At
UN
on Abyei Draft, Sudan PR Denies Food Theft, Dismisses
Burning of “Huts," UNSC to Set June 10 Meeting
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
June 3, updated -- Seventy hours after the US
introduced a draft
Presidential Statement on Abyei,
Sudan's Ambassador Daffa-Alla Elhag Ali Osman walked into the Security
Council in a bright white suit.
Already a Council Deputy Permanent Representative had told Inner City
Press that more work was needed on the Statement, to begin at 1 pm on
Friday.
As
Sudan's
Ambassador walked out of the Council, Inner City Press asked him
about the draft. He said it had been inaccurate to call Sudan's tanks
in Abyei an occupation. (Inner City Press is told that this word is
being removed). He took issue with the phrase that the influx of
Miseriya was an attempt at ethnic cleansing.
“That is
prejudging,” he said. “Let it happen, genocide or ethnic
cleansing, and then talk about it.”
Sudan PR & Ban Ki-moon, follow through on food
theft not shown
When
Inner City
Press asked him about the accusation that tons of food was stolen in
Abyei, he said he hadn't seen the World Food Program see that. Asked
by another journalist about the burning of houses, he said, “those
are huts, these things happen in war. Where are you from - Lebanon?
These things happen there.”
And
then he was
gone, at least until 1 pm.
Update of 11:40 am
-- a Deputy Permanent Representative tells Inner City Press that the
meeting on the Sudan PRST has been moved up from 1 until just after the
consultations on UNOCA, as early as noon. What else will come out of
the draft? Watch this site.
Update of 12:30 pm
-- Inner City Press is told that if the Council finally reaches
agreement on this PRST, it will be adopted by being read out in the
Chamber at 4 pm...
Update
of
1:19 pm -- after a Deputy Permanent Representative tells Inner
City Press that the Sudan PRST is “definitely” going to be
adopted at 4 pm, another source explains to Inner City Press that
there is only one paragraph open, in which the US wants to require
new meetings on the topic every seven days, other members don't.
Eminently solvable.
Update
of
2:26 pm -- while another Deputy Permanent Representative tells
Inner City Press that the Council has agreed to hold another meeting
on Sudan next week, says they have still not agreed on how to express
it in language and “put it on paper.” A Western representative
asks Inner City Press, if we put it out at 4, the news can still be
distributed, right? But of course...
Update
of
2:51 pm -- the Political Coordinators have just left the Council,
a number of them telling Inner City Press that the agreement, to be
typed up by the US and translated into French in which Gabon will
read it out, is to remain seized of the matter and to calendar
another meeting on Sudan for June 10... Timing of adoption now
depends on US typing up, and translation...
Update
of
4:32 pm -- while the players have arrived for adoption of the
Sudan PRST at the Security Council, still the meeting hasn't started.
Meanwhile, reports
of a UN leak saying it WAS ethnic cleansing in
Abyei, here
Update
of
4:39 pm -- a Deputy Permanent Representative tells Inner City
Press, “the French translation is not ready.”
* * *
At
UN,
Amid Haggling on Sudan, Haysum's Hat in Ring, Pascoe Eager to Leave?
By
Matthew
Russell Lee, Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
June 1, updated -- Twenty four hours after the US presented
a draft
Presidential Statement on Sudan asking for Security Council action
that same day, the Council remained in negotiations on it, from 11
am
Wednesday until Deputy Permanent Representatives began arriving
along with a new US draft after 3 pm.
One sticking
point
was flagged on the margins of Tuesday's Council meeting: whether
Khartoum's tanks in Abyei should be called an occupation.
China's
Permanent
Representative Li Baodong told Inner City Press that the word
occupation will not be in the PRST. He said that Sudan is the
priority for June, that China has no preference if stability is brought
by UN
peacekeepers or Ethiopian troops under an African Union banner.
(He
added that the AU felt “marginalized” on Libya, and that China
welcomes a visit to New York by an AU ministerial delegation in mid
June, on which Inner City Press reported on Tuesday, click here.)
The
elephant in the (consultations) room is what the future of the UN
Mission in Sudan or its successor will be. Ban Ki-moon proposed 7000
peacekeepers, which Southern Sudan said is not enough.
