Amid
Egypt Arrest
of Hussain,
Dujarric &
Gallach Break
Rules For
Sisi's Akhbar
al Yom
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
January 7 --
As the
Egyptian
government
stepped up its
crackdown on
the media,
expelling
Liliane Daoud
after
arresting
Yahia Galash
and now Azza
Soliman, the
Sisi-supporting
media stayed
quiet or
participated.
The
silence is
deafening from
Akhbar al Yom
to which UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon and
his communications
chief Cristina
Gallach
are ghoulishly
giving the
long time UN
work space of
critical Inner
City Press. Swiss
Radio here.
Now
Egypt has
arrested
producer
Mahmoud
Hussain,
accusing him
of “provoking
sedition,
incitement
against the
state, and
spreading
chaos through
broadcasting
false news."
At the UN
without a hint
of irony on
January 6,
holdover
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric who
worked to get
Inner City
Press evicted
from the UN
Press Briefing
Room then from
its office and
the UN as a
whole had this
canned
statement:
"we've seen
the reports of
the case of
Mahmoud
Hussein.
We've also
been made
aware of the
allegations by
Al Jazeera
that the
Egyptian
authorities
have coerced
Mahmoud
Hussein to
make a false
confession.
The UN trusts
that the
Egyptian
authorities
will safeguard
Mahmoud
Hussein's due
process rights."
Yeah,
due process. See
UN Special
Rapporteurs'
letter here,
Aide Memoire
to Senate
Foreign
Relations
Committee here,
Dujarric at
Paragraphs
10-11. On
January 6,
Dujarric
squired new
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres
around - to
the media he
has NOT
evicted. YouTube
here, story
here.
UN
Department of
Public
Information
chief Cristina
Gallach, who
consonantly
evicted the
investigative
Press without
a single
conversation
or opportunity
to be heard,
is rewarding
Egyptian state
media and
violating the
UN's own
stated rules.
Ban's
spokespeople
have called
any
questioning of
the UN's
violation of
its own rules
for this
Egyptian state
media an
"attack on
your
colleagues"
which they
will not
answer. See
here.
The UN
of Gallach and
Ban is giving
Inner City
Press' long
time office to
this Egyptian
state media,
whose
correspondent
Sanaa Youssef
rarely even
comes to the
UN and never
asks
questions. That's
the point -
that's what
ban and
Gallach want
to reward and
promote. Sanaa
Youssef does
not comply
with the UN's
stated rules;
her only
qualification
is being a
past president
of the UN
Correspondents
Association,
which sold
access to Ban
on December 16
for $1,200 and
whose
tuxedo-ed
thugs came out
and smashed
Inner City
Press'
Periscope-broadcasting
camera, video
here.
We'll have
more on this.
When Inner
City Press
asked Ban's
deputy
spokesman Haq
on November 30
about Egypt's
new anti-NGO
law, Haq had a
canned Ban
statement
ready. From
the UN
transcript:
Inner
City Press: I
wanted to ask,
assuming that
the UN has
seen the… the
news of this
new NGO law in
Egypt, which
would make it,
among other
things, a
crime
punishable by
jail to
conduct a
survey or to
publish the
results of any
survey without
the
government's
approval.
There are
other elements
to it, and so
I'm wondering,
given the
things the
Secretary-General
has said about
civil society,
what does he
think of this
law that's now
been finally
approved by
the Egyptian
Parliament?
Deputy
Spokesman:
The
Secretary-General
reiterates the
important role
civil society
and NGOs play
in helping
countries meet
both
developmental
and civic
objectives.
He's,
therefore,
concerned
about the
possible
effects of the
new law on
NGOs
reportedly now
approved by
the Egyptian
Parliament.
He recalls
that the
Special
Rapporteur on
the rights to
freedom of
peaceful
assembly and
of association
considered
that the law
appeared to be
drafted to
curtail civil
society's
ability to
operate and to
stifle their
ability to
freely express
themselves.
The
Secretary-General
urges the
authorities to
ensure that
civil society
can work
without undue
restrictions
and exercise
their
fundamental
rights and
freedoms for
the benefit of
all Egyptian
society.
