UN
Presents
Itself as
Heroic in
Madaya, No
Answers on
Rapes, Burundi,
Ladsous
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
January 12 --
When the UN
Security
Council held
closed door
consultations
with OCHA
chief Stephen
O'Brien on
January 11, it
was supposed
to be on both
Madaya in
Syria and aid
issues in
Yemen.
But afterward,
it was only
Madaya,
nothing on
airstrikes on
hospitals by
Saudi Arabia,
from which
OCHA's taken
Yemen aid
funds.
On
January 12,
amid new
reports of
child rape by
peacekeepers
in the Central
African
Republic,
the UN piped
into its none
briefing its
Syria
humanitarian
coordinator
Yacoub El
Hillo, even
cutting off a
UN corruption
mid-way
though. The UN
is presenting
itself as a
hero in Syria
- while not
answering
other
questions.
Inner City
Press has
asked the UN
about the new
rapes, and
about Burundi,
with no answer
at all.
Here is
some of what
the Syrian
Humanitarian
Coordinator
Yacoub El
Hillo said:
"Yesterday we
were able to
reach again
with urgently
needed
humanitarian
assistance,
medical
supplies, and
winter
support... I
was part of
the team that
went into
Madaya. It was
not just
Madaya we were
able to reach,
but I happened
to be part of
the team that
went in
Madaya. And
what we saw –
we saw people
that are
desperate.
People that
are cold.
People that
are hungry.
People that
have almost
lost hope that
the world
cares about
their plight.
And people
that demand
the
international
community does
all they can
to lift siege
wherever
they’re
found...
Wherever a
siege is being
used as a
tactic it
cannot
continue. Who
pays the price
for it? It is
always the
civilians. And
what we saw
yesterday in
fact. We have
followed very
closely and
keenly all
that was being
put out in the
media, the
social media,
and of course
there was the
possibility to
wonder whether
some of it was
not fabricated
or whether
some of it was
not
exaggerated.
It is very sad
to say that
what we saw
yesterday tell
us it was
true. We saw
people who
were extremely
malnourished,
especially
children. We
saw people who
were extremely
thin,
skeletons,
that are now
barely moving.
And we saw
people who
evidently have
been going
without food,
without
regular access
for food, for
a very long
time. And that
is the message
we are
bringing out...
"Yesterday we
managed after
a lengthy
process of
negotiation
the delivery
of aid into
this town. It
took a lot of
time. The day
was long and
cold and it
was rainy, it
got dark
early, these
were not the
difficulties
that I can
remember now,
because these
are
manageable.
What we carry
with us is
really what we
saw. In that
sense it was a
very heavy
day."
Here was
O'Brien's
January 11
statement when
he emerged,
fast
transcribed by
InnerCityPro.com:
"We’ve seen,
as I’m sure
you have, the
harrowing
images
recent days of
adults and
children
suffering.
These are
wholly
credible
reports which
are emerging,
and we’ve had
today, as
people have
been able to
get in,
confirmation
of these
harrowing
scenes are
real, very
real on the
ground. I’m
pleased to be
able to report
that the
United Nations
and its
partners
including the
ICRC and the
SARC have
worked
tirelessly to
try and
negotiate this
access to
bring
life-saving
assistance to
te people in
need in the
besieged nd
hard to reach
areas and
these
communities
across Syria.
Madaya is but
one, as I know
you are aware.
I told the
Council that
of course it
is our first
duty and wish
to pay tribute
to the
extraordinary
bravery of aid
workers,
drivers, those
who are
undertaking
the work; also
our UN
colleagues,
who often
travel over
many months
doing delicate
negotiations
with people in
some places
which is
dangerous
work. So, we
pay tribute.
As you’ve
heard the
trucks have
reached their
destinations
today in
Madaya, in
Kafraya and
Fuaa and have
been
offloading
supplies. As
the night has
drawn on, part
of the problem
there hasn’t
been oil, so
they’ve been
having to do
it under
flashlight,
using, where
they have
charge,
i-Phones to
get the
supplies off
the trucks. Of
course we
don’t regard
the mission as
complete until
all the
drivers and
all the people
involved in
supply have
returned
safely.
I’ve just been
told by the
humanitarian
coordinator,
you may have
heard this,
earlier, that
whilst he was
in the
hospital in
Madaya he saw
around 400
people have
been
identified who
must be
evacuated
immediately.
We must seek
to do this and
put the
arrangements
in place as
soon as at all
possible for
medical
treatment or
they are in
grave peril of
losing their
lives and
dying with
either the
causes being
malnutrition
or for
complications
for other
medical
reasons.
I did
remind the
Council whilst
I was briefing
them that
Madaya is
tragically far
from unique.
There are
about 400,000
people in
Syria who are
trapped in
areas besieged
and that’s
within the 4.5
million or so
who are in the
overall hard
to reach
areas. So that
gives you an
idea of what
we’ve just
been
discussing and
I’m very happy
to take
questions."
While a
rare stakeout
from O'Brien
on aid access
issues is
welcome, what
about Yemen?
Another
MSF-supported
hospital
there, in
Sa'ada, was
just bombed,
as Inner City
Press asked
diplomats
entering the
meeting about,
Periscope
video here;
there is of
course Taizz,
as Saudi TV
was asking.
OCHA signed an
MOU with Saudi
Arabia to
accept its
funds for
Yemen which
the Saudi led
Coalition is
bombing,
including
reportedly
with cluster
bombs. Where's
O'Brien on
this? Inner
City Press has
asked.
Back on
December 18 in
the Lotte New
York Palace
Hotel,
ministers
Lavrov and
Gentiloni,
Fabius and
Kerry passed
through with
entourages; UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon left
early
typically
without
answering any
questions, as
Inner City
Press
Periscoped and
reported.
Hours later,
the draft
resolution was
agreed to,
then adopted
15-0 by the UN
Security
Council, here.
On
December 26,
the UN issued
this for its
envoy Staffan
de Mistura:
"Further to
resolution
2254 (2015) of
the Security
Council,
unanimously
adopted on 18
December 2015,
United Nations
Special Envoy
for Syria, Mr.
Staffan de
Mistura, has
intensified
efforts
towards
convening
representatives
of the Syrian
Government and
the broadest
possible
spectrum of
the Syrian
opposition and
others to
engage in a
political
process
leading
towards
implementation
of the
objectives and
principles for
a political
solution to
the Syrian
conflict as
contained in
the Geneva
Communique of
30 June 2012,
and the Vienna
Statements of
30 October and
14 November
2015.
"In line with
the clear
parameters
outlined in
Security
Council
resolution
2254 (2015),
the Special
Envoy intends
to complete
his
consultations
in early
January, with
a view to
initiating
intra-Syrian
talks on a
target date of
25 January
2016 in
Geneva. He
counts on full
cooperation of
all the
relevant
Syrian parties
in this
process.
Continuing
developments
on the ground
should not be
allowed to
derail it. The
Special Envoy
also relies on
the continued
crucial
support of the
International
Syria Support
Group.
The people of
Syria have
suffered
enough. Their
tragedy is now
felt
throughout the
region and
beyond. They
deserve the
full attention
and commitment
from all their
Syrian
representatives,
who should now
show
leadership and
vision to
overcome
differences
for the sake
of Syria."
The day
before, on
December 25,
on Syria
UNRWA's
spokesman
Chris Gunness
said:
"UNRWA
welcomes any
developments
that could end
the armed
conflict in
and around
Yarmouk, and
ease the
inhuman
conditions
that Palestine
refugees and
other
civilians are
in Yarmouk
continue to
endure. Over
the past three
months, there
have been
persistent
reports of
negotiations
for some form
of truce or
evacuation
arrangement in
Yarmouk.
These reports
are credible
and UNRWA is
taking them
seriously,
although they
have not been
officially or
formally
confirmed, and
details have
been vague.
There are
several
thousands of
civilians
living in
deeply abject
conditions in
Yarmouk. As
UNRWA is
deeply
concerned
about their
well-being,
the Agency is
seeking from
the Syrian
government
further
details of any
negotiated
arrangements
that will
affect the
humanitarian
situation of
civilians in
Yarmouk. In
particular,
UNRWA demands
that any
arrangements
being
negotiated in
and around
Yarmouk must
include
guarantees for
a durable
cessation of
hostilities,
for the
protection of
civilians, and
for safe,
uninterrupted
humanitarian
access for
UNRWA and
other
humanitarian
actors. UNRWA
is redoubling
its strong
appeals to the
Government of
Syria and
relevant
actors to
allow and
facilitate
humanitarian
access to
Yarmouk.
This is
urgently
needed to
enable UNRWA
to
deliver food,
clean water,
winter
supplies,
healthcare,
and other
humanitarian
assistance and
services to
civilians in
Yarmouk. UNRWA
stands ready
immediately to
respond to the
humanitarian
needs of the
entire
civilian
population of
Yarmouk."
Meanwhile the
head of Jaysh
al Islam
Zahran Alloush
was killed al
Ghouta.
Kerry
and Lavrov,
joined by UN
envoy Staffan
de Mistura,
held this
three-question
press
conference.
Kerry said the
negotiations
should begin
in mid to late
January (in
contrast to
the early
January in the
resolution).
Lavrov said
only the
“patriotic
opposition”
should be
involved in
negotiations.
Staffan de
Mistura said
very little.
That
Kerry's
spokesman John
Kirby, who ran
the press
conference,
gave the
second
question to
the Washington
Post, and the
third to
Russian media,
was perhaps
understandable.
But the first
question,
Kirby set
aside for “Al
Arabiya.”
The question
quickly turned
into three,
after being
branded for
“UNCA,” now
the UN
Corruption
Association, a
group which
sold seats
with UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon for
$6000 only
earlier this
week.
We now
add: UNCA gave
one of its
prizes, a free
trip to
Turkey, to one
of its Vice
Presidents,
from Agence
France Presse.
Even Kellogg's
prohibits its
employees from
competing for
its prizes.
But not UNCA,
which ignoring
the Iraq -
Turkey meeting
in the
Security
Council was
trying to buy
people with
Prosecco on
December 18,
after selling
seats with Ban
for $6,000.
Several
other UN-based
journalists --
not (only)
this one --
complained
afterward that
the first
question and
attempted
follow up were
a “Saudi
circus” which
made the UN
press corps
look bad -- as
did attempt to
throw out
certain
journalists,
photographers,
from the front
row at the
beginning.
Afterward a
photo spray of
a meeting
between Kerry
and Iran's
Zarif was
declared “by
invitation
only” and then
canceled. In
the Security
Council, with
very few
journalists
still at the
stakeout, the
US presidency
began the
meeting on
Iraq's
complaint
against Turkey
being in its
territory.
We'll have
more on this.
After the vote
inside the
Council Lavrov
said, “The
unanimous
adoption today
on the Council
has created a
broad front on
the basis of
the UN
Charter, on
the basis of
all of those
who are
pushing back
against
terror,
including the
Syrian army,
[some] armed
militias,
parts of the
Syrian
opposition,
and the
Russian air
forces, in
response to
the legitimate
request of the
Syrian
government."
Inside as
Nasser Judeh
of Jordan
spoke, UN TV
cut repeatedly
to Syria's
Bashar
Ja'afari,
looking more
and more
skeptical.
France's
Fabius spoke
briefly and
left. Outside
at the
stakeout, talk
turned to a
Kerry press
conference,
open to all.
Italy's
Paolo
Gentiloni, by
contrast,
scheduled a
press
availability
only for
Italian media.
A wag from the
Free UN
Coalition for
Access asked,
Isn't
Gentiloni the
foreign and
not interior
minister?
Isn't he
running for a
Security
Council seat?
We'll have
more on this.
In the
hotel lobby in
the late
morning a
Permanent Five
member of the
Security
Council's
spokesperson
briefed a
gaggle of
journalists in
the lobby amid
hissed that it
was “off the
record.”
There
was a
gingerbread
model of the
NY Palace
hotel which,
the sign said,
took 300 hours
to make. All
that was
lacking, one
wag - this one
- snarked on
Twitter, was a
little
gingerbread
Laurent
Fabuis.
Back
that UN, the 1
pm stakeout by
the EU's
Mogherini was
postponed and
then canceled.
The Security
Council
scheduled for
3 pm got
pushed back to
4. Inner
City Press
asked Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric if
Ban had
spoken, what
would he have
said? Vine
here.
On December
17, the day
before Syria
talks resumed
at the New
York Palace
Hotel in
Manhattan,
finance
ministers
spoke in the
UN Security
Council about
cutting off
financing for
ISIS. French
finance
minister
Michel Sapin
spoke darkly
of the use of
pre-paid cards
for the
November 13
Paris attacks;
Russia's
Ambassador
Churkin named
two Turkish
companies as
involved in
ISIS oil sale.
Inner
City Press
asked Syria's
Ambassador
Bashar
Ja'afari, who
came to take
questions at
the Council
stakeout,
about ISIS'
oil. He named
Turkey, then
want on to
name Qatar and
Saudi Arabia,
slamming its
“Sunni
coalition”
recently
announced.
When US
Treasury
Secretary
Jacob Lew,
along with
Sapin and the
UK's George
Osborne held a
short press
conference in
the UN
briefing room,
Inner City
Press hoped to
asked Sapin
about pre-paid
cards, and Lew
and Osborne
about Bitcoin.
But the
question, just
four, were
limited to
Reuters, the
Wall Street
Journal, the
New York and
Financial
Times. So it
goes.
It seems there
will be no
Press access
at the New
York Palace;
Ja'afari has
said he will
speak, at the
UN, and
whatever ISSG
press
availability
there is
should be at
the UN, with a
3 pm meeting
on December 18
scheduled.
Watch this
site.
Back on
December 8,
Inner City
Press put thee
questions
to
Turkey's
Ambassador
Cevic. Video
here.
Here's fast
transcript by
InnerCityPro.com:
Inner City
Press: On
Syria, do you
think the
Vienna process
meeting should
take place in
New York on
the 18th? Are
you satisfied
with the Saudi
process for
choosing the
opposition?
Amb Cevik: The
plans, I don’t
know how
fixed, I mean
how clear it
is, but we are
making our
preparations
for the
meeting.
Inner City
Press: Are
there any
groups invited
to Saudi
Arabia that
you think
shouldn’t be
part of the
opposition
delegation?
Amb Cevik: I
think so far,
in our view,
they are
working on the
right concept.
Let’s see if
they succeed.
Having a
coalition
group that
would be able
to take part
in the process
is one of the
most important
things.
Inner City
Press:
[Russia] said
the group that
killed their
pilot should
be put on the
terror list.
Do you have
any view on
that?
Amb Cevik: If
they know the
specifics, I
don’t know.
But to our
knowledge,
there was no
terrorist
organization,
no extreme
Daesh, Nusra,
in that area.
They are the
Turkomens, and
we know them,
they are
moderate
people.
This
may be an
issue. Watch
this site.
On Syria after
coy comments
by the UN's
Ban Ki-moon if
the next
meeting would
be in New
York, John
Kerry in
Washington at
the Saban
Forum in
Washington on
December 5
said:
"the
governments
involved are
going to meet
later in this
month in New
York in order
to continue to
move this
process
forward.
Our goal is to
facilitate a
transition
that all
parties have
stated that
they support:
a unified
Syria...The
purpose of
this
transition
will be to
establish a
credible,
inclusive
governance
within six
months.
The process
would include
the drafting
of a new
constitution
and
arrangements
for
internationally
supervised
elections
within 18
months...Meanwhile,
a nationwide
ceasefire will
go into effect
between the
government and
the
responsible
opposition,
assuming they
come to the
table and they
begin this
initial
process."
But who
is this
"responsible
opposition"?
Does it
include Al
Qaeda
affiliates?
Can
last-minute
mergers
cleanse these
groups? Watch
this site.
Back on
November 14 in
the shadow of
the November
13 Paris
attacks,
the
International
Syria Support
Group met and
issued a
statement in
Vienna, follow
by statements
by US John
Kerry,
Russia's
Sergey Lavrov
and the UN's
Staffan de
Mistura,
flashing his
pince-nez and
the
highlighted
document
below.
But
what will
happen when a
group said to
be linked to
Al Nusra is
hit by an
airstrike, and
the Free
Syrian Army
says it's
them, not
Nusra?
Meeting in
Vienna on
November 14,
2015 as the
International
Syria Support
Group (ISSG),
the Arab
League, China,
Egypt, the EU,
France,
Germany, Iran,
Iraq, Italy,
Jordan,
Lebanon, Oman,
Qatar, Russia,
Saudi Arabia,
Turkey, United
Arab Emirates,
the United
Kingdom, the
United
Nations, and
the United
States to
discuss how to
accelerate an
end to the
Syrian
conflict.
The
participants
began with a
moment of
silence for
the victims of
the heinous
terrorist
attacks of
November 13 in
Paris and the
recent attacks
in Beirut,
Iraq, Ankara,
and
Egypt.
The members
unanimously
condemned in
the strongest
terms these
brutal attacks
against
innocent
civilians and
stood with the
people of
France.
Subsequently,
the
participants
engaged in a
constructive
dialogue to
build upon the
progress made
in the October
30 gathering.
The members of
the ISSG
expressed a
unanimous
sense of
urgency to end
the suffering
of the Syrian
people, the
physical
destruction of
Syria, the
destabilization
of the region,
and the
resulting
increase in
terrorists
drawn to the
fighting in
Syria.
The ISSG
acknowledged
the close
linkage
between a
ceasefire and
a parallel
political
process
pursuant to
the 2012
Geneva
Communique,
and that both
initiatives
should move
ahead
expeditiously.
They stated
their
commitment to
ensure a
Syrian-led and
Syrian-owned
political
transition
based on the
Geneva
Communique in
its
entirety.
The group
reached a
common
understanding
on several key
issues.
The group
agreed to
support and
work to
implement a
nationwide
ceasefire in
Syria to come
into effect as
soon as the
representatives
of the Syrian
government and
the opposition
have begun
initial steps
towards the
transition
under UN
auspices on
the basis of
the Geneva
Communique.
The five
Permanent
Members of the
UN Security
Council
pledged to
support a UNSC
resolution to
empower a
UN-endorsed
ceasefire
monitoring
mission in
those parts of
the country
where monitors
would not come
under threat
of attacks
from
terrorists,
and to support
a political
transition
process in
accordance
with the
Geneva
Communique.
All members of
the ISSG also
pledged as
individual
countries and
supporters of
various
belligerents
to take all
possible steps
to require
adherence to
the ceasefire
by these
groups or
individuals
they support,
supply or
influence.
The ceasefire
would not
apply to
offensive or
defensive
actions
against Da’esh
or Nusra or
any other
group the ISSG
agrees to deem
terrorist.
The
participants
welcomed UN
Secretary
General Ban’s
statement that
he has ordered
the UN to
accelerate
planning for
supporting the
implementation
of a
nationwide
ceasefire.
The group
agreed that
the UN should
lead the
effort, in
consultation
with
interested
parties, to
determine the
requirements
and modalities
of a
ceasefire.
The ISSG
expressed
willingness to
take immediate
steps to
encourage
confidence-building
measures that
would
contribute to
the viability
of the
political
process and to
pave the way
for the
nationwide
ceasefire.
In this
context, and
pursuant to
clause 5 of
the Vienna
Communique,
the ISSG
discussed the
need to take
steps to
ensure
expeditious
humanitarian
access
throughout the
territory of
Syria pursuant
to UNSCR 2165
and called for
the granting
of the UN’s
pending
requests for
humanitarian
deliveries.
The ISSG
expressed
concern for
the plight of
refugees and
internally
displaced
persons and
the imperative
of building
conditions for
their safe
return in
accordance
with the norms
of
international
humanitarian
law and taking
into account
the interests
of host
countries.
The resolution
of the refugee
issue is
important to
the final
settlement of
the Syrian
conflict.
The ISSG also
reaffirmed the
devastating
effects of the
use of
indiscriminate
weapons on the
civilian
population and
humanitarian
access, as
stated in
UNSCR
2139.
The ISSG
agreed to
press the
parties to end
immediately
any use of
such
indiscriminate
weapons.
The ISSG
reaffirmed the
importance of
abiding by all
relevant UN
Security
Council
resolutions,
including
UNSCR 2199 on
stopping the
illegal trade
in oil,
antiquities
and hostages,
from which
terrorists
benefit.
Pursuant to
the 2012
Geneva
Communique,
incorporated
by reference
in the Vienna
statement of
October 30,
and in U.N.
Security
Council
Resolution
2118, the ISSG
agreed on the
need to
convene Syrian
government and
opposition
representatives
in formal
negotiations
under UN
auspices, as
soon as
possible, with
a target date
of January
1. The
group welcomed
efforts,
working with
United Nations
Special Envoy
for Syria
Staffan de
Mistura and
others, to
bring together
the broadest
possible
spectrum of
the
opposition,
chosen by
Syrians, who
will decide
their
negotiating
representatives
and define
their
negotiating
positions, so
as to enable
the political
process to
begin.
All the
parties to the
political
process should
adhere to the
guiding
principles
identified at
the October 30
meeting,
including a
commitment to
Syria’s unity,
independence,
territorial
integrity, and
non-sectarian
character; to
ensuring that
State
institutions
remain intact;
and to
protecting the
rights of all
Syrians,
regardless of
ethnicity or
religious
denomination.
ISSG members
agreed that
these
principles are
fundamental.
The ISSG
members
reaffirmed
their support
for the
transition
process
contained in
the 2012
Geneva
Communique.
In this
respect they
affirmed their
support for a
ceasefire as
described
above and for
a Syrian-led
process that
will, within a
target of six
months,
establish
credible,
inclusive and
non-sectarian
governance,
and set a
schedule and
process for
drafting a new
constitution.
Free and fair
elections
would be held
pursuant to
the new
constitution
within 18
months. These
elections must
be
administered
under UN
supervision to
the
satisfaction
of the
governance and
to the highest
international
standards of
transparency
and
accountability,
with all
Syrians,
including the
diaspora,
eligible to
participate.
Regarding the
fight against
terrorism, and
pursuant to
clause 6 of
the Vienna
Communique,
the ISSG
reiterated
that Da’esh,
Nusra, and
other
terrorist
groups, as
designated by
the UN
Security
Council, and
further, as
agreed by the
participants
and endorsed
by the UN
Security
Council, must
be
defeated.
The Hashemite
Kingdom of
Jordan agreed
to help
develop among
intelligence
and military
community
representatives
a common
understanding
of groups and
individuals
for possible
determination
as terrorists,
with a target
of completion
by the
beginning of
the political
process under
UN auspices.
The
participants
expect to meet
in
approximately
one month in
order to
review
progress
towards
implementation
of a ceasefire
and the
beginning of
the political
process.
When the Chair
of the UN's
Syria
Commission of
Inquiry Paulo
Sergio
Pinheiro took
questions
after a closed
door meeting
with the
Security
Council, Inner
City Press
asked him
about
airstrikes in
Syria,
particularly
by members of
the Council. Periscope video here.
Pinheiro
replied that,
not having
been to Syria
(except once
as an
individual, he
told Inner
City Press
afterward, second Periscope here),
he could not
determine the
facts of the
airstrikes.
But he said he
had urged the
Council
members
involved to
comply with
international
humanitarian
and human
rights law.
Inner City
Press: For the
2
commissioners:
with the
increasing
airstrikes by
many parties
now inside
Syria, how is
the commission
able to
collect, are
you able to
collect
information
about the
airstrikes
that occur and
to figure out
who’s doing
what? And did
you have any
guidance to,
there’s some
members of the
Security
Council who
are involved
in these
strikes, in
terms of how
to conduct
them or how to
coordinate
more? I’d just
like to know
how you’re
dealing with
this new
change.
Pinheiro: As
you know, we
investigate
violations of
human rights
law and
breaches of
international
and
humanitarian
law from – by
all warring
parties, by
government, by
the armed
groups, by the
terrorist
groups... Yes,
we had said
this to the
Security
Council in the
formal
meeting, that
we have
received
delegations
about
casualties,
about results
of those
airstrikes
that you have
mentioned. But
at this point,
we are not in
a position to
attribute what
was the
responsible,
the member
state
responsible
for this
airstrikes. We
hope by March
when, or in
February when
we release our
report, to be
in a better
position to
elaborate on
that. What we
have done, it
was what we
said at the
human rights
council, that
our roles is
to remind
member states
involved in
these
airstrikes the
necessity of
respecting the
protection of
the civilian
population in
terms of human
rights and
humanitarian
law.
It was said
the Commission
would share
information
with countries
-- or rather,
prosecutors or
courts --
looking into
their own
nationals, as
victims or
perpetrators.
Afterward,
only on
Periscope,
Inner City
Press asked
Pinheiro if
this every
implicated the
type of
privacy
concerns the
UN and its
Herve Ladsous
cite as a
basis to go
after OHCHR's
Anders
Kompass, who
blew the
whistle on
French troops'
rapes in the
Central
African
Republic,
alleged
violating
victims'
privacy.
Pinheiro said
disclosure
would require
the consent of
the victims,
but said that
is most often
given. He
summoned over
the
Commission's
Coordinator
James
Rodehaver, who
previously did
similar work
on
Afghanistan.
It was
Rodehaver who
clarified that
it is not
countries but
prosecutors
and courts
which can
request
information.
He noted that
a court in
Sweden has
cited the
Commission's
work, to show
the conditions
in a
particular
place and time
in Syria.
Pinheiro added
that the
Commission's
work should
make the type
of “Mapping”
exercises as
was done in
Eastern Congo
unnecessary.
The
information
has been
collected. Now
what? Watch
this site. Follow @innercitypressFollow @FUNCA_info