By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, April
23 -- After
the Organization
for the
Prevention of
Chemical
Weapons told
the UN
Security
Council on
April 23 that
Syria has
removed or
destroyed 88%
of supplies,
the questions
were mostly
about new
reports of chlorine
gas use.
Inner City
Press asked
April's
Security Council
president Joy
Ogwu of
Nigeria about
any
investigation
by the OPCW.
She said, they
could play a
role. Inner
City Press
asked, But
will they?
Next, Syria's
Ambassador
Bashar
Ja'afari came
out, denied
that his
government
used the
"mundane"
chemical chlorine
but said the
timing of the
allegation was
too
convenient.
Inner
City Press
asked him of
the Syria Coalition's
statement it
would not
resume Geneva
talks in the
foreseeable
future given
the
announcement
of elections
in June. Ja'afari
replied that
his government
is still
waiting to
hear back from
mediator
Brahimi, who
he added has
"made many
mistakes."
There was more
interest than
usual in
asking
Ja'afari
questions.
Some grabbed
the boom microphone;
Reuters bureau
chief barged
into the roped
off area of
the UN
Television
cameraman,
according to
the cameraman
himself.
Instead of
apologizing,
the Reuters
bureau chief
demanded, What
are you
looking at.
We note this
because we are
against a two
or three tier
UN and it's
the same
character who
who filed "for
the record"
but "private"
anti-Press
complaints
with the UN
he-- one of
them saying he
couldn't do
his job with
the Press
around -- then
got
one of them
censored from
Google's
Search
claiming it
was copyrighted
the Digital
Millennium
Copyright Act.
Click here for
that. This
is how the UN
works, or
doesn't.
Back on April
17, Homs in
Syria was the
topic when the
UN Security
Council met at
5:30 pm.
France called
the meeting
but most who
left called it
a failure.
What
was agreed to
were vague
"elements to
the press"
about
supporting
Brahimi's call
for local
ceasefire
talks in
Homs.
Inner City
Press asked
April's
Council
president Joy
Ogwu of
Nigeria why no
reference to
wider "Geneva
3" talks was
included. It
is not in
there, she
indicated. Video here.
Then Syrian
Ambassador
Bashar Ja'fari
came to speak.
Inner City
Press asked
him about
US-made BGM-71
TOW missiles
now in Syria,
of the group
Harakat Hazm.
They are with
Al Nusra,
Ja'afari said.
Inner City
Press asked on
what basis
Ja'afari said
the US
approved their
transfer to
Syria, if they
could have
come through
Turkey.
Ja'afari said
there is no
way they could
come in
without
approval from
Washington. Video here --
this is Inner
City Press
YouTube video.
Unlike other
stakeouts, the
UN did not put
on its UN
Webcast
archive
Ja'afari's
long April 17
stakeout
including on
TOW missiles.
Inner City
Press asked
about it on
April 22 at
the noon
briefing, and
later another
UN individual
acknowledged
it had not
gone up. But
why?
Now, only
after asking,
it is up. This
is how the UN
works, or
doesn't.
Ja'afari was
asked by Voice
of America, on
whose
Broadcast
Board of
Governor's US
Secretary of
State John
Kerry serves,
why Syria
doesn't use
Russia or
China to get a
meeting about
Kassab.
Ja'afari
responded to
the question;
he did not say
as France
Ambassador
Gerard Araud
did on April
15 to Al
Mayadeen, "You
are not a
journalist,
you are an
agent."
By
Araud's logic,
is not Voice
of America an
agent? Is not
France 24,
also called on
by Ja'afari?
Ah, freedom of
the press. Here
is what the
Free UN
Coalition for
Access has
done so far.
When outgoing
French
Ambassador
Araud
scheduled a
press
conference on
human rights
for April 15,
he
began to
receive many
questions,
here,
about blocking
human rights
monitoring in
Western
Sahara.
It is a policy
Araud is
particularly
associated
with, since
Javier Barden
quoted him
calling
Morocco
France's
"mistress."
Araud spoke
of suing,
but hasn't.
But when
during the
April 15 press
conference, in
which Inner
City Press and
the Free
UN Coalition
for Access
were not
called on,
Araud was
asked about
France having
killed people
in Algeria,
Araud told the
questioner,
You are not a
journalist,
you are an
agent. Video
here.
The French run
press
conference
gave the first
question to Al
Arabiya, for
UNCA (now
known as the
UN's
Censorship
Alliance),
then France
24. By
Araud's
spokesperson
Frederic Jung,
a Voice
of America
affiliate was
given a
question.
Syria "Caesar"
report
panelist David
Crane was
asked who
funded it and
answered on
camera merely
that he was
paid. (The
photographs,
Inner City
Press noted
and notes, are
extremely
troubling -
all the more
reason that
taking Qatar's
funding and
denouncing the
only critical
question were
unwise.)
Afterward,
Inner City
Press asked
Crane to
confirm the
payment was
from Qatar. He
confirmed it.
Inner City
Press asked,
did you seek
any other,
less
compromised
funding? The
answer was no.
In fact, Crane
said he gave
his
recommendations
to the Syrian
National
Council.