Oh. Now from
CPJ, which has
done nothing
on censorship
in and by the
UN and
continuing
targeted
restrictions
on the Press
from covering
the UN General
Assembly,
this, on the:
"conviction
of three
leaders of the Egyptian Journalists Syndicate today
on charges of
harboring a
fugitive. A
Cairo court
sentenced
Yehia Qallash,
the chairman
of the
syndicate, and
board members
Khaled
al-Balshy and
Gamal Abdel
Rahim to two
years in
prison, according
to news
reports. The
court set
bail of 10,000 Egyptian pounds (US$628) each pending
appeal.
"The
authorities
are punishing
Yehia Qallash,
Khaled
al-Balshy, and
Gamal Abdel
Rahim, who
represent the
most
influential
voice for
press freedom
in Egypt,
for working to
protect
journalists
from
harassment,
threats, and
arrests," CPJ
Middle East
and North
Africa Program
Coordinator
Sherif Mansour
said from
Washington,
D.C. "We call
on Egyptian authorities to let the
Journalists
Syndicate and
all members of
the press do
their jobs
without fear
of reprisal."
The
charges were
brought by
Prosecutor
General Nabil
Sadek in May
2016, weeks
after police raided
Syndicate
headquarters in downtown Cairo and arrested
two
journalists who were inside. The three
leaders still
face charges
of spreading
false news
about the
raid.
What
does Egyptian
state media
Akhbar el Yom
say? And while
CPJ veers from
its stated
focus on only
the most
extreme
threats to
free press,
will its
self-serving
silence on the
UN's lack of
due process
rules and
protection for
investigative,
independent
media
continue?
What about this
- the seizure
by the UN of
Inner City
Press' mailbox
and
whistleblower's
correspondence?
Outgoing,
Press-UNfriendly
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon is
giving the
long time
office of
Inner City
Press to this
Egyptian state
media whose
Sanaa Youssef
rarely comes
to the UN and
never asks
questions. The
UN knows this
- but this is
what Ban
Ki-moon and
his Under
Secretary
General
Cristina
Gallach want
to reward and
encourage.
It's worse - see
this October
11 story,
including
current UNCA
boss Giampaolo
Pioli engaging
in hate
speech,
abetted by
(some in)
Ban's UN. This
must change.
On
November 8, as
even from UN
headquarters
Inner City
Press covered
the IMF's
austerity
plans for
Egypt, Akhbar
al Yom's Sanaa
Youssef was
nowhere to be
seen. This has
remained true
during the
Security
Council's
meetings on
Myanmar and
Syria and
through
November 19
and counting.
This is a scam
and must end.
Ban's
UN is
violating its
own stated
rules, for
Sanaa Youssef
a former
president of
UNCA, formally
the UN
Correspondents
Association
now the UN's
Censorship
Alliance. CPJ
was informed
of this, and
of the ouster
and eviction
of the Press
from the UN as
it covered the
UN corruption
and nepotism
story -
including Ban
Ki-moon giving
his
own son in law
Siddharth
Chatterjee
the top UN job
in Kenya
without
recusal - and
has done...
nothing.
The
Journalists
Against
Torture
Observatory
(JATO)
issued its
third
quarterly
report on
violations
committed
against
reporters and
photojournalists
in Egypt. Out
of a total 106
attacks on
journalists
that were
traced, JATO
said it
documented 100
cases through
its fieldwork
team. Out of
those, 59
violations
took place in
July, 18 in
August, and 23
in September.
Journalists
face charges
from the
Egyptian state
directly
related to
their
profession
such as
publishing
false news,
incitement,
libel, and
defamation.
They include
recently
detained Hamdy
Al-Zaeem,
Mohamed
Hassan, and
Osama
El-Beshbeshy.
In
Egypt fellow
journalist Amr
Badr, and
human rights
lawyer Malek
Adly attended
Al-Saqa's
session with
head of the
Press
Syndicate's
Freedom
Committee and
lawyer Tarek
Al-Awady.
By contrast,
among the
silent even in
New York is
Akhbar El Yom,
the
publication to
whose
rarely-present
correspondent
Sanaa
Youssef,
who never asks
the UN any
questions, the
UN of
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon is
giving the
long time
shared office
space of Inner
City Press,
from which
Ban's Under
Secretary
General for
Public
Information
Cristina
Gallach
evicted Inner
City Press on
April 14
(see New York
Times of May
14, here).
