At
UN, Qatar
Event on Syria
Not Webcast or
in UN Journal,
Q on
Private Funds
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, March
21 -- When
Qatar
sponsored an
event at the
UN on March
21 at which a
report on
torture in
Syria which
Qatar also
funded was
presented, it
was not listed
in the UN
Journal. Nor
was the event
broadcast on
the UNTV
Webcast.
Inner
City Press
heard about it
and asked 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.
Watch this
site.