been done.
De Schutter in Geneva, action on Sudan not yet shown
Beyond
Ms. Amos'
September 15 statement that the cessation of reporting malnutrition
data is attributable to the Sudanese government, now at last a
UNICEF official has spoken
out more clearly, expressing
“concern
that the Sudanese government 'very often' bars the release of data on
child malnutrition in Darfur. Nils Kastberg, UNICEF Representative in
Sudan, said that the Sudanese security services have also hindered or
delayed UNICEF’s access to camps in Darfur.
“Kastberg
told Radio Dabanga: 'Part of the problem has been when we conduct
surveys to help us address issues, in collaboration with the ministry
of health, very often other parts of the government such as the
humanitarians affairs commission interferes and delays in the release
of reports, making it difficult for us to respond timely.'
“UN
cooperation with the Khartoum ministries like the Ministry of Health
has failed to secure publication of the reports. The UNICEF country
chief said 'we are raising these issues with the government at the
moment that the humanitarian affairs commission should not interfere
with the release of these reports.'
“Kastberg
also pointed out that certain government agencies hinder the entry of
UNICEF staff into the camps. 'Sometimes it is security services that
hinder access or delay access, sometimes it is the humanitarian
affairs office that delays the release of nutritional surveys.
Sometimes it is delays in granting permissions and visas. It is
different sections of different institutions which interfere in our
work.'”
This
has now been
submitted to Special Rapporteur de Schutter by Inner City Press.
Watch this site.
* * *
As
UN
Gambari
Plans Hand Over to Bashir in Sudan, Torture Complaint Mulled at
UN
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
October
19 -- Could the UN, or the chief of its peacekeeping
mission in Darfur
Ibrahim Gambari, be on the verge of violating the UN Convention Against
Torture?
Inner
City Press
asked the chairman of the UN Committee Against Torture Claudio
Grossman this question on October 19, referring to the leaked
documents showing Gambari's plan to turn over five supporters of Fur
rebel Abdel Wahid Nur to the government of Omar al Bashir, accused
of
genocide, war crimes and, yes, torture. Video here,
from Minute
23:25.
Grossman
answered
that “as to the UN system... no one should be sent to places where
he or she will be tortured.” Video here
from Minute 30. He cited
this prohibition to Article 3 of the Convention.
Gambari, hiding in plain sighting, CAT violation not shown
Inner
City Press
asked, but if a complaint is filed about Gambari's and the UN's
pending turn over of five people to Bashir, how would Grossman's
Committee Against Torture process it? Video here,
from
Minute 30:20.
Grossman
said that
while in one sense the Committee's work is limited to member states,
there is creative lawyering. Not only other venues such as Working
Groups and the Special Rapporteur on Torture, but also “journalism
can play a role,” he said.
So
one wonders why
the SLA, or someone on behalf of the Kalma Five, doesn't start
raising the question as an anti-torture issue, using Gambari's draft
-- which contains no assurances on this -- as the basis for the
complaints? Watch this site.
* * *
UN
Won't
Count
IDPs in Darfur or Soldiers in Sudan, Gambari to Violate
Convention Against Torture?
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
October
19 -- The UN routinely fails at stopping conflict,
even at stopping rape. But it continues to be counted on to at least
do some counting. It issues reports, to the Security Council and to
the public, about how many security patrols its mission in Darfur
UNAMID conducted, or how many ceasefire violations occurred across a
border.
In
Sudan, however,
the UN is hitting new lows. Earlier this month covering the Security
Council's trip through the country, Inner City Press exposed
how UN
Humanitarian Coordinator Georg Charpentier was downplaying and even
covering up the destruction of villages in Jebel Marra like Soro,
and
the blockade
of
Internally Displaced Persons' camps like the one
being disassembled in Kalma.
Now
back in New
York, Inner City Press on October 19 asked Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon's acting Deputy Spokesman Farhan Haq to confirm or deny
reports of increased aerial bombardment in Jebel Marra, and a stream
of IDPs to the camps in Shangil Tobaya and Tawila.