"The
first half of
2016 was the
worst in terms
of freedom of
expression,
press, and
media under
the rule of
President
Abdel Fattah
Al-Sisi,
according to
the
Association
for Freedom of
Thought and
Expression’s
(AFTE)
quarterly
report issued
this week.
AFTE referred
to the
incident in
May when
security
forces stormed
the Press
Syndicate
headquarters
to arrest two
journalists,
as well as the
trial of three
syndicate
leaders
including the
head of the
syndicate
Yehia Qalash."
Tellingly, it
was bragged
in Egypt
that Ban
Ki-moon did
NOT call for
any
investigation
of “the
killing of
hundreds
during
the
Rabaa
Al-Adaweya
sit-in
dispersal.
'The United
Nations in
Egypt denies
the issuance
of any
statements
today or
yesterday
regarding
Egyptian
affairs by the
UN secretary
general Ban
Ki-moon, as
was claimed in
the media,' a
statement
read.
To this has
Ban Ki-moon's
UN descended:
denying that
it ever called
for an
investigation,
while evicting
the
investigative
Press to give
its office to
Egypt state
media.
Gamal Eid was
set to
appear in a
Cairo criminal
court on
August 15,
along with
investigative
journalist /
human rights
activist
Hossam Bahgat
and others.
CPJ, the
Committee to
"Protect
Journalists,"
is rightly
alerting on
this - while
remaining
silent as the
UN Secretariat
evicts and
restricts the
investigative
Press and
gives its
longtime work
space to an
Egyptian state
media. Now CPJ
and its
director are
slated
continue their
UN Censorship
partnership on
September 16,
when they
could instead
appear in the
UN Press
Briefing Room,
open (at
least usually)
to all.
Hypocrisy?
Sanaa Youssef
and Akhbar El
Yom don't even
arguably
comply with
the UN's
stated rules:
she never came
to the UN
three days a
week in recent
years, is only
being used to
censor Inner
City Press. In
the week of
August 8,
Ban's Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit appeared
to service
Akhbar al
Youm's Sanaa
Youssef,
being given
the Press
office as a
former head of
the
Ban-friendly
UN
Correspondents
Association
who has yet to
ask any
question of
the UN.
Still
no questions
asked; in
November not
seen, nothing.
A fraud.
From
August 22 to
September 6
she was
entirely
absent; upon
brief return
she asked no
question, as
Inner City
Press asked
about Yemen
and Ban naming
his own son in
law to the top
UN job in
Kenya. On
September 7 as
Inner City
Press pursued
this and Ban's
spokesman
called it
"ridiculous
accusations"
before walking
off, she was
nowhere to be
seen.
On August 11,
after Ban's
spokesman
claimed he was
"bullied" in
order to evade
a Ban
corruption
question, a duo
of MALU's
supervisors
cruised
through the
press floor.
They are on
notice that
Akhbar Al Youm
never comes,
and of much
else. Watch
this site. On
August 15, as
Inner City
Press asked
Ban's
spokesman
about failures
in Western
Sahara, Yemen
and Burundi,
and
corruption,
Sanaa Youssef
and Akbhar El
Yom were
nowhere to be
found. That's
now Ban likes
it; that what
he rewards
while evicting
the
investigative
Press.
On July
29 when Egypt
abstained on a
resolution to
send UN Police
to Burundi,
Sanaa Youssef
of Akhbar Al
Youm was
nowhere to be
seen; nor on
August 12 when
Egypt abtained
on South
Sudan, explanation
of abstention
here,
published
by Inner City
Press.
Meanwhile
UNCA, her
former
presidency of
which years
ago appears to
be the only
basis for
awarding her
an office, put
this out,
forwarded by
Inner City
Press by a
disgusted UNCA
member:
“The
UNCA Office
will be closed
for holiday
from tomorrow,
Thursday, July
28th to
Tuesday,
August 16th,
2016. All
activities
will be
suspended
during that
period...
Giampaolo
Pioli, UNCA
President”
Does
“activities
being
suspended”
mean they
won't during
that time at
least be
trying to get
investigative
journalists
thrown out of
the UN? Former
UNCA president
Sanaa Youssef
was never in
the UN even
before this
holiday. We'll
have more on
this.
