UNCA
Leaders Vow
Presence at
all UN
Briefings,
Sledgehammers,
Social
Media
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
February 16 –
In an
hour-long
meeting Friday
that ended in
shouting down
a person who
was describing
the decline
and decay of
the UN
Correspondents
Association,
the bankruptcy
of UNCA was
made
plain.
Not
financial
bankruptcy --
though no
written
financial
statements
were
provided,
total cash of
$237,940 was
alluded to,
the vast
majority of
it collected
at UNCA's $250
a plate annual
dinner. A
member asked
for
a written
report; this
was referred
to “Other
Matters” but
was
never
addressed.
It
was said that
the 15 members
of the
Security
Council and
their
spouses are
let in for
free.
Members were
urged to now
lobby the
Council
members about
the layout of
the Security
Council
stakeout, an
issue on which
UNCA
apparently
fell asleep in
2012 while
they focused
on trying to
expel the
investigative
Press, first
from UNCA
then from
the
UN as a whole.
A
“leader” of
that drive, Reuters'
Louis
Charbonneau,
bragged in
Friday's
meeting that
French
Ambassador
Gerard Araud
supports the
tearing down
of a wall near
the so-called
Turkish
lounge; “we
need
more countries
like that,”
Charbonneau
said.
He
also said, “we
need a few
people with
sledgehammers
- then problem
solved.” This
is the
approach he
and UNCA have
taken to
flyers of
the new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
which note his
role
in filing
stealth
complaints
with the UN,
using his
Reuters
credentials
-- the
flyers just
get torn down.
Charbonneau's
twist
is to also
suggest to the
UN that it
charge money
for “a new
paint job”
after the
flyers are
torn down.
This
passive-aggressive
approach was
on display
Friday when as
soon as an
UNCA member
objected to a
financial
proposal,
Charbonneau
immediately
called for
a vote, like
the last
President of
the General
Assembly from
Qatar
used to it.
One
of those
actually
witnessed
tearing flyers
down has been
Tim
Witcher
of Agence
France Presse,
who at
Friday's
meeting spoke
only once, to
urge members
to send
“e-mail and
letters” to
member states.
One
wonder if the
regurgitation
of fawning
coverage might
be part of the
plan to get
the support of
some member
states?
Referring
to
the Turkish
Lounge, Joe
Lauria of the
Wall Street
Journal
reminisced
about
accessing
Sergei Lavrov
there. More
recently,
Lauria
mocked an
alleged victim
of sexual
harassment:
after the
person said
that their
complaint was
news, Lauria
said
sarcastically
that he
couldn't cover
it since he
had not made a
recording of
it.
On
the other
hand,
Charbonneau
said that this
fight about
the wall
“might be a
story” in the
media; new
UNCA president
Pamela Falk
of CBS said
that on the
wall the help
of the
Committee to
Protect
Journalists is
being
obtained.
This
seems strange,
since only
this week CPJ's
Rob Mahoney
declined to
answer
Inner City
Press'
question about
the UN's
accreditation
rules
barring
journalists
based on
geography and
“principles,”
calling
these
“in house”
matters.
Under
Falk, the
focus of UNCA
seems to be on
trying to prop
up the
organization's
credibility,
or at least
visibility.
The first
presentation
in the
meeting, made
by Sylviane
Zehil of L'Orient
le
Jour,
was that the
Executive
Committee
voted that its
members, or an
alternative,
should ask a
question for
UNCA “at every
noon
briefing.”
This
was never done
before; when
Falk recently
thanked
Secretary
General
Ban Ki-moon's
deputy
spokesman
Eduardo Del
Buey for
coming to the
noon briefing,
even Del Buey
had to laugh.
Falk
said she aims
to send
“everything”
to UNCA
members,
including
floor plans of
the Security
Council that
the UN for
some reason
didn't just
post itself so
that all
journalists
could see,
rather
than trying to
prop up the
sagging UNCA.
But
several
members have
noted that
Falk does NOT
“sending
everything”
-- where for
example is the
transcript or
recording of
her and 12
opaque UNCA
apostles'
February 7
session with
Ban Ki-moon?
There
was talk of
revamping
UNCA's
Constitution,using
a lawyer who
did the
same for
UNCA's
affiliate the
Dag
Hammarskjold
Fund for
Journalism.
UNCA
has already
violated its
Constitution
three times in
the past two
months - late
on elections,
leaving power,
and general
meeting - but
noted Friday
the
Constitution's
failure to
address new
and social
media. The
supporter in
charge
followed the
meeting with a
sycophantic
tweet about
how
“excellent” it
had all been.
Compared
to what?
Falk
also bragged
that UNCA will
be more active
in social
media, saying
that Denis
Fitzgerald of
Saudi Press
Agency will
“spearhead”
this. Since
Falk took
over, UNCA
“leaders” have
set up at
least
three anonymous
social media
accounts to
try to
undermine
FUNCA and
co-founder
Inner City
Press, by
sending false
messages to
country's
missions to
the UN.
For
the record,
Fitzgerald
wrote in last
weekend to say
he is “not a
part” of fake
social media
accounts. This
was noted,
though he has
yet to respond
to follow up
questions sent
to him, and he
did not
appear at
UNCA's
February 15
meeting.
Now that
Fitzgerald's
been said to
“spearhead”
Team UNCA's
social media,
his response
will become
clear.
Likewise,
there is more
to be said
about this
“annual”
meeting, but
this is it for
now.
Other
than “the
wall,” much of
the meeting
was about how
21
broadcasters
-- including
Falk's CBS? --
intend to use
UNCA as a
conduit for
money to the
UN.
It was said
that “the UN
will deal
only with
UNCA.” That is
the problem,
increasingly
untenable.
Watch
this site.