While from
the
former, the Security Council was blocked from visiting by the
government, the latter has a Rwandan battalion of UNAMID
peacekeepers.
Haq
responded
with an old statement from Charpentier about Soro, how hard it is to
know. But, Inner City Press asked, can't the UN count the number of
new IDPs arriving, at least at the camps in which it has
peacekeepers? Haq did not answer this simple question of fact. Video here.
To
many, it
appears that the UN, or at least its UNAMID mission under Ibrahim
Gambari, is trying to help cover up the Omar al Bashir regime's
renewed push of ethnic cleansing in Darfur.
Gambari with UK Lyall Grant, US Susan Rice, IDP
counts and CAT not shown
Meanwhile
Gambari's
counterpart at the UN Mission in (South) Sudan, Haile Menkerios, was
caught in a misstatement of fact, according to reporters who cover
him.
In an
October 18 press conference, Menkerios told
Xinhua --
reportedly one of the media organizations whose Sudanese staff was
thrown off the UN Security Council plane by UNMIS in Juba -- that his
Mission hasn't investigated troop build ups on the border of North
and South Sudan because there were only “in the press.”
But
senior southern
army officer Mat Paul told
an
enterprising reporter “U.N. officials were not owning up to
their lack of access. 'This year, the build-up of SAF (northern army)
started in June in South Kordofan and other areas and we've been
raising this several times with the U.N.' said Paul, who is the
SPLA's representative in the joint north-south ceasefire monitoring
commission (CJMC) chaired by the United Nations. 'They...just keep
quiet so there is no monitoring,' he said.”
UNMIS
“lies,”
according to local reporters, to cover up that it has given in to
Khartoum's blockage of access to monitor troop build ups. UNAMID in
Darfur simply refuses to even count incoming IDPs. Both are (mis?) run
by Ban Ki-moon's Department
of Peacekeeping Operations, although Gambari often freelances.
At what point has
the UN become complicit?
Footnote:
UNAMID's
Ibrahim
Gambari's planned turn over to the al Bashir regime
of five supporters of Fur rebel Abdel Wahid Nur may, it was argued
Tuesday at the UN, violate the spirit and even letter of Article 3 of
the Convention against Torture. Inner City Press asked the chairman
of the Committee Against Torture Claudio Grossman if the obligation
not to hand anyone over to a government accused of torture applied to
the UN and UNAMID. Video here.
He
replied that no
one should make such a turn over, and that arguments can be made
about the applicability of the law to the UN (and by implication
Gambari). Watch this site.
* * *
In
Darfur,
Gambari
Criticizes
Nur
&
Inner
City
Press on Video,
Transcription Here
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
DARFUR,
October
8
--
Peacekeepers
were
sent
to
Darfur after reports of a
brutal campaign by the government of Omar al Bashir against opponents
of his regime and civilians perceived as supporting them.
Now
top
peacekeeper
Ibrahim
Gambari,
as
shown
by documents
leaked
to
and
published by
Inner City Press, is near to turning over five supporters of rebel
Abdel Wahid Nur to that same Bashir regime, in exchange for a promise
by Bashir to commute any death sentence his courts impose.
Several
members
of
the
UN
Security
Council,
which ostensibly oversees Gambari's actions
along with the African Union, expressed surprise to Inner City Press
once they saw the leaked documents, consisting of a draft letter and
“Additional Terms” from Gambari to Bashir's foreign minister Ali
Karti.
On
the
UN
plane
Thursday
to
El
Fasher from South Sudan, US Ambassador Susan Rice told
Inner City Press that she intends to inquire into Gambari's offers
about the Kalma Camp Five while in Darfur. This echoed a statement of
intention previously issued by another Permanent Member of the
Council.
After
a
closed
door
meeting
with
the
visiting Security Council members, Gambari
and two
of his military officials, in uniform, came to see the Press.