On June
28, as Inner
City Press
confined ot
minder asked
questions of
the foreign
ministers of
Sweden,
Kazakhstan and
Italy, Akhbar
Elyom's
correspondent,
a former UN
Correspondents
Association
president,
wasn't even in
the building,
having been
awarded the
space in
contravention
of the UN's
supposed
rules, simply
to keep Inner
City Press out
of it. This
was raised at
the UN Human
Rights Council
on June 27, here.
Now,
this: "The
Committee to
Protect
Journalists is
alarmed by the
expulsion of
TV host by
authorities in
Egypt late on
Monday.... 'It
is outrageous
that Liliane
Daoud was
seized from
her home and
forced to
leave the
country
without
warning,"
Middle East
and North
Africa Program
Coordinator
Sherif Mansour
said from
Washington.
"Where
independent
journalists
are concerned,
Egypt has
given up even
the pretense
to rule of
law.'"
But CPJ
and Mansour have
not said
anything about
the UN's
eviction
of Inner City
Press to put
Akhbar Elyom
in. We'll have
more on this.
On May
31 Inner City
Press - not
Akhbar Elyom -
asked Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
the crackdown
in Egypt. Video here, UN
Transcript
here:
Inner
City Press: in
Egypt.
I’m waiting
for a
statement
there…
[inaudible]
Spokesman:
They apply
across the
board.
We, obviously,
have seen the
reports of new
charges being
brought
against the
Union of
Journalists in
Egypt.
We remain
concerned at
the
situation.
We’re
following it
closely.
If
Team Ban saw
the crackdown
and was so
concerned, why
did it issue
no statement
until asked by
Inner City
Press? Why is
it giving
Inner City
Press' long
time UN office
to Egyptian
state media
Akhbar Elyom,
whose rarely
seen
correspondent
Sanaa Youssef,
last seen in
2002, a
former
President of
the UN
Correspondents
Association,
asks no
questions at
all?
Perhaps the
question
answers
itself. We'll
have more on
this.
This
while Ban
Ki-moon speaks
about
"authoritarian
impulses" and
ostensibly for
press freedom,
while
campaigning in
South Korea. (See
article in
Korean here,
robo-translation
here.)
Meanwhile
the Committee
to Protect
Journalists
has said
“Authorities
are pursuing
Yehia Qallash,
Khaled
al-Balshy, and
Gamal Abdel
Rahim for
trying to
defend the
Egyptian media
against a
thin-skinned
and brutal
security
apparatus,"
CPJ Middle
East and North
Africa Program
Coordinator
Sherif Mansour
said. "We call
on Egyptian
prosecutors to
drop these
charges
immediately
and stop
harassing
journalists."
But CPJ has
yet to speak
on Ban's UN
evicting the
investigative
press, much
less on Ban
then giving
Inner City
Press' UN
shared office
to Egyptian
state media
Akhbar Elyom.
We'll have
more on this.
Amnesty
International’s
interim Deputy
Director of
the Middle
East and North
Africa
Programme
Magdalena
Mughrabi said:
"The arrest of
key media
figures at the
Press
Syndicate
signals a
dangerous
escalation of
the Egyptian
authorities’
draconian
clampdown on
freedom of
expression and
demonstrates
the extreme
measures the
authorities
are prepared
to take in
order to
tighten their
iron grip on
power.
“By
prosecuting
senior members
of the Press
Syndicate the
authorities
are clearly
attempting to
punish them
for speaking
out against
the government
and to send a
strong message
to intimidate
all
journalists
into silence.
The
authorities
must
immediately
order their
release and
drop the
charges
against them.”
bo-translation
here.)
one.
"For
ten years as
Inner City
Press covered
the UN in ever
greater
detail,
showing
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
Herve Ladsous'
inept
overseeing and
cover up of sexual abuse and
exploitation
by peacekeepers,
dalliance
with genocide
in Sri Lanka
and
prospectively
Burundi, impunity
for cholera
deaths in
Haiti
and
until now for UN
lead poisoning
in Kosovo
and
cravenly
pro-Saudi position
on Yemen amid
the
airstrikes,
it was never
thrown out of
the UN.
