Sudan
Security Forces Crackdown in
Khartoum Triggers UNSC Session
& Whisper from Guterres
Silent on Tiananmen
By Matthew
Russell Lee, CJR Letter
PFT Q&A
UNITED NATIONS
GATE, June 3 –
While in Khartoum non violent
protesters are shot, the UN of
Antonio Guterres remains
useless, wiht the Secretary
General missing for four days
refusing to disclose his
location, having dumped on the
country an envoy he already
withdrew from Somalia for
asking human rights questions.
New from
Khartoum on June 3, the
thirtieth anniversary of
China's massacre in Tiananmen
Square on which Guterres has
"no patricular comment"
despite repeated written
questions from Inner City
Press he has banned, includes
that Sudanese security forces
have moved against a protest
sit-in camp, besieging the
site and setting fire to
tents, witnesses and protest
leaders said. Machine gun fire
and explosions were heard;
protest organizers said at
least five people were killed.
Amal al-Zein said security
forces set fire to the tents
in sit-in area. “They are
surrounding the sit-in from
all directions,” she
said. The Sudan Doctors’
Committee said at least five
people were killed early
Monday and an unspecified but
high number had been wounded.
“The protesters holding a
sit-in in front of the army
general command are facing a
massacre in a treacherous
attempt to break up our
sit-in,” said the Sudanese
Professionals Association. At
7:30 am Inner City Press asked
Guterres and his spokesman
Stephane Dujarric in writing:
"June
3-1: On Sudan,
what is the
SG's comment
and action on
that today
Sudanese
security
forces have
moved against
a protest
sit-in camp of
non violent
demonstrators,
besieging the
site and
setting fire
to tents,
witnesses and
protest
leaders said.
Machine gun
fire and
explosions
were heard;
protest
organizers
said at least
five people
were killed?"
Dujarric
did not by day's end
acknowledge much less answer
this and other Inner City
Press questions including on
Cameroon and Sri Lanka. At the
noon briefing to those he
allowed in - who called it
"important" - Dujarric began,
" The Secretary-General
strongly condemns the violence
and reports of the excessive
use of force by security
personnel on civilians, that
have resulted in the deaths
and injury of many. He
condemns the use of force to
disperse the protestors at the
sit-in site and he is alarmed
by reports that security
forces have opened fire inside
medical
facilities.
The Secretary-General reminds
the Transitional Military
Council of its responsibility
for the safety and security of
the citizens of Sudan. He
urges all parties to act with
utmost restraint." Yeah, to
Guterres those non violent
protesters definitely have to
show more restraint. And on
Tiananmen Dujarric said
Guterres has no particular
comment. He is corrupt and
killing the UN.
The UK
says it has quietly asked for
a closed door meeting of the
UNSC, probably on Tuesday
afternoon blocking out a
meeting including Cameroon
which the UK also blocks out,
and blacks out by withholding
documents from the Press its
Alison Smale bans from the UN,
under UK FOIA...
Despite
Sudan's Omar al Bashir being
indicted for genocide, Antonio
Guterres repeatedly met with
him, as acknowledged to Inner
City Press by Guterres' deputy
spokesman Farhan Haq on 29
January 2018 (before Guterres
had Inner City Press roughed
up and banned
from the UN for 281 days
now). On April 11, state
media in Khartoum reported
that Bashir is out - and from
Guterres, silence. Now on
April 20, with Guterres on
"annual leave" with location
undisclosed and his $15
million mansion on New York's
Sutton Place empty, suitcases
full of more than $351,000,
€6m ($6.7m; £5.2m) and five
billion Sudanese pounds
($105m) have been found in
Bashir's home. From Guterres,
silence. What's in HIS
mansion? Guterres likes
strongmen like Cameroon's Paul
Biya, from whom he took a
golden statue. CEFC, which
tried to buy the oil company
of Gulbenian Foundation whose
payments to Guterres were
omitted from his public
financial disclosure covering
2016, brought $2 million in
cash in gift boxes to Idriss
Deby in Chad... On April 6
amid protests in Sudan and
around the world, there was a
protest in front of the UN.
Inner City Press filmed the
tail end of it, here
on YouTube,
here
on Facebook.
Guterres was away, meeting
strongman Haftar in Libya as
he had met the killing Paul
Biya in Cameroon, and taken a
golden statue from him.
Guterres is the most corrupt
Secretary General yet of the
UN, and may be its demand. If
you want to save the UN,
#DumpGuterres: #NoSecondTerm.
