In
Ukraine,
Sergeyev Says,
Svoboda Got
4.71%, Claims
IMF in
December
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
November 3 --
When Ukraine's
Ambassador
Yuriy Sergeyev
re-appeared at
the UN on
November 3,
Inner City
Press asked
him about the
elections, the
next
International
Monetary Fund
tranche and
gas deal(s).
Sergeyev had
handed out a chart
with the
Svoboda party
getting 4.71%.
He said that
was a mistake,
that any party
below 5%
cannot be in
Parliament.
What about
Svoboda's
protests?
Sergeyev said
the results
are not final
yet. He also
said that the
"Radical Party
of Oleg
Liashko" is
not, in fact,
right wing.
Back on
October 3 Sergeyev
said the next
IMF tranche
would be in
December. At
the last IMF
briefing,
where Inner
City Press
asked about
Ebola, the IMF
spokesperson
said
"the
policy
discussions
cannot be
completed for
the review
until the new
government is
formed, you
know that's
going to take
some time, as
we all
understand.
That mission
may not be
able to
complete the
discussions
until the new
government is
in place. And
so it's
possible that
the review
would not be
brought to the
IMF's Board
until later
this year or
even early
next year, but
it's driven by
the formation
of the new
government."
And
will any IMF
money be used
for the
deal(s) on
gas? This wasn't
answered - but
Inner City
Press, and the
Free UN
Coalition for
Access, which
thanked
Sergeyev for
his
now-monthly
briefing, will
continue to
pursue this.
Inner City
Press also on
November 3
asked about
reports of an
OSCE drone
engaged by
radar and shot
at. Sergeyev
said his
information it
was was shot
down -- which
OSCE seems to
be denying. On
US Vice
President Joe
Biden's
upcoming visit,
Sergeyev said
he had no
information.
Back on October
3, Inner City
Press asked
Sergeyev about
the killing of
a Red Cross
worker in
Donetsk, about
the
International
Monetary Fund
and when (or
if) Ukraine
will pull its
heavy weapons
back from the
line of
contact as
specified in
the Minsk
Agreements.
Sergeyev said
the next IMF
tranche will
be disbursed
in December,
citing a
longer written
presentation
the first
three pages of
which Inner
City Press has
tweeted
photos of here,
here
and here.
On the
shelling of
the ICRC in
Donetsk -- in
territory
controlled by
the
separatists --
Sergeyev
insisted that
Kyiv's forces
are not
firing, but
said there
would be an
investigation.
For its first
two questions,
Inner City
Press did not
brand the
sparsely
attended press
conference by
offering
thanks for the
Free
UN Coalition
for Access.
But later, and
typically, the
old UN
Correspondents
Association
insisted on
doing so. So
FUNCA followed
suit and asked
about the
pull-back of
heavy weapons.
Sergeyev again
alluded to his
written
presentation,
then said it
will be up to
the OSCE to
say when the
pull back must
take place.
We'll have
more on this.
Back on
September 12,
Inner City
Press asked
Sergeyev about
Amnesty
International's
damning
report about
the pro-Kyiv
Aidar
Battalion,
and about
Point 11 of
the Protocol,
"Economic
Reconstruction
of Eastern
Ukraine."
On Aidar,
Sergeyev
replied that
the
separatists
had been
dressing up in
the
pro-government
militia's
uniforms. Is
that something
that Amnesty
would have
entirely
missed? Their
report
is online
here.
On economic
reconstruction,
Sergeyev
distinguished
between
regions that
were never
with the
"terrorists,"
those that had
been
liberated,
and... others,
presumably
Donetsk and
Luhansk.
On
a second
around, Inner
City Press
asked Sergeyev
about reports
Ukraine is
getting
sophisticated
weapons from a
"non-NATO"
country. He
said there are
negotiations
that he
couldn't get
into the
details of,
since the
counter-parties
might pull
out.
In past
Sergeyev
briefings, for
example on
September 4,
the first
question has
been claimed
by UNCA,
now the UN's
Censorship
Alliance.
On September
12, there was
no UNCA
representative
present -- an
insider
briefing
elsewhere
about which
the scribes
are not
supposed to
report.
Sergeyev was
thanked by the
new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
for showing up
and answering
questions
on-the-record,
as it should
be.
In
that spirit,
Inner City
Press put
online each of
the five pages
of Sergeyev's
opening
statement, here,
here,
here,
here
and here.
Back on
September 4,
Inner City
Press asked
Sergeyev about
challenges
from the right
to Ukrainian
President
Petro
Poroshenko,
for example
from Right
Sector, AVOZ,
and militia
commanders
like Dmytro
Linko and
Semen
Semenchenko,
who has spoken
of the need
“to establish
our own
internal
command.”
Sergeyev
replied
that
“naturally,
some generals
want to be
stronger.”
So are
these are
generals?
Despite talk
in Minsk of a
ceasefire,
Sergeyev
insisted that
the “law
enforcement
action” would
continue.
Sergeyev
began
on September 4
by offering
thanks to USg
Jeffrey
Feltman and to
Valerie Amos
-- but not
John Ging.
Back
on August 24
when Amos
visited
Eastern
Ukraine, her
and Ging's
agency OCHA
put out a press
release
saying that
Amos
visited an
internally
displacement
persons'
center in
Krasnyi Lyman
and “met women
who had fled
the fighting
with their
families.” The
UN OCHA
statement on
Sunday said
that “since
March this
year, around
200,000 people
have fled
their homes in
search of
safety within
Ukraine and
tens of
thousands have
fled to
neighboring
countries.”
