In
Central African Republic, Mosque
Bombing Slammed by OIC,
Nothing Yet from UN, Trip
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
October 15 –
The UN Security Council has a
peacekeeping mission in the
Central African Republic, and
UN Secretary General Antonio
Guterres is about to visit
there. But two days after the
bombing of a mosque in Kembe
in south-central CAR, neither
Guterres nor the UN Security
Council, where France holds
the pen on CAR, has said
anything. This as Guterres'
new head of Global
Communication Alison Smale
told her staff that their
presentation of CAR will be a
litmus test of performance, as
she moved to bring in outside
consultants. The
Organization
of Islamic
Cooperation
issued a
statement on
Kembe:
"strongly
condemned the
attack carried
out by the
anti-Balaka
militia in a
mosque in
Kembe,
south-central
Central
African
Republic on
Friday 13
October 2017,
killing at
least 25." The
UN Security
Council's
silence so far
on this is
mirrored by
its silence on
the bombing in
Mogadishu,
perhaps
because the 15
members'
approval, if
only through
silence procedure.
Where is the
UN, including
its
Secretariat in
Headquarters,
on this? [Update
here.]
When
as here the UN doesn't respond
to or even acknowledge bad
news, it loses even more
credibility. Despite UN
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres talk of “zero
tolerance” for sexual
exploitation by UN
peacekeepers abuses continue,
for example the alleged
drugging and raping of a 19
(or the UN says, 16) year old
girl by Mauritanian forces in
Bambari in the Central African
Republic. Inner City Press
asked Guterres' Deputy
Spokesman Farhan Haq about the
alleged rape on October 12; he
disputed the age but confirmed
that the “relevant country” is
Mauritania. Video here;
transcript here
and below. Meanwhile Guterres'
head of Global Communications
Alison Smale, who has not
responded for five weeks to
detailed Press petitions about
unnecessary and unjustifiable
restrictions and targeting for
investigative reporting, told
her staff on October 3 that
creating good news from
Guterres' trip to the Central
African Republic later this
month will be a litmus test
for the UN. She said Guterres
and she have discussed
bringing in outside
consultants -- that is,
spending yet more public money
-- and said she would keep her
staff informed. She told them,
My office door is open,
sometimes an e-mail door. But
she does not answer detailed
e-mail. That, is a litmus
test. We'll have more on this.
From the UN's October 12 transcript:
Inner City Press: a
19-year-old woman who says
that she was both drugged and
then raped by UN peacekeepers
in Bambari in [the Central
African Republic]. And
it's a very detailed
account. She was on her
way to a funeral. She
was offered tea. She
woke up naked and having been
raped. And I'm just
wondering, what steps has the
UN taken with regard to the
peacekeeper at issue or other
peacekeepers in this case?
Deputy Spokesman: Well,
regarding that, yes, we were
provided with information that
members of one contingent
sexually abused a 16-year-old
girl on… not a 19-year-old
girl, by the way. The
information we have is that
she's 16… on 30
September. As of 10
October, which is Tuesday, the
[United Nations
Multidimensional Integrated
Stabilization Mission in the
Central African Republic]
(MINUSCA) informed the
relevant country through
official channels from the
Department of Field Support
for further investigation and
action. And what we're
expecting is we've requested
that… normally, a Member State
has up to 10 working days to
respond to the UN about
whether it will investigate
the matter through the
appointment of a national
investigation officer, and
we've requested that this be
expedited to five days.
So, we're awaiting a reply.
Inner City Press: And is the
Member State at issue
Mauritania? Deputy
Spokesman: Yes, yes, it
is.
***
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