UN Investigates
Itself in Kosovo, with Francis SSekandi, and in Haiti Shoot-out
Aftermath
Byline: Matthew
Russell Lee of Inner City Press at the UN: News Analysis
UNITED NATIONS,
April 28 -- While in Haiti the UN says it is actively investigating its
reported killing of two people on April 12 in a street market following
the
shooting of UN peacekeeper, in Northern Kosovo its investigation of
UNMIK's
decision-making in re-taking a courthouse in Mitrovica has just gotten
underway. Inner City Press' sources in
Pristina tell of the arrival on April 26 of three officials of the UN
Department of Peacekeeping Operations and a UN-chosen Ugandan lawyer,
Francis
SSekandi, who previously serviced on the Rwanda genocide tribunal.
We've made
the name public. But will their report be made public?
This is always an uphill battle with
the UN. Witness
the UN's reaction Monday to
charges that its peacekeepers in the
Congo traded gold and guns with rebels. The UN gave a briefing, but
only on
condition that the briefers not be named. About Haiti, on Monday at
the UN's
briefing, Inner
City Press asked
Inner City Press: There are reports from Haiti that a protest
has been
filed with MINUSTAH (the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti)
after
the death of the peacekeeper and the shooting up of street vendors and
the
destruction of their property and some deaths.
Has MINUSTAH received a protest in that regard and
is there an
investigation?
Deputy Spokesperson: I'll
look
into that for you.
Bullet holes in Haiti - but will UN
investigate them?
Added later to the
transcript:
"The Deputy Spokesperson later told the correspondent that,
according to MINUSTAH, the mission says it has not been sent any
complaint or
protest directly, but it has received a copy of a letter from two local
commercial associations (Association of the Defense of Haitian
Merchants &
Consumers and The Association for Small Businesses) addressed to the
Government
prosecutor, in which it is alleged that the two persons named were
killed by
MINUSTAH troops on 12 April 2008 following the public murder of a
Nigerian
United Nations Police, who was shot dead in the market in Belair.
MINUSTAH is,
of course, investigating these allegations, but has not found any facts
to
substantiate them. Consequently the
allegations that any MINUSTAH personnel killed these individuals or
subsequently removed their bodies from the scene remain unsupported by
any
evidence."
The individual named in Inner City
Press follow-up written question were Amonese Pierre and Anna
Ainsi
Connu. While the UN has said it is investigating itself -- we have
heard this
before -- this particular case should continue to be followed, as a
matter of
the UN's own "Responsibility
to Protect" and otherwise.
* * *
These reports are
usually also available through Google
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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[at] innercitypress.com
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Other,
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