Ban
Ki-moon's Task
Force of
Friends Blames
Corruption on
PGA Ashe,
Audits
Withheld
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, March
29 -- The UN's
unwillingness
to address the
obvious
corruption of
South South
News, to which
it has given
awards and Ban
Ki-moon photo
ops via its UN
Correspondents
Association,
and whose Ng
Lap Seng
bought
documents from
Ban's
Secretariat,
became even
more clear on
March 29.
Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric read
out a
statement that
Ban's “Task
Force” report
on corruption
had been
circulated,
limited to
structural
flaws in the
Office of the
President of
the General
Assembly.
Inner
City Press, facing
eviction from
the UN for
seeking to
cover an event
by one of Ng's
and South
South News'
fundees, UNCA,
in the UN
Press Briefing
Room,
immediately
asked why Ban
wasn't
studying
corruption in
his own
Secretariat.
Dujarric said
there are two
audits on that
- but then
despite having
said the
audits would
be public in
March, said he
“thought” they
would be
withheld for
some weeks
more.
Inner
City Press
asked current
PGA Mogens
Lykketoft's
spokesperson
Dan Thomas if
Lykketoft
could just
order the
audits
released.
Thomas said he
doesn't have
the audits -
which is
strange.
Or not.
When Inner
City Press got
a copy of
Ban's report,
it found from
Footnote 1 that
among the
three members
of the Task
Force were
Ban's chief of
staff Edmond
Mulet and
Ban's personal
lawyer, Miguel
de Serpa
Soares (who in
full
disclosure on
March 28
issued a
threat of
imminent
eviction to
Inner City
Press, here.)
Of
course such a
Task Force of
Friends would
not find any
problem with
Ban's own
conduct. But
Ban took the
photo op with
Ng; his spouse
and his senior
adviser Vijay
Nambiar
attended the
founding of
Sheri Yan's
Global
Sustainability
Foundation.
Nothing from
Ban's Task
Force Friends
on that.
Instead
there are
proposal such
as that
perhaps PGAs
should make
financial
disclosure.
But most of
Ban's senior
officials do
not make even
their
rudmentary
financial
disclosure
forms public.
Ban claim to
be for
transparency,
but allows
this, then
picks his
friends to
study
corruption.
Ban
though
Dujarric
claims to be
for free
press, while
his Under
Secretary
General for
Communications
Cristina
Gallach threw
the Press out
into the
street on two
hours notice
with no due
process, and
his lawyer
Serpa Soares,
after
self-servingly
clearing Ban
of corruption
issued a treat
of eviction to
Inner City
Press citing
immunity.
Impunity,
indeed. We'll
have more -
watch this
site.
From the UN's
March 29
transcript:
Inner City Press:
I want to ask
you about,
about the
announcement
you made at
the top about
the John
Ashe/Frank
Lorenzo/Sheri
Yan… you
called it the
John Ashe
case, but it's
obviously a
series of
indictments.
Spokesman:
I mean, I
didn't call… I
just used John
Ashe as a
point of
reference and
I said John
Ashe and
others.
Inner City Press:
What I want to
ask about is
the
Secretariat
itself.
It seems like
this task
force, the way
you've
presented it,
is entirely
about flaws in
the structure
of the PGA's
office.
But, as I'm
sure you know,
in the
criminal
complaint,
there's a
number of
portions where
it talks about
bribery or
misdoings by
UN Secretariat
officials.
In paragraph
40, it talks
about a DGCAM
official…
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I'm well aware
of the
complaint.
Inner City
Press:
yesterday,
you'd said
nobody knew
that
South-South
News and David
Ng were
problematic.
And since then
I've learned
that there's a
memo by Éric
Falt, then D-2
of DPI, about
David
Ng. I'd
also like to
show you
this.
This was an ad
taken by David
Ng South-South
News after
which Ban
Ki-moon did a
photo op with
David
Ng. So I
wanted to
know, what is
Ban-Ki… how is
it possible
that if
documents
existed in the
UN system
contemporaneous
with Ban
Ki-moon's
interaction
with a now
indicted David
Ng or Ng Lap
Seng that it
took place,
and what does
it say about
weaknesses of
the
Secretariat,
and who is
going to do a
report on
that?
Spokesman:
There is an
audit of… that
is ongoing of
the
relationship
with David Ng
and his
various
NGOs.
That audit has
been
done. It
is available
for Member
States to be
shared.
And according
to OIOS'
existing rules
and
regulations,
it will be
made public, I
think, within
a couple of
weeks.
From that, we
will see where
that goes on.
Again, not to
beat old
horses with
whatever one
beats old
horses with,
but it was not
a… there was
no official
photo op with
the
Secretary-General
and the
gentleman you
mentioned.
He obviously
came up to the
Secretary-General,
took a photo.
Inner City
Press:
It was taken
upstairs at
Cipriani.
I have video…
Spokesman:
I
understand.
You and I have
different
views.
Question:
No, different
view of a
video? I
just have one
question,
because it
seems like Ban
Ki-moon has
done a report
on another
part of the UN
system…
Spokesman:
Matthew, I
think I just
answered your
question.