Afterward
Inner City
Press asked
him if he
meant the
Turkey based
group headed
by Ahmed Al
Jarba, and
Crane said
yes, than
added, "The
resistance"
writ large.
When Qatar
sponsored an event at
the UN in New
York on March
21 featuring
the Syrian
Coalition
headed by
Ahmad al
Jarba, a group
calling its
the Syrian
Grassroots
Movement held
protests
seeking to
oust Jarba.
By March 22,
the group
stated that
some 40,000
people in 58
cities inside
Syria had
participated
in
demonstrations
to get Jarba
out of his
post, saying
"it is time to
put an end to
political
corruption."
Back in
September
2013, France
sponsored an
event in the
UN and called
Jarba the sole
legitimate
representative
of the Syrian
people. French
Ambassador
Gerard Araud
was the first
questioning at
Qatar's March
21 Syrian
Coalition
event. What is
France's
position now?
Who chooses
the leaders?
Likewise, back in
July 2013
and earlier
this month,
the Jarba-led
Syrian
Coalition held
faux
"UN" events in
the clubhouse
Ban Ki-moon's
Secretariat
gives to the
largely Gulf
and Western UN
Correspondents
Association.
How does that
now appear, in
light of the
anti-Jarba
protests?
Qatar's March
21 event was
not listed in
the UN Journal
nor in the UN
Media Alert.
It was not on
the UN's
publicly
available
webcast.
Select media
outlets were
there, when
Inner City
Press came in
at the end to
ask a
question: Al
Jazeera on the
podium in
Qatar's event,
Al Arabiya
like a Saudi
diplomat --
not the
Permanent
Representative
-- in the
audience along
with Al Hayat,
even Al Hurra,
on whose
Broadcasting
Board of
Governors US
Secretary of
State John
Kerry serves.
The new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
is against
faux UN
events, in the
clubhouse the
Secretariat
gives to
what's become
its UN
Censorship
Alliance or
elsewhere.
On
March 21 Inner
City Press put
these
questions,
also on behalf
of the Free
UN Coalition
for Access,
to the UN's
top two
spokespeople:
"there
is an event in
Conference
Room 4 right
now, sponsored
by Qatar,
which is no
listed in
today's UN
Journal, nor
is it on UN
Webcast
http://webtv.un.org/
but it appears
to be being
filmed. Please
explain the
legal status
of this
meeting, if
there are any
sponsored
beyond Qatar,
how it was
publicized and
if any request
to have it
webcast was
made. Thanks,
on deadline."
But no
answer was
provided.
Inner City
Press ran to
the event and
from the back
of a three
quarters empty
Conference
Room 4 asked
why the event
was so
stealth: not
in the UN
Journal, not
webcast.
The
Permanent
Representative
of Qatar
answered,
saying it was
a "special
event" to
which Qatar
had invited
(some) member
states and
groups, and
(some) media.
There is a UN
Media Alert,
but this event
was not put in
it.
Perhaps
it
was publicized
by the Gulf
& Western
United Nations
Correspondents
Association,
which has twice
hosted faux
"UN" events
by the Syrian
National
Coalition or
Syrian
Coalition. (In
both cases,
the Free
UN Coalition
for Access
suggested
that the SNC
hold its
events in the
UN briefing
room,
accessible to
all
journalists.)
Since
French
Ambassador
Gerard Araud,
the first
questioner
flanked by
representatives
of Saudi
Arabia and of
Turkey which
earlier in the
day banned
Twitter, has
spoken about
"fakes" and
others about
accountability,
Inner City
Press asked if
the groups Al
Nusra and
ISIS, and
those who fund
them such as
private
individuals in
Qatar alluded
to at the US
State
Department
briefing
earlier in the
day, could or
would be held
accountable.
The
SNC
representative
emphasized
what he called
links between
the Assad
regime and
ISIS, saying
it was too
easy to blame
the Gulf
countries.
Here's
from the March
21 US State
Department
briefing
transcript:
Question:
you
have concerns
about the
withdrawal of
the
ambassadors.
Do you also
have concerns
about the
reasons that
these
countries said
that they
withdrew their
ambassadors
from Qatar? In
other words,
do you – if
you have
concerns about
the withdrawal
of the
ambassadors,
do you also
have concerns
about Qatar’s
behavior,
which –
alleged
behavior,
let’s say –
which led to
these
countries
withdrawing
their
ambassadors?
MS.
PSAKI: Well, I
know one of
the issues
that has been
mentioned is
the issue of
private
donations to
extremists –
and that’s
something that
some have
mentioned –
operating in
Syria and
elsewhere. It
remains an
important
priority in
our high-level
discussions,
and one that
we also
certainly
raise with all
states in the
region,
including
Qatar,
including the
Government of
Kuwait,
wherever we
have concerns.
After
Inner City
Press asked
about the
sponsorship of
the event, a
one-page
"Joint
Statement by
the
Co-Organizers"
was passed
out, listing
among the
co-organizers
France, the
UK, US,
Belgium, the
Netherlands,
Saudi Arabia
and Turkey.
Inner City
Press tweeted
it.
Even 24 hours
later, the
UN's top two
spokespeople
had not
answered the
simple
questions put
to them,
above. Watch
this site.