Now it
has been, and
even as groups
like the
Government
Accountability
Project tell
Ban to reverse
the eviction
and give Inner
City Press
back its long
time office
and Resident
Correspondent
pass, Ban's UN
tellingly move
to award Inner
City Press'
office to
Egypt state
media
Al-Akhbar /
Akhbar Elyoum.
Akhbar
Elyom has been
used to finger
for
imprisonment
non-state
journalists in
Egypt. For
example, in
July 2015
Aboubakr
Khallaf, the
founder and
head of the
independent
Electronic
Media
Syndicate
(EMS), “was
arrested after
a news article
was published
by the
government-owned
daily Akhbar
Elyoum.” (Article
in Arabic
here.)
According
to CPJ,
Khallaf's EMS
“trains and
supports
journalists
who work
online in
Egypt. The
syndicate
operates
independently
from the
state-recognized
Egyptian
Journalists
Syndicate...
The
local press
freedom group Journalists
Against
Torture and the
local Association
for Freedom of
Thought and
Expression (AFTE)
said Khallaf
was also
accused of 'taking
pictures and
displaying
artistic works
without a
license,'
among other
allegations. A
1998 executive
order states
that
individuals
conducting
audio and
audiovisual
work must have
a license from
the Ministry
of Culture.
According to
AFTE, the
accusation is
in connection
with Khallaf
photographing
the funeral of
Hisham
Barakat,
Egypt's
prosecutor
general who
was
assassinated
late last
month."
There
are many
echoes of this
in Ban's UN: as
simply one
example Ban's
Under
Secretary
General for
Public
Information
Cristina
Gallach
telling Inner
City Press it
takes
photographs of
things
that "are not
newsworthy."
There are
more, and more
examples of
Akbar Elyom.
Only
when it
questioned
Ban's and its
PR official
Cristina Gallach's
roles in
the John Ashe,
Ng Lap Seng
and Francis
Lorenzo UN
bribery
scandal did
Gallach order
Inner City
Press ousted
then evicted,
and now try to
give its
office to an
Egyptian media
which rarely
or never asked
questions. Ban
Ki-moon claimed
“That is not
my decision,”
but that is
not true.
The New York
Times on May
14 covered
the story. But
they did
not in their
long process
report, because it
happened at
the end, that
Ban Ki-moon
and Gallach are
moving to give
Inner City
Press' long
time office to
Egyptian state
media, Al
Akhbar /
Akhbar El-Yom
/ Akher Saa,
to a
correspondent
Sanaa Youssef
who most even
on the UN
press floor
have never
seen.
Her
"in" seems to
be that she
was a previous
president of
the UN
Correspondents
Association,
now become the
UN's
Censorship
Alliance. As
one respected
usual UN
interlocutor
put it, "it
would be a
hugely
negative
symbolic step
for Egyptian
state media to
replace Inner
City Press in
the UN."
A
longtime UN
correspondent
who spotted
her moving in
on Inner City
Press' office
noted she had
not been seen
before; the
name was
confirmed by
UN Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit, which
refused to
provide the
waiting list
or describe
the rationale.
But
this is Ban's
and Gallach's
UN (click
here for a
Spanish take
on Gallach's
tenure.)
We are
beginning to
report this
now because it
has proven
nearly
impossible to
reach Al
Akhbar /
Akhbar Al Yom
- the
telephone
numbers listed
online are
disconnected,
or private
homes; the
correspondent
at UNCA
address has
been
unresponsive.
The
absurdity of
this has been
directly
raised to Ban
Ki-moon, his
Deputy and
Chief of Staff
with enough
time to stop
it. We'll see.
For now
from
the NYT we
note this
quote: “It’s
not exactly
the same
access,’’ Mr.
Dujarric said,
“but if he has
an issue,
there is a
staff of media
liaisons to
help him
resolve the
problem and
get where he
needs to go.”
This is false.
As Inner City
Press has
raised to Ban
Ki-moon, "even
when
begrudgingly
accompanied by
a staff member
of your
Spokesperson's
office, UN
Security
refused to
allow me
through the
turnstile onto
the second
floor of
Conference
Building. I
have been told
not to ask
questions of
diplomats,
just after you
came out of
ECOSOC and
even with a
MALU minder /
escort with
me, a UN
Security
official stood
directly in
front of me,
apparently so
I couldn't
even try to
ask you a
question. This
is
censorship."
