UNDP
Disses Palau
To Avoid
Layoff
Questions
Using UN's
Censorship
Alliance
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, June
24 -- The UN
Development
Program, which
under
Helen
Clark is
moving for
massive
layoffs of its
staff,
held a press
conference in
UN
Headquarters
on June 24,
very rare for
UNDP.
Three
UNDP
officials
stood in the
front of the
UN Press
Briefing Room,
along with the
Permanent
Representatives
of Papua New
Guinea (also a
player on
Security
Council
reform) and Palau --
a proponent of
a
Sustainable
Development
Goal on
Oceans.
Inner
City Press had
question to
ask to each,
and obviously
to UNDP,
having
reported in
detail on the
layoff plans,
and earlier
in the day on
a
survey of 600
UNDP staff
members,
on which UN
(and former
UNDP)
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric had
no comment
when Inner
City Press
asked at the
June 24 noon
briefing.
UNDP,
present during
the noon
briefing,
arranged it so
that the
question on
layoffs would
not be asked.
It set aside
the first
question for
Pamela Falk of
CBS, for the
United Nations
Correspondents
Association
(which
represents
less than 10%
of journalists
who get
accredited by
the UN each
year).
Falk's
softball
question
ignored what
Palau's
representative
said on the
record in
February.
Will CBS be
reporting on
this press
conference,
or was the
question
essentially
wasted such
that layoffs
could not be
asked about?
Then
the UNDP
spokesperson
gave Falk's
sidekick the
second -- and
LAST, he
said --
question,
which was
wasted on a
mere follow up
to Falk's.
Inner City
Press objected
to the mere
two question
press
conference; it
and the Free
UN Coalition
for Access
formally
oppose the
setting aside
of the first
(and here,
second and
last)
question for
UNCA a/k/a
the UN's
Censorship
Alliance.
Under
Falk, even
more than
under her
rarely present
predecessor,
UNCA has
taken to
branding and
claiming the
first question
press
conferences
and even
stakeouts,
even if Falk
does NO
reporting on
the topic.
On
June 24, Falk
lamely asked
exactly the
same question
that had
already
been asked,
not only about
illicit
financial
flows but even
the
important
topic of the
journalists in
jail in Egypt.
Al Jazeera had
already asked,
but Falk asked
exactly the
same question
(when there
were many real
questions to
ask about the
jailing and
the wan
response by
the UN, whose
credibility
on press
freedom is in
question
-- for
example, in
Sri Lanka.)
Falk
then tweeted
that
#JournalismIsNotACrime
-- strange,
from a person
who shouted in
a meeting
she'd already
said she knew
would be
reported, on the
record,
that covering
her and UNCA
made a one not
a
reporter but a
“mugger”
-- audio
here, here and
here.
That
is the logic
used by Egypt,
that if you
don't like
coverage, the
reporter is
not a journalist
but a
criminal, or
mugger. This
is the
UN's
Censorship
Alliance.
Footnote:
After
UNCA's Falk
and Evelyn
Leopold wasted
the two and
only
questions at
UNDP,
mid-layoffs,
they had UN
(and former
UNDP)
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric's
office squawk
over the
loudspeaker
system that
UNCA would be
showing the
World Cup in
the large room
the
UN gives it,
usually to sit
empty, while
the UN
evicted the
News
Agency of
Nigeria for
lack of space.
Here
background on
UNCA's
television
games under
Falk. Watch
this site.