In
Ukraine
Presser,
Kosovo & TRNC
Cited, Right
Sector
Denied,
Journalists
Profiled
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, May 8
-- On and for
Ukraine it
seemed a
strange UN
press
conference
from the
beginning, and
it only got
more
circus-like as
it
went along.
A
group called
the
Ukrainian-American
Human Rights
organization
(RAZOM)
was scheduled
at 1:15 pm on
May 8 to
present their
report
entitled
"Crisis in
Ukraine and
its legal
aspects.”
But the
moderator
quickly denied
that the
report online
WAS their
report. She
repeatedly
insisted that
some questions
were outside
of the “legal”
scope of the
briefing, then
speechified
about her
upbringing in
Ukraine and
how bad Russia
is.
Another
panelist,
calmer and
more
legalistic,
spoke about
possible Kyiv
deals
with Chevron
and Exxon.
Inner
City Press
speed-read the
report and
asked about a
line on page
27,
that “What
happened in
Northern
Cyprus seems
to be the
closest
precedent
situation to
Crimea today.”
Inner City
Press asked if
what the
panelists have
in mind is a
decades long
process with a
UN
“good offices”
envoy like
Alexander
Downer. The
calmest of the
panelist said
the analogy
was to a
military
intervention
not preceded
by calls for
independence.
Inner
City Press
also asked
about Kosovo;
the panelist
referred to a
UN-run
referendum,
which in fact
there never
was. The other
panelists
insisted the
Right Sector
is not in the
government in
Kyiv. One said
that the
burning of the
building in
Odessa was the
work of
outside
agents.
In
this same UN
briefing room
on April 15,
French
Ambassador Gerard
Araud told a
correspondent
from Lebanon,
“You are not a
journalist,
you are an
agent.”
The Free
UN Coalition
for Access
has asked UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric to
convey to
Araud the
stated UN
position, that
correspondents
should be
treated with
respect. But
this has not
happened. The
old UN
Correspondents
Association,
the
attacked
journalist
says, has
“dragged its
feet.”
The
UNCA
representative
at this
Ukraine press
conference
approached the
panelist
before it
began, and
offered them
her
description of
who
each
journalist in
attendance
was:
politicized
correspondents.
She
took the first
question - not
having read
the report -
and also the
last one.
It was not
possible to
ask why the
report does
not address
one of the
precedent
raised, in the
Security
Council: that
of
France's
unilateral
referendum to
split Mayotte
from Comoros.
But,
despite the
disclaimers,
the press
conference was
not really
about
the law or
precedents.
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