What does
"tens of
thousands"
mean -- and
why is it so
different from
what OCHA
official John
Ging told the
UN Security
Council on
August 5? In
that Council
session, Ging
said
“since
the start of
the year
168,677
Ukrainians are
registered as
having crossed
into Russia,
with nearly
60,000 of
these having
applied for
refugee status
and a further
115,952 having
applied for
other forms of
legal stay.”
Ging on August
5 acknowledged
that “this is
not the full
picture as
many
Ukrainians
that have fled
their homes do
not register
with Ukrainian
authorities or
officially
apply for
assistance.
The Russian
authorities
and UNHCR are
reporting that
740,000 people
have crossed
the border
since the
start of the
year.”
While
technically
both 740,000
and 168,677
are made up of
"tens of
thousands,"
there is a
striking
disparity
between what
Ging told the
Security
Council on
August 5, and
the OCHA's
August 24
press release
on Amos' visit
to Krasnyi
Lyman.
What explains
it?
Back on August
24 just as an
emergency but
closed-door
meeting of the
Security
Council about
Ukraine began,
and after the
US,
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon issued
this
statement:
The
Secretary-General
follows with
deep concern
reports that a
Russian aid
convoy has
crossed the
border into
Ukraine
without the
permission of
the Ukrainian
authorities.
While
recognising
the
deteriorating
humanitarian
situation, any
unilateral
action has the
potential of
exacerbating
an already
dangerous
situation in
eastern
Ukraine.
Once
again,
the
Secretary-General
urges all
sides, in
particular
Ukraine and
the Russian
Federation, to
continue to
work together,
in
coordination
with the
international
community, to
ensure that
humanitarian
assistance
reaches the
most affected
areas. He
reiterates
that all sides
should
continue to
exercise
maximum
restraint and
avoid
escalation.
In
this
regard, he is
encouraged by
the
announcement
from President
Petro
Poroshenko
that Ukraine
will do
everything
possible to
prevent more
serious
consequences
as a result of
the convoy
moving into
Ukrainian
territory.
How
was this
statement
formulated? By
whom? Inner
City Press
asked: What is
the position
of the UN's
humanitarian
chief Valerie
Amos, who has
elsewhere
called for
cross-border
aid?
At the Churkin
presser, Inner
City Press
asked about
the draft
press
statement
Russia
proposed on
August 21.
Churkin
said that the
“indefatigable”
Lithuanian
delegation
“sent in
amendments”
that dropped
references to
Russia and
included
references to
the European
Union and
dropped the
reference to a
ceasefire.
Then, Churkin
said, the US
delegations
send in
amendments
dropping the
ceasefire and
blaming the
separatists.
Inner City
Press also
asked about a
report by CNN
from Eastern
Ukraine in
which
correspondent
Diana Magney
asked why
Russia was
sending salt
if there are
salt mines in
Eastern
Ukraine.
Churkin said,
"You can mine
salt if you
are not
shelled.
If you are
hiding in your
cellars,
mining salt is
problematic."
Later the
Voice of
America's
correspondent
asked about
accusations
that the
convoy was
only to
support the
rebels.
"With baby
food?" Churkin
asked.
"Rebels have
babies too,"
the Voice of
America
correspondent
said. The
implication
seemed to be
that starving
children based
on the
positions
taken by their
parents would
be okay. We'll
have more on
this - for
now, click
here.
Back on July
30 when
Ukraine's
Permanent
Representative
to the UN
Yuriy Sergeyev
held a UN
press
conference on
July 30, Inner
City Press
asked him
about the
Human Right
Watch report
his government
is using Grad
rockets,
killing at
least 16
civilians
between July
12 and 21 near
Donetsk.
Sergeyev
responded
first about
the UN's (or
Ivan
Simonovic's)
report, then
emphasized
that Russian
media is
saying Ukraine
is using
ballistic
missiles.
Inner City
Press repeated
the question,
emphasizing it
concerns Human
Rights Watch's
report, not
the UN's, and
not Russian
media.
Sergeyev
provided
essentially
the same
answer.
Here
is the HRW
report, online.
Inner City
Press also
asked about
the status of
the
International
Monetary Fund
program, after
the downing of
MH17. Sergeyev
said Ukraine
has met with
the IMF's
Christine
Lagarde and
"will" get the
next tranche
of the program
in late
August.
But won't
there be an
Executive
Board meeting?
After
Russian
foreign
minister and
US Secretary
of State John
Kerry spoke by
phone on July
27, the US
State
Department
issued two
read-outs, or
a readout in
two stages.
The second, an
"additional
point" by a
Senior State
Department
Official, was
that Kerry
"underlined
our support
for a mutual
cease fire
verified by
the OSCE and
reaffirmed our
strong support
for the
international
investigation
to show the
facts of
MH17."
Inner City
Press on July
30 asked
Sergeyev for
Ukraine's
position on
this. Sergeyev
cited as
"pre-conditions"
the closing of
the border
with Russia,
and the
release of all
hostages.
Procedurally,
Ukraine set
aside the
first question
at its press
conference
saying,
"Pamela,
traditionally
you open our
session."
Using this UN
Correspondents
Association
set-aside, Pam
Falk of CBS
asked about
rebels mining
the MH17 site.
Her UNCA
sidekick asked
about "Russian
propaganda."
And so it went
until, fifth,
the new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
asked about
HRW's report.
This is how
it's working,
with the UN's
Censorship
Alliance. In
this context,
the Free UN
Coalition for
Access is
against the
automatic
setting-aside
of questions.