We await
response.
UN
Correspondents
Association
boss Giampaolo
Pioli lied,
but at least
on the record.
(He rented
one of his
Manhattan
apartments to
Palitha Kohona
then granted
Kohona's
request, as
Sri Lanka's
Ambassador, to
screen his
government's
war crimes
denial film in
the UN. Then
Pioli told
Inner City
Press to take
its story
about it off
the Internet
or be thrown
out of the UN,
which Gallach
and Ban did:
UN Censorship
Alliance.)
In any
event, who is
a rarely
present boss
of an ostensible
Correspondents
Association
(morphing into
the UN's
Censorship
Alliance) to
lobby for the
ouster of an
investigative
journalist so
that his
office can be
handed to a
never present
former UNCA
president - a
representative
of state owned
media who
never asks
questions?
This too has
been raised
and we await
response.
What's
next? Is it
acceptable for
the UN to
throw out a
critical
journalist
writing four
to eight
stories a day,
while leaving
in people who
write little,
and ask
nothing? Is
Ban Ki-moon
killing the
UN? Watch this
site.
The
UN is now both
corrupt -- a
half a dozen
indictments
and counting,
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon
cavorting with
the indicted
and his team
covering it up
-- retaliatory
and badly run.
Now the
UN is
moving
to give away
Inner City
Press' long
time office as
retaliation
for its
seeking to
cover the
bribery and
corruption scandal,
including
trying to
cover a
meeting in the
UN Press
Briefing Room
of the UN
Correspondents
Association
(UNCA), a
group which
took money
from the
indicteds'
company, Ban
Ki-moon's
“Communications”
chief Cristina
Gallach threw
Inner City
Press out of
the UN on
February 19.
So to
whom does the
UN seek to
give Inner
City Press'
office away? A
former UNCA
President, who
it seems has
not asked any
question, much
less a
critical
question, in
the UN Press
Briefing Room
or stakeout in
quite some
time.
Inner
City Press has
in the past
defended
correspondents
when the UN
sought late in
their careers
to move them
along, and is
treading
lightly for
now: perhaps
this former
UNCA President
didn't know
the history
here.
(The
current UNCA
website
doesn't even
list its past
Presidents,
perhaps
wisely: it
seems to be a
Year Zero
operation.)
But
what is the
UN's rationale
of giving away
the office of
a working,
critical
journalist to
a former UNCA
president who
asks even
fewer
questions than
the current
UNCA
president?
It's
called
retaliation,
or some say,
human shields.
Who is
responsible?
Audio
hereBan,
when asked,
said “that is
not my
decision.” But
he heard about
the ouster and
eviction in
advance and
ok-ed it.
On
April 16, the
acting chief
of Gallach's
“Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit Tal Mekel
oversaw the
eviction of
Inner City
Press' office,
leaving five
boxes of its
files out on
First Avenue.
Video
here.
Some in
Ban's team
indicated to
Inner City
Press its
office would
be left empty
until its four
month
“purgatory” or
punishment-for-reporting
period was
over.
That
was a lie: on
May 13, after
Inner City
Press asked
more questions
about Ban's
engagements
with John Ashe
and Francis
Lorenzo -
president of
South South
News which
paid UNCA and
still has a UN
office - Inner
City Press was
informed that
its long time
office is
being given
out --
apparently, to
a former
President of
UNCA.
When Inner
City Press
asked to see
the supposed
waiting list,
this was
refused by
Mekel. It is
apparently
entirely up to
Gallach - or
UNCA - who is
given UN
office space,
without which
one cannot
access the UN
Conference
Building's
second floor,
see below.
On
May 13 as the
UN Security
Council began
a meeting
about Lebanon,
the glass
doors to enter
the Council
were locked.
Apparenlty the
UN can't
afford one
guard for a
Security
Council
meeting, but
won't provide
information
requested by
the Press
about Ban
Ki-moon's
endless and
largely
fruitless
travel.