Inner City
Press:
You
didn't.
There's an
audit…
Spokesman:
An audit has
been
done.
It's
done.
Member States…
Inner City
Press:
There's an
audit as
opposed to a
report.
I'm just
asking.
Finish,
please.
Spokesman:
Okay.
It's an
audit.
It's available
with Member
States.
If further
investigations
need to be
done following
that audit,
they will be
done.
What the
Secretary-General's
task force
examined, in
fact, and it
talked to, I
think, almost
all, a whole
number of, as
you will read
it yourself in
the report, a
number of
former
Presidents of
the General
Assembly.
It's about
structural
issues and the
weaknesses of
the Office as
they then
existed.
Inner City
Press:
But, are you
saying there's
no structural
weaknesses…?
Spokesman:
I will come…
Inner City
Press:
…Secretariat?
Spokesman:
As I said,
there is an
audit, and
whatever else
needs to be
done
afterwards, it
will be
done. Mr.
Reuters.
Question:
Thank you,
Stéph. I
wanted to
follow up on
Benny's
question.
It sounds like
with these…
you've had
several
statements
about the use
of the word
"occupation".
On March 28
Inner City
Press asked
Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric at
the noon
briefing the
following, as
mis-transcribed
by the UN:
Inner City
Press: This
has to do with
UN corruption
or I said
otherwise
South-South
News. In
October I’d
asked you
about these
multiple
inclusions of
South-South
News content
in UN
Television
archives.
While you were
away, Farhan
explained one,
one incident
saying that it
had, it was a
request from
Habitat, but
I’ve gone back
and looked,
and as you may
know, there
are many of
them.
And so I
wanted to
know…
Spokesman
Dujarric:
Again, all…
[inaudible]
Spokesman:
I think you
have… you have
asked this
question.
If I’m not
mistaken, my
answer to you
was to check
with DPI.
Inner City
Press: But my
question is,
given there
are other
things that
came up while
you were away
that remain
unexplained
including a
statement of
support for
South-South
News by the
Under-Secretary-General
of DPI that
remains
online.
I wanted to
know…
[inaudible]
Spokesman:
I think
obviously, you
know, it’s
clear that the
latest legal
decisions
taken by
courts in New
York and
prosecutors I
think will
push us to
again review
the
situation.
Second, you
know, as for
the statement
that the
Under-Secretary-General
made at the
time, she made
the
statement.
You know,
taking it
down, we’re
not going to
whitewash what
was
said.
And obviously,
at the time,
no one had any
indication
that there was
anything
untowards
going on with
the leadership
of South-South
News.
Inner City
Press:
But my
question,
given what
you’ve said
now, which is
Mr. Frank
Lorenzo
pleading
guilty and
Vivian Wang
being indicted
right after
that, both of
South-South
News what is
the thinking
of expanding
or having a
new audit…
Spokesman:
I just said
two seconds
ago…
Inner City
Press:
Right. I
didn’t…
Spokesman:
…obviously,
the latest
issues are
pushing us to
review a…
[inaudible]
Inner City
Press:
Is that a
reference to
perhaps
starting a new
OIOS audit?
Spokesman:
No, it’s just
reviewing the
current
situation with
South-South
News.
Thank you,
all.
Yeah,
thanks. As
Inner City
Press was
staking out
the UN
Security
Council
meeting on
March 24 about
Western Sahara
and Morocco's
ordering out
of the UN
Peacekeeping
mission there,
a figure
rarely seen at
the stakeout
approached.
Giampaolo
Pioli the head
of the UN
Correspondents
Association
came over to
where Inner
City Press was
typing and
editing audio
and video and
said, “You're
an asshole.”
Moments later,
Inner City
Press now with
its UN
accreditation
pass
downgraded to
Non-Resident
Correspondent
by UN
Department of
Public
Information
chief Cristina
Gallach at the
behest of
Pioli went to
ask UN
Security not
to lock the
glass door to
the Security
Council before
the Council's
president
spoke at the
stakeout.
As
Inner City
Press asked
the guard not
to lock the
door to
journalists,
UNCA's Pioli
again said,
“You're an
asshole. I'm
telling you
that you're an
asshole. Quote
me.” Audio
here.
What's behind
this? How did
a journalists
club turn into
a club against
a journalist,
and why?
Beyond Pioli's
financial
relationship
with Palitha
Kohona, who as
Sri Lanka's
Ambassador to
the UN Pioli
unilaterally
granted a "UN"
screening of a
war crimes
denial film,
there is for
example the
matter of
South South
News.
South
South News is
depicted in
the October
2015 criminal
complaint
against John
Ashe, Ng Lap
Seng, Frank
Lorenzo and
others as a
vehicle for
bribery, to
the tune of
$12 million.
UNCA
under Pioli
took SSN's
money, and
gave its
funding Ng Lap
Sent a photo
op with Ban
Ki-moon. But
Pioli's UNCA
also gave
South South
News a
"journalism
award," and SSN
in term
featured
videos of
Pioli, here
- and of Pioli's
tenant Kohona,
here.
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