On the morning of April 8,
Inner City Press sent
questions to Guterres, Amina
J. Mohammed, Alison Smale and
Stephane Dujarric who held a
briefing these four banned
Inner City Press from the
278th day, including: "April
8-1: On Sudan, what is the
SG's comment and action if any
on that security forces in
Sudan have used teargas and
baton charges in an effort to
break up a protest by tens of
thousands of peaceful
anti-government demonstrators
who have been camped for more
than 48 hours in central
KhartoumThe demonstrators are
calling for the president,
Omar al-Bashir, who seized
power in a military coup in
1989, to resign. At least one
protester, a laboratory
doctor, was killed on Saturday
when huge crowds surged
through the centre of
Khartoum. Activists say the
number of casualties may be
much higher. Again, how many
times has Mr. Guterres met
with Bashir? Why?"
On
the afternoon of April 8
Dujarric send this out: "The
Secretary-General is following
closely the demonstrations in
Sudan. He appeals to all
actors to exercise utmost
restraint and avoid
violence. He calls for
full respect for human rights,
including the freedom of
assembly, the freedom of
expression, and the release of
detained protestors. He
further calls on the
Government of the Sudan to
create a conducive environment
for a solution to the current
situation and to promote an
inclusive
dialogue.
The Secretary-General affirms
that the United Nations stands
ready to support any efforts
agreed by the Sudanese to
peacefully resolve the current
crisis.
Stéphane Dujarric, Spokesman
for the
Secretary-General New
York, 8 April 2019." On March
13, this: "ACJPS calls upon
Sudanese authorities to
urgently investigate the
reported torture and custodial
death of three University
students who were detained by
the National Intelligence and
Security Services (NISS) for
participating in the ongoing
protests. Mr Muhajoob Eltaj
Muhajoob, a 25-year-old
student from Khartoum died on
24 December 2018 shortly after
being detained on the same day
by NISS of Khartoum. Reliable
information indicates that he
was subjected to torture
including beatings on
different parts of his body
using horse pipes and sticks
while in NISS
custody. In
January 2019, ACJPS documented
the custodial and suspicious
deaths of two students
arrested for participating in
peaceful protests by NISS in
Khartoum and Al Gaderef
states. The dead bodies of
both students retrieved from
River Nile in Khartoum and Al
Gederef hospital had serious
marks of torture. One of the
deceased students had a bullet
wound in his mouth and his
hair was shaven off.
[Then there are the] 48
University students who remain
in NISS custody since protests
broke out on December 19 2018,
given reports about the
torture and ill-treatment. The
students were arrested during
raids on students' residence
by NISS in the states of
Khartoum, Sennar and Port
Sudan among others." What will
Guterres say? Guterres
met with Bashir again, in
Addis Ababa. Inner City Press
on February 13 before the UN
noon briefing run by Guterres'
lead spokesman Stephane
Dujarric asked him, Alison
Smale, Amina J. Mohammed and
others: "February 13-2: On
Sudan and the ICC, please
immediately deny or confirm
and read out that " United
Nations Secretary-General
Antonio Guterres met with
Sudan’s president on the
sidelines of the African Union
summit in Addis Ababa, said
Foreign Minister El-Dirdeiry
Ahmed in a statement released
on Monday. The meeting
of al-Bashir with Guterres was
reported by the official news
agency SUNA saying it took
place at the Sheraton Hotel in
Addis Ababa on the sidelines
of the 32nd Ordinary Summit of
the African Union." How many
times in total has Guterres
met Bashir - and any other ICC
indictees?" None of these have
answered, despite promises
including to UNSR David Kaye
that they would. But the UN
has become such a scam that
inside the February 13 noon
briefing Inner City Press was
banned from one of Dujarric's
partners in censorship, James
Bays of Al Jazeera (see
Dujarric's false claims to the
Columbia Journalism Review, here)
asked a question not about the
meeting with Bashir, but only
about Guterres standing next
to Bashir in the African Union
"family photo." Dujarric was,
not surprisingly, able to
dismiss the issue by saying
the AU chose where people
stood. Did the AU make
Guterres meet with Bashir?