Inner City
Press, which
covers the UN
corruption
scandal and
was ousted
then evicted
by an official
implicated in
the scandal,
Cristina
Gallach -- see
OIOS
audit
Paragraphs 37
to 40 and
20(b) --
with Ban
Ki-moon's full
knowledge, was
unable to get
to the
Security
Council
stakeout. Its
pass, cut by
Gallach, won't
open the
turnstile at
the other end
of the
stakeout. This
week a guard
there even
refused to
allow Inner
City Press
through to a
stakeout with
a staffer of
the
Spokesperson's
office.
Gallach, at
least
according to
some paid to
tweet for the
UN, is in
Washington. So
Inner City
Press
undertook to
document the
restrictions
and
censorship.
Another UN
system
spokesperson
tried to
undermine it,
as did UN
Security. They
claimed
everything is
fine, even as
Security
Council
Ambassadors
asked them how
can it be that
the door is
locked (and
Press
excluded).
Some Security
write-up
began, sure to
omit all of
this. Watch
this site -
and see below.
While
many try to
insulate
today's UN
from the open
corruption of
the recent
past of
President of
the General
Assembly John
Ashe, and of
Francis
Lorenzo who
has pleaded
guilty, there
is continuity
to this UN
scandal. This
includes a
revival of the
Ng
Lap Seng's old
"South South
News" team,
with El
Salvador
ex-Ambassador
Carlos Garcia
and others,
even as those
investigating
this UN
corruption are
evicted and
restricted,
and those
covering it up
are rewarded.
Inner
City Press has
repeatedly
asked Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
Ban's
appearance at
an event
sponsored by
the Francis
Lorenzo
registered
group Global
Governance for
the UN
Sustainable
Development
Goals. Q&A
videos
here and
here.
Dujarric
tried to
answer about
another group,
then said
Lorenzo's
connection to
the group
isn't clear. Q&A video here.
Well, now
Inner City
Press can
report that
the "Global
Governance for
the UN
Sustainable
Development
Goals"
event Ban
attended was
with indicted
John Ashe, his
wife Anilla
Cherian's book
launch. Video
here.
It
featured
speeches by
Ban and by
Francis
Lorenzo, who
in his speech
named both
GG-UNSDG and
Global
National
Competitiveness
Cooperation
Organization
for the UN,
which
sponsored the
DPI-NGO
conference
last year at
which Under
Secretary
General
Cristina
Gallach spoke.
Q&A
video here.
How did this
not show up in
the UN's audit
of l'affaire
John Ashe and
Ng Lap Seng?
How did this
book launch
event get
inserted into
UNTV archives,
run by
Gallach's DPI?
On the video,
Ban and then
Mrs. Ban are
thanked by
Ashe and then
Anilla
Cherian. The
indictment
details how
over
$1,000,000 was
withdrawn from
the PGA
Accounts and
transferred to
the personal
accounts of
Ashe and of
Anilla
Cherian;
no-show jobs
are also
described.
Then there is
the speech of
Francis
Lorenzo, how
Anilla Cherian
showed Ban the
book even
before Ashe.
The UN has
been trying to
downplay or
conceal Ban
Ki-moon's
contacts with
Lorenzo, most
recently
saying it's
unclear how
Lorenzo is
connected to a
group that he,
Lorenzo,
register, and
another one he
founded. Those
obfuscations
cannot stand;
separately,
the
retaliation is
more and more
clear. We'll
have more on
this.
As
UN officials
including
Cristina
Gallach, whose involvement
in the scandal
is detailed in
the UN's own Office
of Internal
Oversight
Services audit
at Paragraphs
37 to 40 and
20(b)
have
moved to
evict
Inner City
Press
from the UN
premises (video
here, Courthouse
News article
here)
and
restrict its
access, Inner
City Press has
been made
aware of a
revival of the
South South
News model, in
organizations
which
retains ties
to indicted Ng Lap
Seng.
And Gallach's
Department of
Public
Information
continues
partnering
with these
organizations,
even as DPI
falls apart on
Gallach's
watch. The
last NGO
Conference at
the UN,
sponsored by
South Korea
among others,
had as a
sponsor and
speaker the
"Global
National
Competitiveness
Cooperation
Organization
for the UN,"
one of four
Sponsors of
indicted
Francis
Lorenzo's
Global
Governance for
the UN
SDGs.
Gallach even
spoke at the
event.