Some
wonder of the
relation
between the
two processes,
and of the
relevance.
Lyall Grant added
that the UK
would support
Ukraine's
Yatsenyuk addressing
the Security
Council.
Inner
City Press
asked
Luxembourg's
Sylvie Lucas
about
Yatsenyuk's
statement he
"will" address
the Council on
March 13. She
replied, We
will react
when we
receive such a
request.
The US has
announced that
Ukraine's
Arseniy
Yatsenyuk will
meet with
President
Barack Obama
on March 12;
he has added
he will
address the UN
Security
Council on
March 13.
But if UNSC
Permanent Five
member Russia
does not
recognize
Yatsenyuk, can
he? On Syria,
France and
others
declared that
Ahmad al Jarba
is the sole
legitimate
representative
of the Syrian
people. But he
was confined
to a Friends
of Syria
meeting down
the hall from
the Security
Council, and
before that a
faux
"UN briefing"
with the UN's
Gulf &
Western media
club.
Yuriy Sergeyev
has addressed
the Security
Council at least
four times in
the last ten
days. But he
was Ukraine's
Ambassador
under Yanukovych:
he is
automatically
recognized.
With Yatsenuk,
it may be
different.
When the UN
Security
Council was
debating Abkhazia
and South Ossetia,
the US problematized
their
representatives
getting visas
to come
address the
UN. The US can
and will let
in Yatsenyuk,
into the
country - but
will Russia,
into the UN
Security
Council?
On March 7 with
little fanfare,
Ukraine's
Ambassador
Sergeyev went
into basement
Conference
Room 3.
Outside the
sign simply
said, "GRULAC:
Grulac meeting
[Closed]."
GRULAC is the
Latin American
and Caribbean
Group at the
UN. Sergeyev
told Inner
City Press he
is trying to
brief each
regional
group. But why
have it
closed?
Inner City
Press staked
out the
meeting, as
upstairs the farewell of Ban Ki-moon's
spokesperson
Martin Nesirky
was partially
held in the
room the UN
gives to the UN
Correspondents
Association,
which has
become the
UN's
Censorship
Alliance. Bottoms
up!
Throughout the
day the rumor
grew that
there would be
another
emergency
meeting on
Saturday, if
only to
further raise
the profile of
the issues. At
Friday's noon
briefing,
Inner City
Press asked
the departing
Nesirky again
about the leaked
EU - Estonia
audio that the
same snipers
shot
protesters and
police.
Nesirky again
declined to
comment on the
audio, saying
it may or may
not be
authentic
(Estonia has
said it is).
But he said
these seemed
like the type
of issues on
which the UN's
Ivan Simonovic
will conduct
"fact
finding."
We'll see.
In terms of
fact finding:
in Crimea, how
long was UN
envoy Robert
Serry held? By
whom?
A day after UN
Deputy
Secretary
General Jan
Eliasson told
the media
Serry was
threatened and
told to leave
Crimea, got in
his car which
could not
move, then
walked to his
hotel, the
story was
contradicted,
or
exaggerated.
Inner City
Press asked
Ukraine's
Ambassador
Yuriy Sergeyev
about Serry.
Sergeyev, at
the UNTV
stakeout, said
that
"Russian...
kept him a
long time."
Sergeyev added
that Russians
now come into
Crimea
pretending to
be tourists,
for example
from
Kazakhstan. He
told a Russian
reporter that
the only
movement of
displaced
people is to
Western
Ukraine.
Inner City
Press asked
Sergeyev about
the sanctions
announced by
the US in the
morning, and
how things are
going with the
IMF. Sergeyev
said his
government is
getting "good
signals" from
the IMF, and
that the
sanctions
announcements
also "send
signals." Then
he went into
the UN
Security
Council, where
a meeting for
members only,
convened by
the UK, was
taking place.
Four hours
after the US
announced
Ukraine
related
sanctions,
Inner City
Press asked UN
spokesperson
Martin Nesirky
if the UN had
any comment on
what some of
its member
states,
including
Russia, call
unhelpful and
even illegal
"unilateral"
sanctions.
No, Nesirky
said, no
comment on the
actions of
individual
countries in
this regard.
But of course,
the UN
Secretariat
does have
comments on
actions by
Russia.
Nesirky
was asked if
the UN
considers
Crimea under
occupation. He
replied that
UN envoy
Robert Serry
felt a certain
presence
there. One wag
- this
one -
asked,
poltergeist?
Pressed,
Nesirky
referred the
press to
Serry's
interview with
"Wolf Blitzer
on CNN." To
some it
seemed, while
the UN said
Serry would
have no press
availability
today, the UN
was proud to
get Serry - on
CNN.
Inner City
Press asked
Nesirky to
confirm
Serry's quotes
to UAA, that
he probably
wouldn't go
back to Crimea
and would
leave Ukraine
on Saturday.
Nesirky said
he'd check.
The UN's Jan
Eliasson is
slated to
brief the
Security
Council by
video at 2:30,
in a meeting
Inner City
Press, as
early at 7 am,
was told was
requested by
the UK. We'll
be there.
It was before
8 am in
Washington on
March 6 when
the White
House
announced an
"Executive
Order that
authorizes
sanctions on
individuals
and entities
responsible
for activities
undermining
democratic
processes or
institutions
in Ukraine;
threatening
the peace,
security,
stability,
sovereignty,
or territorial
integrity of
Ukraine;
contributing
to the
misappropriation
of state
assets of
Ukraine; or
purporting to
assert
governmental
authority over
any part of
Ukraine
without
authorization
from the
Ukrainian
government in
Kyiv."
How this last
criterion
would have
applied, say,
to South Sudan
or Kosovo is
not clear. The
White House
held a
background
call at 8:30
am, on which a
Senior
Administration
Official said
they can also
target
"derivatives"
- those
providing
material
support.
Another added
the "OSCE team
is on the
ground" (see
below).
Meanwhile the
UN on the
morning of
March 6
announced that
while its
envoy Robert
Serry,
threatened in
Crimea the day
before, will
be in Kyiv,
but no press
availabilities.
On March 5,
the
Organization
for Security
and
Co-operation
in Europe
announced it
is sending 40
unarmed
military
personnel to
Ukraine, from
twenty one
countries.
Inner City
Press asked
the OSCE to
update, beyond
the 18
countries in
its press
release, which
were the three
"new"
contributors
of personnel.
The
answer came:
Austria,
Iceland and
Italy.
Based on a
quote from
Paris, Inner
City Press has
asked the OSCE
if it has any
comment on
Russian
foreign
minister
Sergey Lavrov
saying its
steps "do not
help create an
atmosphere of
dialogue"?
As of this
writing an
hour after the
question, no
reply.
The other 18
OSCE
contributors
are: Canada,
Czech
Republic,
Denmark,
Estonia,
Finland,
France,
Germany,
Hungary,
Ireland,
Latvia,
Lithuania,
Norway,
Poland,
Slovakia,
Sweden,
Turkey, United
Kingdom, and
the United
States.
On Estonia
(and Ukraine)
more leaked
audio has
emerged on
YouTube, in
what we're
calling
Kwikileaks, of
the EU's
Catherine
Ashton and
Estonia's
Foreign
Minister Urmas
Paet. Click
here for audio,
particularly
from Minute
8:30.
After both
speak of a
prospective
new Ukrainian
Health
Minister,
Olga, Paet
says: