By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, May 25
-- Amid voting
in Ukraine,
Italian journalist
Andrea
Rocchelli and
his interpreter
Andrey Mironov
were found
dead near the
village of
Andreevka
outside
Slavyansk on
May 25.
Rocchelli had
been taking
photographs,
for example of
children
seeking
protection
from shelling
in a basement
in Slavyansk's
Cherevkovka
neighborhood.
Italian
Foreign
Minister
Federica
Mogherini
confirmed the
deaths;
another
photographer
who was
traveling with
Rocchelli and
Mironov said
they were hit
by mortar fire
as they were
taking shelter
in a roadside
ditch; it's
reported the
journalists
came under
shelling from
Ukrainian
troops late on
May 24.
If this
happened say
in Syria, what
would the
reaction be?
What will the
reaction be
now?
On May 23 when
Ukraine's
Permanent
Representative
to the UN Yuriy
Sergeyev
held a press
conference
two days
before the
elections,
Inner City
Press began by
asking him why
chocolate
magnate Petro
Poroshenko had
not agreed to
participate in
debates. (On
May 25, Poroshenko
is pictured
voting, here.)
Sergeyev
replied
that he
understands
Poroshenko
would, if
there is a
second round.
Then
Inner City
Press asked
Sergeyev about
the “UN”
painted
helicopters
shown by
LifeNews as
being in
Ukraine, and
about the two
LifeNews
journalists
detained.
Sergeyev
said
he contacted
his
government's
defense
department and
was assured
that
helicopters
that serve for
pay in UN
peacekeeping
mission
returned
painted white
but with the
UN insignia
“erased.” He
said the
filming was
not in
Ukraine.
Inner
City Press
asked if it
was in a UN
peacekeeping
mission why
the soldiers
around the
copter were in
camouflage and
not UN blue
helmets. This
has not been
answered.
On the
LifeNews
journalists,
Sergeyev said
they had
confessed to
not being
“pure
journalists”
and had
revealed
Ukraine
military
positions.
Inner
City Press
asked if that
wasn't always
a possible
charge of war
reporters. It
might also be
asked which
others
detained while
engaged in
acts of
journalism,
sometimes, are
not “pure
journalists.”
The Free
UN Coalition
for Access
supports these
journalists
and continued
to ask about
their fate, as
it asked
the UN's Ivan
Simonovic this
week.
The two have
now been
released, and
have said they
were held with
sacks over
their heads,
arms and legs
tied.
On a
second round
of questions
on May 23,
Inner City
Press asked
about the four
or five
investigations
of the May 2
murders in
Odessa that Simonovic
had described.
Sergeyev said
Simonovic must
have been
referring to
four or five
versions of
events,
because there
are only
Ukrainian
investigations.
Inner
City Press at
the day's noon
briefing asked
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric how
many
investigations
of Odessa
there are, and
if one
involving the
Organization
for the
Prevention of
Chemical
Weapons is
being
considered.
The request is
in, Dujarric
said, we have
to see. See
what?
And so far
from the UN,
nothing on the
killing of
Rocchelli and
Mironov. Watch
this site.