Tuesday
evening
UNICEF official Hilde Johnson confirmed to Inner City Press its
previous report, that she, Ian Martin and at least one other UN
official are under consideration to replace Haile Menkerios as head
of UNMIS.
Inner
City Press
can now exclusively report the name of this “other UN official”
-- it is Ban Ki-moon's savvy South African adviser on peacekeeping and
political affairs
Nicolas Haysum. Sources told Inner City Press a week ago that the
onus for Haysum's consideration is Ban Ki-moon's on again off again
policy of mobility, of no more than five years in a UN job.
Under
this policy,
for example, Department of Peacekeeping Operations' long time
spokesman has been sent out to Somalia.
But
others notice
that the policy is not being applied to many of those closest to Ban,
for example his chief of staff Vijay Nambiar, his (and Kofi Annan's)
adviser Robert Orr, and genial DPKO chief Alain Le Roy, of whom more
and
more sources tell Inner City Press a (French) replacement has been
chosen, akin to the proposed Lagarde for DSK switch.
The
head of Ban's
Department of Political Affairs Lynn Pascoe is said to one close to
him to “want out, badly.” But would the UK take his spot? And if
so, what of Valerie Amos?
Pascoe, even
when he skips the stakout, answers on such topics as Kyrgystan. On
Wednesday the Spokesperson's Office took a question for him about the
mutinies in Burkina Faso. Watch this site.
Footnote: Menkerios
on Tuesday evening told Inner City Press, when asked when he'll come
back to New York, "when they call me." On Wednesday, Li Baodong told
Inner City Press Menkerios is "experienced" and "knows both sides," and
that China hopes he will stay while he is needed. We'll see.
Update of 3:50 pm --
outside the DPR level consultation, a close observer marveled to Inner
City Press that the US hadn't given any time for members' experts to
even confer with their DPR - the US "just keeps pushing."
Update of 4:13 pm --
the DPR's have left, two telling Inner City Press that the experts'
work wasn't done, it was too early to have convened them. On the
substance, some point at Southern Sudan having put a claim to own Abyei
in its draft constitution a provocation, just like what's now being
called the North's "takeover" (not occupation) of Abyei. Susan
Rice has done in to meet with Gabon, as storm clouds (literally) gather
over the UN.
Update
of
4:53 pm -- as US Ambassador Susan Rice left her bilateral meeting
with June's Gabonese Security Council president, Inner City Press
asked her to confirm that the word “occupation” of Abyei is
coming out of the PRST. It doesn't matter, she said. It's just a
word.
Sources
say that
the alternative is “takeover.”
Inner
City Press
asked Ambassador Rice about the US' just announced “boycott” of
the Durban III review conference. Not a boycott, she said.
Non-participation.
Another
word
switch. And so it goes at the UN.
Update
of
5:40 pm -- on the US drafted Sudan PRST, the experts meeting has
broken up. Inner City Press is told it will be sent to capital, also
subject to more negotiations Thursday morning under “Other Matters”
alongside the program of work consultations.
This is a substantive
text, an expert complained. They only introduced it yesterday
afternoon - how can they expect us to just go along? Delegations had
problems not only with “occupation” applied to Abyei, but also
“ethnic cleansing.” Which words will be traded out? Watch this
site.
* * *
UN
Admits
2d
Flight
of
ICC
Darfur
Indictee
Haroun
to
Abyei
in
Sudan,
Impunity
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
March
4,
updated -- The UN
has for a second time offered a free UN
flight in Sudan to Ahmed Haroun, under indictment by the
International Criminal Court for war crimes in Darfur, the UN
admitted Friday in response to questions from Inner City Press.
On
March 3 the UN
Security Council met about renewed fighting in the disputed Abyei
region. Back in January, Inner City Press got the UN to acknowledge
they had flown ICC indictee Haroun from South Kordofan, where he
serves fellow ICC indictee Omar al Bashir as governor, to Abyei.
The
UN has defended
this controversial flight by saying that Haroun and Haroun alone
could stop violence in Abyei. The UN never explained why the
government of Sudan, which has an air force currently bombing civilians
in Jebel Marra in Darfur, couldn't itself fly Haroun.
The
UN said it was
a scheduled flight, then UN Mission in Sudan chief Haile Menkerios
admitted to
Inner City Press that it was a special flight. Inner City Press is
told such flights cost $40,000, and the UN has confirm no
reimbursement has been sought from the Bashir government.
