On
Syria, de
Mistura Banned
Exclusives
After Protest,
Dujarric Says
No Policy
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, March
14 -- Before
UN envoy for
Syria Staffan
de Mistura
took four
questions in
Geneva on
March 14, he
announced that
for the next
ten days, he
will grant no
exclusive
interviews.
Here's the
background,
then Inner
City Press'
question on
it: on March 1
the
"Association
des
Correspondants
Aupres des
Nations Unies
a Geneve"
(ACANU), in a
bit of
advocacy the
NY-based UNCA
does not
engage in,
protested de
Mistura making
announcements
about the
Syria talks in
exclusive
interviews,
and not to all
correspondents
at once.
Inner
City Press has
obtained the
ACANU letter,
which was
cc-ed to UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric (who
threw Inner
City Press out of
the UN Press
Briefing Room
on January 29
and out of the
entire
UN on February
19 and 22, petition
here) and
publishes
it here.
In New
York, Ban
Ki-moon and
his Under
Secretaries
General like
Herve Ladsous
dole out
information to
favored
correspondents;
Ban's
USG for Public
Information
Cristina
Gallach on
February 19
went so far as
to oust Inner
City Press
after speaking
with Giampaolo
Pioli's UNCA
but not Inner
City Press.
Will de
Mistura, as
now pledged,
be different?
On March 14,
Ban Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric told
Inner City
Press there is
no policy in
this regard. From the UN
transcript:
Inner City
Press: I saw
you [carbon
copied] on
this, so it
seems like a
fair question
to you.
I saw a letter
from the
ACANU, or the
Geneva press
association of
correspondents,
directed to
Mr… Mr. de
Mistura and
[carbon
copied] to
you,
protesting
that he
announced a
delay… initial
delay in the
Syria talks in
an exclusive
interview.
And I saw him
this morning
very early say
that he's not
going to do
any exclusive
interviews
between 14 and
24 March, sort
of as an
accommodation.
I guess I
wanted to
know, what is
the UN's
policy in
terms of both
the
Secretary-General
or a
news-maker
like de
Mistura
giving… ACANU
seemed to say
very clearly
this
information
should be
given to all
correspondents
at the same
time. Do
you agree with
that?
Spokesman:
No, Mr. de
Mistura is a
seasoned
diplomat.
He chooses to…
he deftly
handles the
media, and he
will do
whatever he
feels he needs
to do.
There is no
policy per se
on any of
these issues
that you
raised.
No
policy - like
on the
"lending out"
of the UN
Press Briefing
Room,
resulting in
differences of
opinion on the
right to cover
events there
which the UN,
Dujarric, can
use as a pretext
to oust the
Press.
Spokesman
Ahmad Fawzi on
March 14 gave
the first
question to
“our Turkish
colleague” --
who asked
about the
timing of
elections in
Syria. The
next picked
questioner
identified
himself “with
the Geneva
press corps;”
then Al
Jazeera Arabic
asked if there
is any
deadline for a
deal to be
reached.
To
this, de
Mistura said
this first
round would
run from March
14 to 24 --
during which
no exclusive
interviews, he
said -- then a
recess of a
week or ten
days. This
will be
folllowed by a
second round
of two weeks,
then another
recess, length
undefined.
Fawzi's
final question
went to ACANU,
representing
Geneva
correspondents
accredited by
the UN,
hopefully
(much) better
than the decaying
and corrupt UN
Correspondents
Association
the UN uses in
New York. This
question was
to say when
meetings begin
and end. And
then it was
over.
One couldn't
help wonder if
there were
anywhere near
this focus on
the slaughter
in Yemen - and
where is de
Mistura's
counterpart
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed?
On
Syria, will
the Ankara
attack impact
mounting
demands that
the Kurds be
given a role
in this round
of talks?
We'll have
more on this.
Previously, when
the UN pulled
the plug on
the
Intra-Syrian
Talks, or as
envoy Staffan
de Mistura
said merely
pushed them
back, de
Mistura said
that the UN
"is not
prepared to
hold talks for
the sake of
talks."
Then de
Mistura was
scheduled
after delay to
brief the
Security
Council on
Friday,
February 26 at
3 pm, in
connection
with a vote on
a US - Russian
draft Inner
City Press had
seen.
After a
delay
described
below, de
Mistura
briefed by
video, saying
he intends to
re-convene
Intra-Syrian
talks on March
7.