Watch this site. On February 9
there was a protest outside
the UN in New York, demanding
action on Bashir - this while
INSIDE Guterres' UN the
Delegates' Dining Room was
given over to yet another
China Intangible Cultural
Heritage event,
and Guterres continues to
cover up his links to CEFC
China Energy. Bashir under
fired it offering as an
inducement for support raises
and new housing to "his"
police. (At the UN Guterres
has used UN Security to rough
up the critical Press
and put it without due process
on a non-public
"barred"
list that his official in
charge of media access Alison
Smale said
she has nothing to do with,
but would take under
advisement - then nothing,
including no answers to
questions.) On January 23 US
State Department deputy
spokesperson Robert Palladino
issued this: "The United
States is concerned about the
increasing number of arrests
and detentions, as well as the
escalating number of people
injured and killed, following
four weeks of protests across
Sudan. The United States
supports the right of the
Sudanese people to gather
peaceably to voice their
demands for political and
economic reform and a more
peaceful and inclusive
Sudan. We condemn the
use of violence, including the
use of live fire, and the
excessive use of tear gas by
the Sudanese security
forces. A new, more
positive relationship between
the United States and Sudan
requires meaningful political
reform and clear, sustained
progress on respect for human
rights. This must
include prohibiting the
security services’ use of
arbitrary detention and
excessive force against
protesters, and ending the
government’s harassment and
intimidation of journalists,
human rights defenders,
political opposition, medical
personnel, students, and other
civil society actors. We
urge the government to release
all journalists, activists,
and peaceful protesters who
have been arbitrarily
detained, and to allow those
facing charges full access to
legal representation and the
opportunity to seek legal
review of their
detention. We also call
on the government to allow for
a credible and independent
investigation into the deaths
and injuries of
protesters. Moreover, to
address the legitimate
grievances of the population,
the government must create a
safe and secure environment
for public expression and
dialogue with the opposition
and civil society in a more
inclusive political process."
On January 14 Inner City Press
asked Guterres and his
spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
who had promised
to answer, "On Sudan, what is
the SG's comment and action on
that Sudanese security forces
Sunday fired tear gas and real
bullets on Khartoum North
Hospital and other medical
facilities in other towns said
a statement issued by the
Sudan Doctors’ Syndicate?
Again, please state when and
why Mr Guterres met Omar al
Bashir." But there has been no
answer. Rather, now on
January 17 a statement by
Michelle Bachelet whom
Guterres picked as Rights
Commissioner and who has said
nothing about Guterres' own
roughing up and banning of the
Press, now for 196 days.
Here's from Bachelet:
"Credible reports of the use
of excessive force, including
live ammunition, by State
security forces against
protestors across Sudan over
the past month are deeply
worrying, UN High Commissioner
for Human Rights Michelle
Bachelet said Thursday.
Bachelet called on the
Government to protect the
exercise by all of their
rights to freedom of
expression and peaceful
assembly, regardless of their
political affiliations.
The demonstrations since 19
December 2018 have taken place
in a number of cities across
Sudan, including Wad Madani,
Port Sudan, Al-Qadarif,
Atbara, Berber, Dongla,
Karima, Al-Damazin, Al Obeid,
Khartoum, Sinar, Bara, Nyala
and Omdurman. The Government
has confirmed that 24 people
have died in the course of the
protests, but other credible
reports suggest the death toll
may be nearly twice as high.
Many others have been injured.
According to information
received, security forces have
also followed some protestors
into the Omdurman Hospital and
fired tear gas and live
ammunition inside the premises
of the hospital. Reports also
suggest that police fired tear
gas inside Bahri Teaching
Hospital and Haj Al-Safi
Hospital. These two hospitals
are in Khartoum North, where a
large protest was organized by
opposition groups.
Authorities have also
confirmed that up to 6
January, at least 816 people
were arrested in connection
with the demonstrations.
Reports indicate that these
include journalists,
opposition leaders, protestors
and representatives of civil
society. “A repressive
response can only worsen
grievances,” High Commissioner
Bachelet said. “I am
very concerned about reports
of excessive use of force,
including live ammunition, by
Sudanese State Security Forces
during large-scale
demonstrations in various
parts of the country since 19
December." So she calls for
freedom of expression?
Everywhere but in the UN,
where Guterres banned critical
Inner City Press even from her
own events? Under Guterres and
now Bachelet, the UN is
rotting into hypocrisy, mere
words from arrogant absentees.
We'll have more on this. Back
on 20 December 2018, banned
Inner City Press asked
Guterres and his spokesman
Stephane Dujarric and Farhan
Haq, "December 20-2: On Sudan,
what is the SG's comment and
action on the anti-government
protests that started on
Wednesday in northern Sudan
and have been spreading to
other cities?" Even by 7 pm on
December 28 with more
journalists arrested in Sudan,
for example Ahmed Younes from
Al-Sharq Alowsat newspaper and
Maha Al-Tilib from Attayar
newspaper, both just for
reporting on the protests in
Wad Nubawi, Omdurman, there
was no answer at all, nor to
46 other questions Inner City
Press has submitted including
on conflicts
of interest by Guterres.
It turns out the UN has become
so corrupt under Guterres that
one of lead Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric's Associate
Spokespeople Ms
Keishamaza
Rukikaire who
actually seems to care or at
least re-tweet about Sudan has
been ordered not to answer
banned Inner City Press'
written questions about Sudan,
etc, see here.
***
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