At
UN, Second Set
of Syria
Photos Go Up,
With Warning
& More
Sponsors
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, March
9 -- Two
months after
the Syrian
government
sponsored a
photo
exhibition in
the UN that
the opposition
Syrian
National
Coalition
unsuccessfully
asked the UN
to cancel, on
March 10 a
counter-exhibition
of photos
depicting
torture in
Syrian prisons
is set to
open.
On the evening
before the
opening, Inner
City Press
visited the
site to find
a Warning: The
Following
Images Are
Disturbing.
Another sign
said "The
content of
this
exhibition is
solely the
responsibility
of the
sponsoring and
supporting
member states,
any queries
should be
directed to
them."
An invitation
to the Press
said that "The
Permanent
Missions of
France, Qatar,
Saudi Arabia,
Turkey, the
United Kingdom
and the United
States and the
co-sponsors
the Permanent
Missions of
Belgium,
Denmark,
Germany,
Kuwait,
Lithuania,
Luxembourg,
Norway, Sweden
and the United
Arab Emirates
cordially
invite you to
attend the
opening of the
exhibit
“Caesar
Photos: Inside
Syrian
Authorities’
Prisons” on
Tuesday, 10
March 2015,
6-7pm, at the
South Wall of
the United
Nations
Conference
Building."
A
separate
invitation
came from the
Syrian
National
Coalition,
which had
tried to get
the previous
exhibition
canceled:
Co-Hosts:
Permanent
Missions of
France, the
State of
Qatar, the
Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia,
Turkey, the
United
Kingdom, the
United States
Co-Sponsored
by: Co-Hosts
and the
Permanent
Missions of
the Belgium,
Denmark,
Germany,
Italy, the
State of
Kuwait,
Lithuania,
Luxembourg,
Norway,
Sweden, United
Arab Emirates
In
Coordination
with:
Coalition for
a Democratic
Syria (CDS)
and Syrian
National
Coalition
“Caesar
Photos: Inside
Syrian
Authorities’
Prisons"
exhibit
displays
photos of
detainees from
the prisons
run by Syrian
authorities
that were
taken by a
defector from
the Syrian
army who is
known by the
pseudonym
Caesar.
Back on
January 7, a
day when
officials
around the
world and at
the UN after
the attack on
Charlie Hebdo
in Paris spoke
about the
right to
freedom of
expression and
to display
unpopular
views, the UN
received a
protest to a
photo exhibit
about Syria
set to begin
the next day,
January 8.
The
Syrian
National
Coalition --
the moderate
opposition, in
Washingtonese
-- wrote to UN
Management
official Yukio
Takasu:
"It
has come to my
attention that
on 8 – 16
January 2015
the United
Nations
Secretariat
Building will
host an
exhibit for
the Syrian
Arab Republic
Mission
featuring the
photographs of
Syrian regime
propagandist
Hagop
Vanesian, in
an event
entitled 'My
Homeland.' The
UN cannot in
good
conscience
host an
exhibit that
callously
promotes a
regime that is
responsible
for immense
death and
unprecedented
destruction.
By doing so,
the UN
condones the
atrocities
committed by
Syrian forces,
and serves as
a mouthpiece
for Assad’s
heinous war
crimes."
As set forth
below, UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon in a
contradictory
way, in a
private event
in the
clubhouse of a
group that has
itself engaged
in censorship,
spoke on
January 7
about the need
for freedom of
expression.
(Whether he's
raised this in
his native
South Korea,
where a
newspaper
editor faces
criminal
charges for
insulting the
president, is
not known; the
issue was not
included in
Ban's long
read-out of
his New Years
call to South
Korean
president
Park.)
Perhaps Ban's
Secretariat
won't act on
the SNC
complaint,
which we're
linking to here, because it
came one day
before the
exhibition.
Will its
response be
about "freedom
of
expression"?
There are
certainly
distinctions
to be made
between
Charlie Hebdo,
the Syrian
government and
this
photographer,
and we're open
to hearing
all. But what
does freedom
of expression
mean?