On
Eritrea
- Somalia
Sanctions,
Slow Motion
toward Action,
UN's Lazy Eye
on Saracen
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 9 --
Alongside a
growing drumbeat
for more UN
Security
Council
sanctions on
Eritrea,
the Council's
committee on
Somalia and
Eritrea
sanctions met
Tuesday in the
UN's North
Lawn building.
Outside
Conference
Room 7 sat
three people
waiting: a
diplomat, the
representative
of UN system
humanitarian
agency, and
this reporter.
Out in the
UN's Vienna
Cafe sat a
delegation
from Eritrea,
not allowed
into the
meeting.
When
after an hour
the meeting
ended, Inner
City Press
asked
committee
chairman
Hardeep Singh
Puri of India,
who is also
this month's
Council
president,
what had been
accomplished
in the
meeting.
He replied:
"A
lot
was
accomplished.
There are 34
recommendations.
What we are
doing, we have
prepared
suggested
actions. We
are going
through a
meticulous
exercise to
see how these
are resonate
with different
delegations,
with respect
to some there
may be legal
issues, or
views that
they may have.
Based on this
round of
consult with
delegations we
will come up
with a revised
tabulation of
recommendations
and suggested
actions."
Inner
City Press
asked about
the proposal,
by Ethiopia
and others,
that new
sanctions be
imposed on
Eritrea,
including on
mining and
against the
government's
tax on
remittances.
Ambassador
Puri replied
"No,
this
is not that.
The Monitoring
Group has come
up with
certain
recommendations,
based on its
own due
diligence.
Theirs are
only
recommendations.
To be acted
on, the member
states have to
take a view if
they accept."
Eritrean
Permanent
Representative
Desta sent
Inner City
Press his
country's
"preliminary"
July 22
response to
the Monitoring
Group report,
which asked
for "adequate
time to
present a
definitive
reply."
Inner City
Press asked
Ambassador
Puri about
Eritrea's
right to
reply. He said
of Eritrea,
"They wanted
four to five
months. It's a
127 page
report, with
300 page of
annexes, made
available to
them, only
when, some
time ago."
Afterward
in the Vienna
Cafe, an
Eritrean
representative
reiterated
this to Inner
City Press,
that they only
formally got
the report on
July 28, it
will take time
to reply. But
will the
Council wait?
Previously,
Indian
peacekeepers
in Asmara,
Badme not
shown
Eritrea
is not the
only accused
in the
Monitoring
Group report.
Ethiopia
itself is said
to aid the
anti-Shabaab
militia Ahlu
Sunna,
without having
asked
committee
approval. The
private
military
contractor
Saracen, about
which Inner
City Press has
already
written, is
named as
violating
sanctions and
being a threat
to
international
peace and
security.
Last December
27, 2010,
Inner City
Press
reported:
December
27
-- Amid
growing doubts
about
private
military
contractor
Saracen
working for
the Somali
Transitional
Federal
Government and
Puntland,
the lawyer for
the program,
former US
Ambassador at
Large for War
Crimes Pierre
Prosper, spoke
to a half
dozen UN
correspondents
on December
23, ostensibly
on background.
In
remarks
subsequently
disseminated,
Prosper said
that he was
briefing the
Group of
Experts of the
UN's Somalia
Sanctions
Committee but
would not yet
provide the
name of the
program's
funder, due to
concerns the
UN would leak
it.
Afterward,
Inner
City Press on
the record
asked the
outgoing
chairman of
the UN's
Somalia
Sanctions
Committee,
Claude Heller
of Mexico, if
he or the
Committee had
been briefed
about the use
of PMCs or
mercenaries in
Somalia. No,
Heller said,
he had only
read about it
in the
newspapers.
Video here.
With
Mexico leaving
the Council at
the end of the
month, India
is to be given
the chair of
the Somalia
Sanctions
Committee, as
first
exclusively
reported by
Inner City
Press. Will
Saracen reach
out to India?
We will be
asking.
On
August 9,
Inner City
Press asked
Ambassador
Puri, "Is
Saracen on
your radar?"
Puri replied:
"I've
seen
some
correspondence.
My radar is a
little
diffuse. In
Navy there is
something
called... the
lazy eye -- I
used to be
secretary for
the navy once
-- if you fire
a missile
which is
skimming the
water, in air
you can catch
it, radar
doesn't know
if missile is
skimming the
water or play
of light on
the surface...
The radar does
a flip flip,
like a lazy
eye."
Earlier
on Tuesday,
Puri had
presided over
Security
Council
consultations
on Yemen,
leading to a
press
statement, and
an
"acrimonious"
discussion of
Libya
including
NATO's bombing
of state
television
there.
"We
did a lot on
Libya," Puri
said. "I don't
chair in the
normal way, I
get involved
in negotiating
outcomes. We
would never
have gotten
Yemen done
otherwise -
this is a
strong
Council."
But
after
Resolution
1973 on Libya
was adopted,
over five
abstentions,
its use has
proceeded with
few brakes
able to be
thrown on it
by the
Council,
despite
attempts. A
request for an
African Union
presidential
statement on
the AU visit
to the Council
came to
nothing.
Now,
while Ethiopia
asks the
Council's
three AU
members to
introduce new
sanctions on
Eritrea,
including for
allegedly
trying to blow
up the AU
summit,
Eritrea asks
that the
issues be
considered at
the AU, and
not Security
Council. We'll
continue to
follow this.