The
Council
approved the
resolution
15-0, Russia's
Gatilov spoke
of strict
implementation,
and the need
for
"immediate"
talks.
At 2:40
pm, UK
Ambassador
Matthew
Rycroft was in
the hall
outside the
Council,
talking
heatedly into
his cell
phone. Another
Council
diplomat, on
background,
said there
would be a
delay of at
least 30
minutes or an
hour - someone
didn't agree.
Inner
City Press was
told by
sources it was
to renegotiate
the annex of
groups.
Now Inner City
Press has been
informed of
more. In the
public
session, UK
Matthew
Rycroft said
"The HNC
represents a
broad sweep of
the opposition
forces
fighting in
Syria against
the tyranny of
Asad. They
deserve our
whole-hearted
support, which
regrettably
was not
reflected in
this
resolution."
Other
changes were
to the Cairo
and Moscow
platforms.
But, the
sources tell
Inner City
Press, the
country which
occasioned the
delay was....
France.
France
was miffed to
have been left
on the
sidelines by
the Russian -
US bilateral
negotiations.
Similarly
miffed to have
been left on
the sidelines
of the US -
China
negotiations
on North
Korea? Strange
how when
elected
members
complain, for
example about
their
exclusion from
the so-called
"Group of
Friends on
Western
Sahara,"
France is
unconcerned or
happy. Now,
they feel
excluded...
We'll have
more on this.
On
February 19,
Russia
convened a UN
Security
Council
meeting and
proposed a
draft
resolution on
the
sovereignty
and
territorial
integrity of
Syria. Western
powers, as
they're
called, were
dismissive the
draft.
Here's
some of what
Turkey's
Permanent
Representative
said, as fast
transcribed by
InnerCityPro.com:
"The fighting,
it’s not only
bombing
militarily,
hospitals,
schools,
medical
facilities,
are being
bombed, after
the Russian
Federation’s
intervention
in the war,
the majority
of the
civilian
casualties are
caused by this
intervention.
So it is, the
resolution is
there, so why
do we need
another
resolution in
that regard?
When I see the
text I found
it... silent
on the
humanitarian
issue.
"For us,
any terrorist
organization
is a terrorist
organization,
full stop. For
PYD they seem
to try to get
legitimacy by
seeming
fighting with
Daesh.
Actually this
is not the
case... For
us, fighting
against
another
terrorist
organization
does not give
legitimacy to
any terrorist
organization."
Inner
City Press --
in the middle
of being thrown
out of the UN
for seeking to
covering
meetings in
the building,
click here for
that --
talked its way
through a UN
Security block
at the Council
stakeout and
asked Turkey's
Permanent
Representative
Cevic if his
country would
send in ground
troops. He
said only if
part of a
multinational
force.
Also at
the stakeout -
with a UN
Security
"minder" still
trailing Inner
City Press,
like one of
Ban Ki-moon's
thought police
as one wag put
it -- Inner
City Press
asked the
President of
the Council
for February,
Venezuela's
Rafael
Ramirez, if he
would convene
and emergency
meeting if
Turkey or
Saudi Arabia
were to send
in ground
troops. He
said yes, he
would convene
such a
meeting.
But as
things stands,
even with Ban
Ki-moon's
censor
Cristina
Gallach
receiving
calls to delay
and reverse
her decision,
Inner City
Press could
not cover such
an emergency
Security
Council
meeting.
We'll
have more on
all this.
On
February 16,
Inner City
Press asked
Syrian
Ambassador
Bashar
Ja'afari about
de Mistura's
and Ban
Ki-moon's
explanations
of why those
talks ended -
and about the
UN saying Ban
was misquoted
in or
misinterpreted
by the
Financial
Times.
Ja'afari said
that the UN
would rather
blame itself
than the
opposition,
because then
the UN would
get push-back
from
“Westerners.”
Ja'afari said
that de
Mistura's
deputy only
provided him
with a partial
list of the
opposition
delegations as
the talks were
ending.
Ja'afari
called them
badly
organized.
Before
Ja'afari
spoke, the
Security
Council's
president for
February
Rafael Ramirez
of Venezuela
told reporters
that the
Council's
members agreed
to tell Turkey
to comply with
international
law.
Associated
Press - click
here for AP's
UN rape
reporting on
Feb 15 - asked
if that meant
all
members.
All to
different
degrees, was
the answer.
* * *
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