At
UN, Clinton Foundation
to Meet Deputy SG, ICP Has Asked for
Read-Out, Citing Haiti
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
July 14 – At 5 pm on this
mid-July Friday, UN Deputy
Secretary General Amina
Mohammed is set to meet with
the Clinton Foundation's
director of foreign policy,
Amitabh Desai. Inner City
Press spotted the schedule,
deep in the UN's website, went
through in the UN's tourist
entrance and asked
the UN spokesman Stephane
Dujarric about the meeting.
Given the Clinton Foundation's
ambiguous record in Haiti -
where the UN has brought cholera
and failed to even try to make
up for it - Inner City Press
asked to know the topic(s) of
the UN's Clinton Foundation
meeting. Spokesman Dujarric
has said he will try, but
given his statement only the
day before to Inner City Press
that "I cannot hold your hand
as you conduct your form of
journalism," we'll have to try
other means to find out about
the meeting. Watch this site.
The UN has
no rules protecting the
rights of journalists to
investigate and report on UN
corruption without being evicted
and restricted for their
coverage. Despite not making
any change to this
since taking power, UN
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres' deputy Amina J.
Mohammed lists as her lone
public appointment on July 6
“remarks at the launch of the
2017 United Nations
Correspondents Association
Directory.” Tweeted photo here.
This supposed UN
Correspondents Association has
not
pushed for any rules or
transparency. In fact, it was
for seeking to pursue the UN
bribery / Ng
Lap Seng / South
South News story by covering
a UN Press Briefing Room event
of UNCA, which accepted funds
from Ng's South South News,
that Inner City Press was evicted
from the UN and remains restricted
sixteen months later.
(Guterres' holdover spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric has defended
this, saying he "lent" the
room to UNCA, Aide Memoire
to US Senate here.)
On July 5 as Guterres gave a
“reform” speech about how
Amina Mohammed will take over
the UN Development System,
Inner City Press was ordered
to stop staking-out the
meeting unlike other
correspondents. Actually, at
the same time UNCA was holding
an unrelated event in the
clubhouse the UN gives them.
It's like an in-house union,
which has allowed a two-tier
system of access and actively
sought to get the
investigative Press thrown
out. And while Amina Mohammed,
of whom we still expect and
hope for more, earlier in 2017
said she was "working on"
Cameroon where the Internet
was cut off for 94 days,
nothing came of that so far,
and no reforms or reversal.
The UN and censorship. In this
context it is also troubling
that the acting head of the UN
Department of Public
Information Maher Nasser, who
has maintained
the double standard of access
for ten weeks and counting
recently "multiple reportedly"
attended a Hamptons event of
-- and accepted gratuities
from, as they'd put it in the
Ng Lap Seng trial -- UNCA big
wig Giampaolo Pioli, who
previously vowed to get Inner
City Press thrown out if it
did not remove from the
Internet a story concerning
his renting
of an apartment to the
ambassador of Sri Lanka,
implicated in the White Flag
murders of surrendering
combatants. These things are
not all UNCA members' fault,
nor most of those who accept
their gratuities. But the UN
Secretariat's failure to have
content neutral rules, and for
example to have now
disparately treated the
investigative Press for
sixteen months while trying to
give its office and full
access to an Egyptian state
media, Akhbar al Yom, whose
Sanaa Youssef rarely comes in
and never asks questions - is
shameful. It's the UN
Censorship Alliance. We'll
have more on this.
***
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