UN Let
In FDNY &
Ambulance --
But Not Haiti
Cholera Legal
Paper
Servers
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, March
18 -- Given
the UN's
claims of
immunity, like
on
bringing
cholera to
Haiti, it is
rare to see
New York City
emergency
services let
into the UN.
So
when Inner
City Press saw
a New York
fire truck at
the UN's gate
midday on
March 18,
then some fire
personnel
allowed in
without the
truck, beyond
running a
photograph
and
running to get
the story,
some questions
had to be
asked.
Inner
City Press
asked the
office of UN
Spokesperson
Stephane
Dujarric:
"Beyond
the
outstanding
questions, I
just witnessed
the NY Fire
Department
arriving at UN
gates with
truck, an FDNY
team came into
the UN, went
down to 1B
between
Conference
Rooms 1 and 2,
were stopped,
were
escorted to
the gate and
out of UN.
Please provide
a description
of
what happened,
why FDNY
wanted in, if
they wanted
truck in, on
what
basis UN let
them in on
foot, and what
if anything
was done by
them
while inside.
There were
also two
ambulances,
one inside on
the
traffic circle
and one at the
gate."
Two
hours later,
Dujarric's
office
answered:
Subject:
Your
question on
the FDNY
From: UN
Spokesperson -
Do Not Reply
[at] un.org
Date: Tue, Mar
18, 2014 at
3:47 PM
To:
Matthew.Lee
[at]
innercitypress.com
Regarding
the
Fire
Department of
New York's
(FDNY)
appearance at
UN
Headquarters,
we can confirm
that they were
responding to
a 911 call.
We had a
serious
medical
emergency in
one of the
Conference
Rooms,
with a
delegate whom
UN responding
medical
personnel
subsequently
assessed
needed to be
urgently moved
to hospital.
The FDNY
responded
first and were
shortly
thereafter
joined by a
paramedic team
from New
York
Presbyterian
hospital. The
patient was
evacuated to
hospital in
an ambulance
and the FDNY
left the scene
thereafter.
Allowing
in
emergency
services
personnel of
the host
country -- the
US, here
NYC -- is a
change of
sorts for the
UN. But the UN
wouldn't
allow in
those seeking
to serve legal
papers in the
case about the
UN bringing
cholera into
Haiti. So
it is
selective
access. We
wish the
patient
the best.
Watch this
site.