ICP's
Scoop
Confirmed on
UN in Iraq
“Losing” 25
Weapons,
Glocks &
Sniper Rifles
By Matthew
Russell Lee,
Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 20 --
The day after
Inner City
Press asked
both US
Ambassador
Samantha Power
and UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
the UN Mission
in South Sudan
giving
automatic
weapons to
warlord James
Koang, who
killed
civilians, a
new UN outrage
was brought to
the attention
of Inner City
Press and
after its
publishing and
asking
about it (video
here), was
confirmed by
the UN.
Since the UN
covered up its
arming of
South Sudan
warlord Koang,
and refuses to
answer written
questions
including
about its use
of public
funds, we
published this
report on this
we'll follow
up:
The UN
Assistance
Mission in
Iraq, UNAMI,
under the
authority of
the UN
Department of
Safety and
Security
(DSS), have
“lost” 25
weapons from
their armory
in their base
in the Green
Zone in
Baghdad.
The loss
includes 18
Glock 9mm
pistols, 5 G36
assault
rifles, and 2
G36 sniper
rifles.
Sources say
that 10,000s
of thousands
of rounds of
ammunition are
also missing.
DSS only
discovered or
internally
acknowledged
this months
after the fact
and cannot
account for
their loss.
The UN's
Fijian Guard
Unit have had
to start
patrolling
inside the
base.
This is an
outrage, on
which we'll
have more. At
the UN "noon"
briefing on
December 20,
Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
it. Video
here. At
first he
dodged, then
got handed a
statement by
his deputy
that confirmed
that the
"light"
weapons are
missing.
Inner
City Press
asked why the
UN has sniper
rifles, and
what will
happen if
someone is
killed with
them. First we
want them
back, Dujarric
said. Watch
this site.
When the UN
Security
Council
members met
about South
Sudan on
December 15,
the best they
could do was
extend the
mandate of the
UNMISS mission
for a single
day. Even
then, there
was already
news of UNMISS
having given
arms to
warlord, or
“rebel
general,”
James Koang.
Inner
City Press
asked US
Ambassador
Samantha Power
about this on
December 16
and she said
she hadn't
read it. On
December 19,
even while
fielding a
pre-picked
question on
South Sudan,
Power still
refused to
answer. Video
here.
This was in a
Small
Arms Survey
report,
picked up in
the Washington
Post.
Inner City
Press tweeted
it at UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric,
requesting a
comment.
Nothing.
On the
morning of
December 16,
Inner City
Press asked
the
Ambassadors of
the UK and New
Zealand about
it, and both
had heard of
it and said it
needed to be
investigated.
The Ambassador
of France, the
country that
has run UN
Peacekeeping
for 20 years,
did not
comment. Video
here.
The US
holds the pen,
and more, on
South Sudan.
In the early
afternoon of
December 16,
when US
Ambassador
Samantha Power
held a
stakeout about
Syria, Inner
City Press
asked about
the US South
Sudan draft,
and the
Washington
Post report.
Power said she
hadn't seen
the Washington
Post report,
but that the
draft would
pass. Video
here.
At 4 pm the
resolution,
changed, was
adopted 15-0.
Afterward
Egypt, for
example,
criticized the
US for not
consulting
enough, and
showing its
draft(s) too
late. Final
adopted draft
here.
But three days
later on
December 19
when Samantha
Power came
again to the
Security
Council
stakeout,
while it was
mostly on
Syria Power or
her spokesman
made sure to
pick a South
Sudan question
which would
allow Power to
gently urge
Japan to
support the US
call for
sanctions and
an arms
embargo.
Inner
City Press
asked right
after, what
about UNMISS
arming Koang?
Nothing. Then
as Power left,
Inner City
Press asked
the question,
quite audible.
Power walked
off; the
understanding
is that she
has now read
the report but
wants to ask
the UN about
it before any
comment.
Later on
December 19,
Inner City
Press asked
Ban Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, video
here, UN transcript
here:
Inner City
Press:
On South
Sudan, I
wanted to
know, on
Thursday, The
Washington
Post published
a report based
on the small
arms survey
report that
UNMISS (United
Nations
Mission in
South Sudan)
gave hundreds
of automatic
weapons to a
SPLM (Sudan
People’s
Liberation
Movement)-in
Opposition
commander
named James
Koang, who, in
turn, killed
civilians with
them.
And I'm
wondering,
since it's
pretty
outrageous,
what is
UNMISS' under…
explanation
for having
turned these
weapons
over?
And even if
they say they
were under
duress, what
was their
responsibility
once they gave
these weapons
to the
civilians that
were killed
with them and
also to… did
they ever
inform the
Security
Council?
