By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
March 27 --
When the UN
General
Assembly voted
on a
resolution
rejecting the
Crimea
referendum, it
was far from
unanimous.
There were 100
countries for,
11 against and
fully 58
abstaining.
Afterward, Inner
City Press
asked Russia
Ambassador
Vitaly Churkin
about citation
in the meeting
of Kosovo as a
precedent, and
about UN
Secretary General
Ban Ki-moon
having met the
leader of the
Svoboda Party.
Churkin took
issue with a
high US
official
claiming there
was a referendum
in Kosovo, and
expressed
concern about
Ban meeting
with a party
deemed among
other things
racist and
anti-Semitic.
Inner City
Press ran,
before 12:10
pm, to the UN
noon briefing
in order to
ask these and
other
questions. But
Ban's deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq had
begun and
ended the
briefing
before 12:09.
This contrasts
to Ban's Spokesperson's
Office having,
for example in October
2013,
delayed the
noon briefing
so that a(nother)
country's
speech could
be covered,
click here for
that.
When asked on
behalf of the
Free
UN Coalition
for Access
what the
Spokesperson's
Office policy
is, Haq said,
"You want a
policy where
it's all about
you." We'll
have more on
this.
In the GA
meeting beyond
Kosovo,
Nicaragua
cited the
Honduras coup
as an analogy.
St. Vincent's
cited Grenada,
saying the
positions are
reversed but
abstaining
because the
Ukraine
resolution is
about the
principals,
not the
principles.
Uruguay cited
Kosovo and
also the referendum
carried out in
the Malvinas /
Falkland
Islands. UK
Ambassador
Mark Lyall
Grant was in
the room, and
tweeted at; if
there's a
response we'll
publish.
Earlier it was
4:25 am in New
York and
Washington
when the International
Monetary Fund
announced its
preliminary
agreement for
a $14 - $18
billion loan
program with
Ukraine.
Inner
City Press
asked the IMF
to confirm or
comment on
reports that
the Ukrainian
"increase the
price of
natural gas
for household
consumers by
an average of
50%" is
attributable
to the IMF.
At the IMF's
9:30 am
embargoed
briefing, IMF
deputy
spokesperson
William Murray
read out the
question then
said that the
program has
five
components,
including
energy sector
reform.
He said
Ukraine will
reduce
subsidies to
the energy
sector, and
that current
prices in
Ukraine are
two to three
times lower
than in
neighboring
countries. He
said, as it
did to other
questions,
that responses
were given in
a press
conference in
Kyiv.
In
New York at
the UN, a
General
Assembly
meeting
started at 10
am. Russia's
Ambassador
Vitaly Churkin
recounted
history and
said radicals
"called the
shots" in the
change of
government.
We've noted
that UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon met
with the
leader of the
Svoboda party
while in Kyiv.
In Washington
later on March
27 the US
Congress is
expected to
act on a $1
billion loan
guarantee to
Ukraine, but
not on the IMF
changes the
Obama
administration
requested.
Obama Press
Secretary Jay
Carney issued
a statement
welcoming the
IMF
preliminary
deal,
concluding
that "We also
remain
committed to
providing the
IMF with the
resources it
needs – in
partnership
with Congress
– to provide
strong support
to countries
like Ukraine
as well as
reinforcing
the Fund’s
governance to
reflect the
global
economy."
Two
weeks ago on
March 13, the
day after several
US Senators
argued that
International
Monetary Fund
quota reform
would have to
be approved by
Congress
to enable the
IMF to
meaningfully
assist
Ukraine, Inner
City Press
asked IMF
spokesperson
Gerry Rice if
this is true.
Video
here, from
Minute 12:05.
Rice
genially said
several times
that the
question
couldn't or
wouldn't be
answered while
the IMF
mission is “in
the field” in
Ukraine. He
initially gave
the same
answer to
Inner City
Press'
question that
had nothing to
do with
Ukraine: is it
true, as
Russia
reportedly
argued at the
most recent
G-20 meeting,
that quota
reform could
be
accomplished
without US
approval,
under some set
of rule
changes?
Rice
during the
briefing
repeated this
could not be
answered while
the mission is
in Ukraine.
Later it was
conveyed that
the reform is
not possible
without US
approval. The
answer is
appreciated: a
benefit of
asking in
person. But
Inner City
Press (and the
Free
UN Coalition
for Access)
hope to make
the online
asking of
questions work
better from
now on.
And
on March 27,
for example,
IMF deputy
spokesperson
William Murray
read out this
question from
Inner City
Press: