As
UN Admits Targeting
Press' Sources, Smale Silent
on Content Neutral Media
Rules, Saudi Pass-By
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Periscope here
UNITED
NATIONS, March 14 --
The
UN has been
targeting not
only Inner
City Press for
censorship
through its
Department of
Public
Information
under Alison
Smale, but
also its
sources, for
retaliation. It
was reported and
quoted here:
"Looks like UN is
making efforts to ID
people who send
stuff to media:
'Identified a
computer used to
print an email that
was later leaked to
Inner City Press, by
correlating an URL
on the top of the
leaked document with
Webmail & DHCP
logs.' Are they
punishing
whistleblowers?"
Well,
yes. And the
investigative Press.
On
March 14, Inner City
Press asked UN
Secretary General
Antonio Guterres'
deputy spokesman
Farhan Haq about the
above-quoted and he
said, since the UN
has confidential
information it can
and does investigate
leaks and leakers.
Video here.
The decay or need
for reform at the UN
Department of Public
Information was
shown again on March
12, when DPI's UN
Photo called Arancha
Gonzalez of the ITC
the UN National
Security Adviser, here,
and on March 14,
when its Alison
Smale found time to
praise with presence
the Saudi event on
women, Periscope here (Smale
was called USG for
DPI and not "global
communications" as
she aspires to -
apparently it
justifies her
ongoing lawless
censorship) while
still not responding
to months of
petitions about
having content
neutral rules for
free press.
This came just days
after March 9, when
DPI's now flagship
UN News mis-named
the UN's scandal
plagued peacekeeping
mission in the
Central African
Republic “MONUSCO”
instead of its
actual name MINUSCA.
Photo here;
DPI also mistakenly
called Najat Rochdi
a "High
Commissioner." That
came on the same day
that DPI chief
Alison Smale was
criticized, both
fairly and unfairly,
in a General
Assembly meeting
held in the
Trusteeship Council.
Inner City Press,
covering the meeting
but only with the
escort or minder
that Smale's DPI
requires of it but
not more than a
hundred less
prolific, less
critical and seldom
present
correspondents, put
questions after
Smale's holdover
adviser Hua Jiang
sped out of the
meeting to a critic,
then politely to
Smale herself. She
acknowledged little
action to date on
the criticisms, at
least one of which
should have been
directed to the
Department of
General Assembly and
Conference
Management. But all
bureaucratic
niceties aside, how
can a former New
York Times editor
have presided
without explanation
or response over a
system of press
accreditation with
no rules, with
blatant targeted
restrictions, for
more the six months?
In October Smale
said she
acknowledged the
need for the
“courtesy” of a
response to the
Press' petitions -
which has yet to
come - and on March
9 seemed to indicate
an acknowledgment of
the need for rules.
But where are they?
After the reiterated
exchange, Inner City
Press demurred for
days. On March 12 it
reiterated the
request for rules,
to Smale, Guterres
and his chief of
staff, and Deputy
Amina J. Mohammed:
"Dear USG Smale, SG
Guterres, DSG
Mohammed & CdC
Ribeiro: I am
writing to formalize
my oral request to
USG Smale on March
9. Specifically,
that Inner City
Press be given an
opportunity to be
heard on why, after
now more than two
years of restricted
access to the UN for
having pursued the
Ng Lap Seng UN
bribery story into
the UN Press
Briefing Room, it
should be restored
to its long time
office and resident
correspondent
status. Beyond my
particular case - on
which Special
Rapporteur David A.
Kaye wrote to DPI
about the lack of
due process, here.
There is as I
mentioned again to
USG Smale on March 9
the need for UN
rules not only on
how a journalist
gets due process
before any eviction,
but also for how a
once-evicted
journalist can
pursue
reinstatement. I
have been told I am
not even on any
list, as
correspondents who
ask less and produce
less than I do about
the UN have come
after I was evicted,
and been made
resident
correspondents. I
have covered, among
other stories, Cameroon,
DPRK,
Sri
Lanka, Yemen,
Sudan, the new (Nov
2017) UN bribery
case of Patrick Ho
and CEFC
China Energy and the
issues raised by a
UN Security
Inspector openly praising
a controversial GA
speech (the Iran
bomb fuse cartoon
speech), in both
2016 and this month
- and for this last
story, I'm told I
face further
complaints or
restrictions.
Similarly lawlessly,
as I live-streamed
on Periscope a
recent SG photo op
with Egypt's new
Ambassador I was
suddenly told
by UN Security
that I could not
record audio, even
as UNTV recorded
audio. This is
Kafka-esque and must
end, this month
which marks the 25th
month. I will be
trying to cover the
UNSC and CSW, with
the absurdly
required DPI minder
or escort. A meeting
on this should be
held this week by
USG Smale or one of
you." 24 hours,
nothing. We will
continue on this.
The deadline is now.
Watch this site.
***
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