And what do
they do to
protect
civilians from
their weapons
they gave to a
warlord?
Spokesman:
I don't have
anything to
share with you
on that.
ICP
Question:
I heard that
UNMISS has an
answer.
Spokesman:
I… they
may. I
don't have
anything for
you on that
right now.
Later: I've
just been
given
something that
I didn't have
with me on
UNMISS, which
I will share
with you,
which… from
the Mission,
which says,
when UNMISS
opened its
gates to save
lives as the
conflict
erupted, it
applied utmost
diligence to
disarm and
collect
weapons and
ammunition
from people
seeking
protection.
The Mission
worked
tirelessly and
impartially to
save thousands
who sought
refuge in its
camps at the
points…
protection of
civilians
sites in the
town and avoid
an escalation
of violence
with the
forces
controlling
the
area.
Anyone who was
armed and
seeking for
protection was
not allowed to
enter the UN
Compound.
In December
2013, at the
early stages
of the
conflict, some
SPLA (Sudan
People’s
Liberation
Army) soldiers
abandoned
weapons
outside the
UNMISS
compound, in
order to seek
protection
inside the
compound in
Bentiu.
UNMISS
collected the
abandoned
weapons and
safely stored
them according
to its weapons
management
policy.
In response to
direct threats
from local
SPLA
commanders to
UNMISS to hand
over weapons
abandoned by
the soldiers,
the Mission
facilitated
the transfer
of a limited
number of
weapons to
Major-General
James Koang,
who commanded
the SPLA 4th
Division in
Bentiu at the
time.
Later in that
month, he
officially
defected to
the then
newly-established
SPLM-in-Opposition.
Since January
2014, the
Mission has
also conducted
several
destructions
of weapons and
ammunitions
that pose
risks to the
civilian
population and
UN
staff.
The Mission
underscores
that a
political
solution is
the only
viable
solution to
the crisis, as
it continues
to implement
its protection
of civilians
mandate in
Bentiu and
around the
country.
Question:
Follow-up?
Spokesman:
Yeah.
ICP
Question:
Do they… I
mean, first of
all, what's
the number of
weapons that
they handed
over?
Small arms
survey puts it
at… at several
hundred
automatic
weapons so it
seems like…
it's a large
number.
Why didn't
they… this
whole idea of
like stay and
deliver or
stand and
deliver, once
they handed
the weapons
over, what did
they do to
ensure that
they, in fact,
wouldn't just
be used to
kill
civilians?
Spokesman:
Well,
obviously, the
Mission has
continued to
protect
civilians in
the… tens of
thousands of
civilians at
its point…
protection of
civilians
sites in
Bentiu since
then and
continues to
do so. I
don't have an
update on the
exact number
of weapons
we're talking
about.
ICP
Question:
And just one…
I'd asked you
whether…
whether at the
time because
it seems like
a pretty
extreme thing
to do to give
these
weapons.
Did DPKO
(Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations) or
UNMISS tell
the Council…
and I ask you
because my
understanding…
I asked
Samantha Power
about this on
Friday, and
today the US
Mission has
said that
they're asking
the UN for its
answer.
So did they
not tell… I
read from that
that they
didn't tell
the
Council.
Is this the
kind of thing
that the
Council should
have been
told?
Spokesman:
I don't know
what was
updated in
2013 at the
time.
And
after that,
nothing from
the UN - Ban
Ki-moon didn't
answer when
Inner City
Press asked, Vine here, video
here - nor
from the US
Mission to the
UN.
Speaking for
the US on
December 16
was deputy
Isobel
Coleman, who
did not in her
speech mention
UNMISS arming
Koang. (In
full
disclosure,
she is also
the USUN
ambassador to
whom the Government
Accountability
Project
directed its
request
that the
Mission
opposed the
UN's eviction
and
restriction of
Inner City
Press - and
apparently did
nothing.) Nor
now about this - the smashing by UN thugs of
the same
Periscope-camera
ICP used to
broadcast
Samantha
Power.
We'll have
more on this.
There
were already
over 9,000
viewers of
Inner City
Press'
Periscope of
this South
Sudan Q&A,
but even after
Inner City
Press tweeted
the Washington
Post story to
Power, her
spokesman and
the US Mission
generally,
there was no
response.
None of these
did ANYTHING
when Inner
City Press was
evicted,
and is still
restricting,
by the UN of
Ban Ki-moon
and Cristina
Gallach this
year, despite
a request
from the
DC-based
Government
Accountability
Project.
We'll have
more on this.
* * *
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