On
Libya, Before
Leon's Murky
UAE Deal,
Mitri Got Waiver
from Ban, Here
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
November
13,
more
here --
When
Bernardino
Leon, set for
a $1500 a day
job with the
United Arab
Emirates, came
to the UN
Security
Council for
the final time
on November 5,
Inner City
Press
asked
him about the
UAE. He did
not answer;
Inner City
Press for the
Free
UN Coalition
for Access
said; louder,
that he should
do a question
and answer
stakeout on
UNTV.
Leon
did emerge and
take
questions;
Inner City
Press went
first and
asked him if
he had sought
approval from
the UN Ethics
Office before
pursuing
the UAE job,
if he acknowledged
the conflict
of interest
and thought it
will impact
intra-Libya
talks. Video
here.Leon
did not answer
about the UN
Ethics office,
but conceded
that the
“optics” were
bad. Video
here.
Leon's
predecessor as
UN envoy to
Libya Tarek
Mitri,
however, got a
formal "Note"
from Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon,
signed by
Ban's chief of
staff Susana
Malcorra and
cc-ed to Under
Secretaries
General Jeffrey
Feltman
(Political
Affairs), Yukio
Takasu
(Management)
and Joan
Dubinksy (Ethics
Office)
approving
outside activity for
Mitri, which
Inner City
Press is putting
online here, and
embedded
below.
Among the
continuing outside
engagements
approved by
Ban Ki-moon
were for Mitri
to be on the
Board of the
Arab Center
for Research
and Policy
Studies, in
Beirut and
Doha.
Did Leon get, or
even seek,
such a Note
from Ban? The
leaked
emails show
that Feltman
knew of Leon's
job search
with the UAE
by August 27,
at latest.
Now after more
leaked emails,
of the UAE
about embargo
/ sanctions
violations and
that the UN's
Jeff Feltman
knew of Leon's
UAE job
search as of
August 27 at latest,
Leon on the
evening of
November 12
issued this:
"I am
aware of the
report today
in the New
York Times
about Libya
and alleged
activities in
contravention
of United
Nations
Security
Council
resolutions.
In light of
this report, I
have decided
to request a
full
clarification
of the issue,
including from
the United
Arab Emirate
(UAE)
authorities,
as I take time
to reflect on
the next steps
in my
professional
career."
While
Leon said that
"I" have
decided to
request
clarification
from the UAE,
Reuters
reported that
the UN is
seeking an
explanation.
But Leon
did not say he
will share the
UAE's
explanation
with the UN,
much less
with the
public. And
shouldn't the
UN Security
Council's
Libya
sanctions
committee be
seeking the
explanation,
or asking for
action against
the UAE?
So
is Leon no
longer taking
the UAE job? What
about Feltman
and what he
knew? We'll
have more on
this.
For
Leon, it's
about
more than optics. Inner
City Press has
researched and
compared Bernardino
Leon's
conduct, as
reflected by
the emails
he does not
dispute, to the
UN Charter and
UN staff rules
which apply to
him. And after
publishing
the rules,
Inner City
Press on
November 6
asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
them. Video
here.
Leon wrote to
the UAE: "all
my movements
and proposals
have been
consulted with
(and in many
cases designed
by) the HOR
and Aref Nayed
and Mahmud
Jibril (with
whom I speak
on a daily
basis)
following Your
request."
UN
Charter Article 100
provides that
"In the
performance of
their duties,
the
Secretary-General
and the staff
shall not seek
or receive
instructions
from any
Government or
from any other
authority
external to
the
Organization.
They shall
refrain from
any action
which might
reflect on
their position
as
international
officials
responsible
only to the
Organization."
But Leon
told the UAE
took and
obeyed "Your
request" - and
got the UAE
job. Also
relevant was
Leon's oath:
"(b) Staff
members shall
make the
following
written
declaration
witnessed by
the
Secretary-General
or his or her
authorized
representative:
'I
solemnly
declare and
promise to
exercise in
all loyalty,
discretion and
conscience the
functions
entrusted to
me as an
international
civil servant
of the United
Nations, to
discharge
these
functions and
regulate my
conduct with
the interests
of the United
Nations only
in view, and
not to seek or
accept
instructions
in regard to
the
performance of
my duties from
any Government
or other
source
external to
the
Organization.'"