Gambari
called Inner City Press' publication of his draft documents
“reprehensible” and told Inner City Press to “be careful...
lives are at stake.” Transcription below.
Yeah, a witness to
Gambari's statements later said, the
lives of the Kalma Camp Five are
at risk if the UN turns them over to a strongman already
indicted for
genocide and war crimes. “Is this what the UN should be doing?”
Gambari's
statements
to
Inner
City
Press
were
caught on video and will soon be
published online as such. For now, here is a transcription, prepared
late Thursday night at a guest house in El Fasher outside of
Gambari's UNAMID compound:
Inner
City
Press
asked
Ibrahim
Gambari,
“What's
happen
with the Kalma
Camp Five that you are considering turning over to the government...
or that documents indicate you are considering turning over?”
Gambari
answered:
“Here
is
the
situation.
We
have
these five sheikhs who
have been accused of some very serious offenses. We have no means as
UNAMID to try them... Down the line if ever there was a death
sentence, the President has the prerogative of mercy. All has been
discussed confidentially. I want to say how reprehensible it was
that somebody leaked the confidential communication of the government
of Sudan...endangering the lives of those in the camps. The recipient
of such a leak I think should also think twice about what they do
considering that they are endangering the lives.. We've lost 27
peacekeepers between UNAMID and UNMIS, I mean AMIS.”
Inner
City
Press
asked
about
Abdel
Wahid
Nur
saying that if the Five are
turned over, it will make UNAMID complicit in genocide, and that his
group would not cooperate with the UN any more.
Gambari
responded,
“you
quote
words
Abdel
Wahid
was
supposed to have
said... I met Khalil Ibrahim yesterday, asked how about how someone
said JEM wants Gambari to resign for Tarabat Market. [He
said he] ever said that, never authorized this... I want to hear from
Abdel Wahid. I've been to Paris twice, I went to Tripoli...What
happened in New York I condemn it. Matthew I have known you a long
time, you should be careful... You are a recipient of a leaked
document... Journalism also is a responsibility. I regard you as a
friend, I used to, I regard you as a friend, I am admitting that.”
Of
Abdel
Wahid
Nur,
Gambari
said:
“He wants all issues resolved almost
before he comes.”
“Matthew,
I'm
very
angry
with
you
,
what are we supposed to do, keep people
indefinitely?”
Inner
City
Press
said,
“Several
Security
Council
members,
when they saw
the leaked documents, said they were not aware that you or UNAMID
were in such discussions, and some expressed worry. How much is this
Mission overseen by the Security Council?”
Gambari
said
“Ask
them.
Ask
the
S-G.
I
am responsible to two masters. You
have the AU and you have the UN. The unity of the international
community is key to finding a solution.”
Inner
City
Press
said,
as
Gambari
backed
out
the door toward his vehicle,
“Transparency you can always say is dangerous, but I think it's
probably a good thing.”
“No,”
Gambari
said.
“Believe
me,
lives
are
at stake.”
Or
maybe
jobs,
a witness to Gambari's statements later said, adding that the lives
of the Kalma Camp Five are at risk if the UN turns them over to a
strongman already indicted for genocide and war crimes. Among other
lives put at risk, without oversight, transparency or explanation.
“Is this what the UN should be doing?”
Watch
this site.
Footnote:
it's
worth
noting
that
even
before
Inner
City Press obtained and
published Gambari's draft letter to Sudan's Ali Karti, Gambari had
already expressed anger at Inner City Press' publication
of
other
leaked
documents
concerning
his
time
as UN envoy to Myanmar.
That time,
before
the
UN's
September
24
high
level meeting on Sudan, Gambari didn't
argue about lives being at risk. He claimed the documents were “old”
(2009) and not newsworthy. “Just leave me alone,” he said, having
in the past declined to respond to questions sentto his UN e-mail
address by Inner City Press. Now, the claim that lives are put at
risk. Is it just opposition to transparency?
Watch
this
site,
follow
on
Twitter
@InnerCityPress.
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
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