At UN, Khalilzad's Undisclosed Meeting with Ban
Stumbled Onto, Of Budgets and Typos from Geneva
Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at
the UN: News Analysis
UNITED NATIONS, March 29 --
Saturday
afternoon in the UN's near-empty Delegates' Lounge, U.S. Ambassador
Zalmay
Khalilzad came in. Inner City Press, at the UN to ask
questions of Australian
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, asked Amb. Khalilzad what brought him
inside on such
a nice early Spring day. "A meeting with the Secretary General," he
said.
Ban Ki-moon's daily schedule for Saturday, while
noting the 4 p.m.
meeting with Prime Minister Rudd, made no mention of meeting the
American
Ambassador. In fact, some who went up to the 38th floor for Ban's
photo-opportunity
with Rudd later told Inner City Press that Khalilzad looked surprised
and not
entirely happy with the arrival of cameras on the scene. "Maybe I
should
have worn a tie," Khalilzad ad libbed.
The impact of not listing such a meeting on Ban's
schedule is that,
normally, journalists would not then know to ask for a read-out on the
meeting.
What might Ban and the U.S. Ambassador have been meeting about, on
Saturday
afternoon? While some speculate it involved a report on Rudd's
Washington meetings, Friday the UN budget committee voted to approve
some $48 million in "Special Political Missions," as part of a $1.1
billion add-on package which Khalilzad's outgoing colleague Mark
Wallace had
criticized as an unprecedented 25% increase in the UN budget.
Khalilzad, asked
about the increase by Inner City Press, said that the UN has to get
better and
setting its priority, that he might like to drive a Ferrari, but can't
afford
one. Perhaps a Japanese luxury car -- sources tell Inner City Press
that Japan
only reluctantly voted for the $48 million in budget add-ons, and even
then,
only with an understanding that the Secretariat will make $3 million in
cuts
elsewhere. It's considered strange that Japan rather than the United
States made the most noise in the budget committee about the
ever-rising spending. Then again, there are those that say the main
story from March's closed-door session was U.S. opposition not only to
"human resources reform" but even to strenthening the Department of
Political Affairs, headed by American Lynn Pascoe. Perhaps the U.S.'s
view on the budget were
delivered more quietly, in an undisclosed Saturday afternoon meeting.
Khalilzad, Ban, Mrs. Ban and NBA's Stern:
this is how to spend a Saturday (except for Knicks)
The end of the
budget committee's March session was hard to cover:
it was impossible to get audio recordings of the meeting once it
finished, and the
resolutions voted on Friday afternoon were not available, even as of
noon. At
the noon briefing, Inner City Press asked "if, hours before they vote
on
these things, we don’t have the documents, do the people voting have
the
documents now or do they just vote on them when they get them?" The
General Assembly's spokesman replied, "I would assume that within the
informal consultations, if we have these drafts listed, I have the
feeling that
probably those drafts have been worked on. Otherwise
these would not be here."
We'll
see. As of Saturday, 9 p.m., Ban's schedule
still read as follows:
Saturday,
29 March 2008
All other appointments are internal
4.00
p.m H.E. Mr. Kevin Rudd, Prime Minister of Australia
Monday, 31 March 2008
12.00
p.m. Mr. Serge Brammertz, Prosecutor, International Criminal Tribunal
for the
Former Yugoslavia (courtesy call)
12.30
p.m. Ambassador Elbio Rosselli, Permanent Representative of Uruguay to
the UN
(farewell call)
3.30
p.m. Rt. Hon Lord Robertson of Port Ellen, Chairman, Commission for
Global Road
Safety
4.45
p.m. H.E. Mr. Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury, Foreign Minister of
Bangladesh
5.30
p.m. Mr. Ibrahim A. Gambari, Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on the
Iraq
Compact and Other Issues
Inner City Press
annotations:
apparently, Ban meeting with the U.S. Ambassador is now considered an
"internal" meeting. Of Monday's disclosed meetings, one imagine with
Bangladesh the issue surrounding the mandates combined with the Office
of the
Special Advisor on Africa coming up. Does Gambari being identified with
reference to Iraq mean that Myanmar will not be discussed?
Footnote: While Zalmay
Khalilzad has
denied the reports that he might seek the presidency of Afghanistan,
perhaps
the rumors will revive, now that the august Tribune
de Geneve has, if only as a
typo, named Hamid Karzai as having joined that agro-bureaucrats at
the World
Food Program, click
here for that (in French). It's nice work if you can get it
-- a recently released ECOSOC report E/2008/36 reports that the WFP's
Executive Board voted to set the housing allowance of executive
director Josette Sheeran Shiner at 121,440 Euros per year, "indexed
annually against the Italian retail price index." The price of food is
not the only price that's going up. To be continued.
* * *
These reports are
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News and on Lexis-Nexis.
Click
here for a Reuters
AlertNet piece by this correspondent
about Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army. Click
here
for an earlier Reuters AlertNet piece about the Somali National
Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's $200,000 contribution from an
undefined trust fund. Video
Analysis here
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