From the Staff
Rules:
"Rule
1.2 Basic
rights and
obligations of
staff
Conflict of
interest
(m) A conflict
of interest
occurs when,
by act or
omission, a
staff member’s
personal
interests
interfere with
the
performance of
his or her
official
duties and
responsibilities
or with the
integrity,
independence
and
impartiality
required by
the staff
member’s
status as an
international
civil servant.
When an actual
or possible
conflict of
interest does
arise, the
conflict shall
be disclosed
by staff
members to
their head of
office,
mitigated by
the
Organization
and resolved
in favour of
the interests
of the
Organization;
Specific
instances of
prohibited
conduct
(k) Staff
members shall
neither offer
nor promise
any favour,
gift,
remuneration
or any other
personal
benefit to
another staff
member or to
any third
party with a
view to
causing him or
her to
perform, fail
to perform or
delay the
performance of
any official
act.
Similarly,
staff members
shall neither
seek nor
accept any
favour, gift,
remuneration
or any other
personal
benefit from
another staff
member or from
any third
party in
exchange for
performing,
failing to
perform or
delaying the
performance of
any official
act."
We'll have
more on this.
On
November 5,
Leon also said
that the GNC,
which has
written to the
UN complaining
about Leon's
new job, has
its own
problems to
solve. After
Leon argued
that his new
job is not
really a
conflict
because it is
“academic,”
Inner City
Press without
the UN
microphone
asked him to
confirm it is
the UAE
government
that will be
paying him. It
is.
Inner City
Press asked
Leon if he
thought there
should be some
“cooling off”
period during
which a UN
mediator
cannot go work
for one of the
parties to the
conflict. Leon
said he is
just a civil
servant and
has to work
somewhere.
It seemed a
strange
defense of the
UAE job, and
give rise to
an idea, only
half in jest:
a UN “Trust
Fund” to
support
mediators so
they don't
sell out to
parties to the
conflicts they
work on. It's
similar to the
idea that
former
President of
the General
Assembly John
Ashe had to
take hundreds
of thousands
of dollars in
bribes because
he comes from
a small
country.
Leon appeared
to say that no
one from the
UN has raised
any question
about him
negotiating
for and taking
the UAE job.
Inner City
Press asked
the Security
Council's
president for
November,
Matthew
Rycroft of the
UK, if the
issue came up
in
consultations
and did not
receive a
“yes” answer.
Instead,
Rycroft told
Inner City
Press that the
UN must have a
lot of rules
about this.
But does it?d
At noon,
with Leon
still inside
the Security
Council, UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric
declined to
tell the Press
if Leon has
even sought UN
Ethics Office
clearance to
negotiate with
the UAE for a
$1,500 a day
job while
purportedly
serving the UN
in Libya.
Dujarric
said again and
again that
Leon had
worked hard
and had been
subject to
criticism from
all side --
like the UN's
(also dubious)
Yemen envoy.
Dujarric told
one reporter
that he was
not asking a
question --
suddenly rules
are important,
one wag
remarked --
and tried to
distinguish
the analogies,
raised by
Inner City
Press earlier,
to Tony
Blair's
business
interests
while Quartet
Envoy, and
Alexander
Downer on
Cyprus.
Inner City
Press asked,
in light of
the other UN
scandals, if
Ban Ki-moon
saw the need
to implement
rules before
he leaves.
Dujarric's
reply was that
each case is
different; on
the CAR rapes
he said wait
for the
(delayed)
report. Can
this scandal
similarly be
put on ice?
Watch this
site.
Back on July
15 after
Leon briefed
the UN
Security
Council about
his political
agreement
without the
Tripoli-based
General
National
Congress,
Inner City
Press asked
him what plan
he may have to
get the GNC to
sign, and
about
long-time
Libyan
ambassador
Ibrahim
Dabbashi's
criticism in
the Security
Council of its
Sanctions
Committee. Video here.
