On
Syria, UN's
Ban &
Annan
Stonewall on
Mandates,
Censor
Selectively
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
May 25 -- With
the UN
observer
mission in
Syria widely
seen
as failing,
Press
questions
about the
division of
labor and
responsibility
are referred
from New York
to Geneva and
then back to
New York,
never getting
answered.
Rather, a
focus seems to
be been to
selectively
censor Press
coverage of
the failures.
On
May
21, Inner
City Press asked
the
spokespeople
for current UN
Secretary
General
Ban Ki-moon
and his
predecessor
Kofi Annan
for a
"description
of
the division
of labor and
mandates
between
Annan's Deputy
Guehenno
and UN
Peacekeeping
chief Ladsous,
and if Annan's
Deputy
El-Kidwa has
since taking
the post asked
to enter
Syria, and
what the
response
was."
When
Inner City
Press asked
this question
at the UN in
New York, the
response was
to
ask Annan's
spokesman
Ahmad Fawzi in
Geneva, which
Inner City
Press
immediately
did.
It
was two days
--
and many dead
-- later when
Fawzi sent an
interim (non)
response:
"Will get back
to you on
questions
related to the
Deputies. On
questons about
the Fijians
and
USG/Ladsous,
please ask
Kieran Dwyer"
[the spokesman
for Ladsous].
In
the two days
since, no
answer about
Annan's
Deputies has
been provided.
Kieran
Dwyer, on the
other hand,
has demanded
that Inner
City Press
remove
Ladsous' name
from an
article which
quoted
Ambassadors at
the UN that
he would visit
Damascus.
Dwyer, and Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Martin
Nesirky,
claimed that
censorship was
appropriate
because Inner
City
Press had put
Ladsous at
risk.
Now
in the last
12 hours the
Reuters news
agency, at
which both
Nesirky and
Fawzi
proudly say
they used to
work, has
through its UN
correspondent
Louis
Charbonneau
(who this week
stole
Inner City
Press' exclusive
that US
official
Jeffrey
Feltman will
come work for
Ban Ki-moon,
without giving
credit as for
example Foreign
Policy's The
Cable did,
and tried
to
have Inner
City Press
ejected from
the UN)
quoted unnamed
"UN
envoys"
that Kofi
Annan
himself,
certainly a
higher profile
target than
the
uncommunicative
Ladsous, would
be going to
Syria on
May 27.
Rather
than
request
censorship
from Reuters,
hours later
Fawzi told the
agency,
his former
employer, that
"Annan will
visit Syria
'soon.'"
This two
paragraph piece,
datelined
Geneva, has "reporting"
by Louis
Charbonneau.
Nothing has
been said of
the previous
report naming
May 27 as
causing
danger or
needing to be
censored.
In
the interim,
Fawzi has
still not
answered any
part of the
Press
questions
referred
to him by Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesperson's
office on May
21.
Two
days later,
Fawzi sent an
interim reply,
"Will
get back to
you on
questions
related to the
Deputies. On
questons about
the Fijians
and
USG/Ladsous,
please ask
Kieran Dwyer."
In the two
further days
since then, no
responses or
explanations
from Fawzi.
Here is what
Kieran Dwyer
sent Inner
City Press,
copying Ban's
spokesman
Nesirky:
I
have become
aware of
you[r] web
article and
tweets naming
[individual's
name included
in DPKO's
email, but
initially
deleted, now
reported: Mr.
Ladsous] as
planning to
travel to
syria along
with dpko
colleaugues.
Your decision
to publish
this
information in
advance of a
trip has
created a
potentially
serious
security
situation for
un personnel.
I ask that you
remove all
such
references
from the inner
city press
website
without delay
For the UN to
request
post-publication
removal from
the Internet
of
information,
stated on the
record by a
Security
Council's
Permanent
Representative,
seemed to
implicate
freedom of the
press issues
which have not
been the UN's
priority under
Ban Ki-moon.
But
within minutes
of receiving
the above,
Inner City
Press modified
the story,
removing the
name and an
included
critique of
the individual
specified in
DPKO's removal
request --
that is, Mr.
Ladsous and
his refusal to
answer any
questions as
DPKO fails
under his
watch.
And so it goes
at the UN.
For now, here
is a letter
Syria filed
with the
Security
Council and
Ban Ki-moon
which Inner
City Press has
obtained and puts
online --
more on this
to come. Watch
this site.