But
now the
violence has continued, making the UN flight of ICC indictee Haroun
harder to justify even by the UN's own argument.
March
3
in
front
of
the
Security
Council,
Inner
City
Press
asked
Council
president
for
March Li Baodong of China if the UN Peacekeeping official who briefed
the Council, Atul Khare, had mentioned if Haroun would again be flown
in a UN helicopter. Li Baodong did not directly answer.
At
the March 4 UN
noon briefing, Inner City Press asked Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's
spokesman Martin Nesirky to confirm or deny that that the UN would
once again fly ICC indictee Haroun to Abyei, even now that his work in
connection with the first flight has proved ineffective.
Nesirky
said
he
would
check.
Ten
minutes
later,
Nesirky's
deputy
Farhan
Haq
announced
by
speaker
to all UN correspondents that yes, Haroun attended today's
meeting in Abyei, and yes, “he was transported” by the UN.
This
UN
promotes
impunity,
even
for
one
of
the
few
people
indicted
for
war
crimes by
the ICC. Meanwhile Ban Ki-moon brags about the Security Council's partial
referral of the situation in Libya to the ICC -- a referral that Ban
Ki-moon did not even call for until after the Council voted to make
the referral.
This
UN
is
promoting
and
enshrining
lawlessness,
with
no
transparency
or
accountability.
Watch
this
site.
Update
of 3:48 pm -- Human Rights Watch, via Richard Dicker, submitted
this
comment:
“This
is the second time in recent weeks the UN has transported Ahmed
Haroun who is charged by the ICC with war crimes in Darfur. We have
real concerns because the U.N. should not be in the business of
transporting Haroun. There needs to be an extremely high threshold of
urgency for such action by UNMIS.”
Responses
have
been
sought
from
the
Missions
to
the
UN
of
France,
the
UK
and the US,
with the latter two asked if they knew in advance of the UN's new
flight of ICC indictee Haroun. Given her
statements
this
year
about
social
media, & after hours of non-response by the US Mission
to the UN,@AmbassadorRice
has been asked directly as well. Watch
this site.
Update
of
4:30
pm
--
Then
this,
from
UK
Mission
to
the
UN
spokesman
Daniel
Shepherd:
“As
spokesperson, I would only reiterate the message that my two
Ambassadors have both said on the record (and published by Inner City
Press) first time around: that we aren’t going to second guess how
UNMIS fulfills its mandate to provide good offices to the
Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) parties in efforts to resolve
differences through dialogue and negotiations. I’d only add that
this work is particularly important at this sensitive time, to
contain any potential escalation after the recent Abyei violence.”
We could
note
again that violence has persisted despite the UN flying ICC indictee
Ahmed Haroun in the first time, and that it is the role of UN member
states to oversee the UN Secretariat, not to defer in this case to
what some see as its promotion of impunity - but at least the UK
would put its position on the record.
Update
of
4:43
pm
--
this
too
has
come
in,
perhaps
in
response:
Date:
Fri,
Mar
4,
201
Subject: Haroun and Abyei
To: Matthew.Lee [at]
innercitypress.com
You
guys
ask
great
questions!
Have
you
noticed
perhaps
that
the
United
Nations
seems
to
be unaware of who is causing the violence in Abyei.
And yet "diplomatic sources" report seeing the burial of 33
bodies - all southerners.
The
Arab
nomads
say
the
violence
started
when
SPLM
police
shot
at
them
(Hitler
used
a similar ploy to invade Poland) - and today thousands
of civilians fled Abyei fearing another crisis like in June 2008. The
Dinka Ngok villages north of Abyei, such as Maker, have been
burnt to the ground. The end explains the means. There is a
creeping ethnic cleansing going on in the Abyei region despite the
agreements of 2005 and the Court of Arbitration ruling in 2010.
Why
fly
Haroun
to
Abyei
-
what
is
his
cv?
It
is,
as
you
correctly point
out, that of arming arab militias to burn villages. I hope to see
more of your questions pinning the UN to the responsibility to
protect.
Click
for Mar 1, '11
BloggingHeads.tv re Libya, Sri Lanka, UN Corruption
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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[at] innercitypress.com
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Inner
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Inc.
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