On the latter,
Leon said that
that first
step is to
form a unity
government,
THEN to listen
to what it
asks for. On
the GNC, Leon
seems to say
they agree in
principle,
only differing
on timing or
sequencing.
The same two
questions,
nearly
identically,
were repeated
by a Gulf
media; an
Italian
journalist
asked about
the flow of
migrants to
Europe. This,
Leon seized
on, asking
rhetorically
what “we” can
tell the
British, whose
people were
killed in
Tunisia by a
guy reportedly
trained in
Libya.
The answer
again
reflected
Leon's at
least dual
allegiances or
constituencies.
He was the
EU's envoy,
then put in to
replace UN
enovy Tarek
Mitri.
Recently
former IAEA El
Baradei said
Leon was
involved in
the “coup” in
Egypt. (Leon
said he hasn't
seen that You
Tube and
doubts El
Baradei said
it.)
The UN, after
ousting Tarek
Mitri as envoy
in favor of
Bernardino
Leon, has been
promoting its
good works in
Geneva and in
the country.
Back on
February 18,
speaking
before the
foreign
ministers of
Libya (Tobruk)
and Egypt,
Leon again
cited his own
work: "given
the sense of
urgency, I
have called
for the next
meeting of the
political
dialogue to
finalize
discussions
initiated in
Geneva on the
formation of
government of
national unity
and security
arrangements
to pave the
way for a
formal and
comprehensive
cessation of
hostilities.”
At the
Security
Council
stakeout
before the
Jordan-requested
meeting began,
UK Ambassador
Lyall Grant
said the
meeting would
provide a
chance to hear
from Libya and
Egypt; he said
he hadn't yet
seen the draft
resolution.
(Another
non-Arab
Permanent
Representative
said they HAD
seen the
draft.)
After
Leon, Libya's
foreign
minister said
he is not
requesting an
international
intervention,
only wants
Egypt's help.
Egypt's
Foreign
Minister
Shoukry,
citing the
killing of the
US Ambassador
in Benghazi,
said that too
little was
done after the
parliament was
chased to
Tobruk. He
said he is
counting on
Jordan to
distribute the
draft
resolution.
Some of the
Council say
they have a
different line
of thinking.
Watch this
site.
Bernardino
Leon, as Inner
City Press
exclusively
reported, was
installed as
head of UNSMIL
after
then-head
Tarek Mitri
declined to
make the UN
mission a mere
appendage of
European / UK
diplomacy. Is
it working?
UNSMIL's
former deputy
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
of Mauritania
has been moved
to head
UNMEER, the
UN's Ebola
mission.
Sources in
Yemen say Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
was the UN's
“designated
security
official” when
a UNICEF
staffer was
taken hostage
while
traveling to
the Sana'a
airport
without the
required (and
needed)
security
detail. Some
say Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
was
distracted, in
Yemen and
later in
Libya, by side
business
interests.
But a check of
Ban Ki-moon's
Public
Disclosure
website, where
his officials
are supposed
to make
rudimentary
disclosure of
the finances
and outside
business
interests,
does not even
list Ismail
Ould Cheikh
Ahmed (while
numerous other
Deputy SRSGs
are listed).
His is not in
the most
recent
database, for
2013 - and may
escape any
disclosure by
become an
Under
Secretary
General with a
mere nine
month stint at
UNMEER. Then
what? We'll
stay on this.
When the UN
Security
Council met
about Mali on
January 6, it
was Malian
Foreign
Minister
Abdoulaye
Diop, and not
UN
Peacekeeping
official Herve
Ladsous, who
distributed
his speech and
came to take
Press
questions.
(Ladsous has a
policy
against it,
here and here.)
Inner City
Press asked
Diop about the
Mali talks in
Algiers, and
about the
impact of
Libya. On the
latter, Diop
said that “in
2012 the Mali
crisis started
when the war
started in
Libya and many
Malian
elements who
were part of
the Libyan
army decided
to come back
home with the
arms and
ammunition.
This started
the
destabilization
of Mali.”
Diop added,
"In the
southern part
of Libya there
is a group
that has
declared
allegiance to
the Islamic
State.” (When
asked to name
the group he
could not or
would not.)
On
Leon: To try
to counter
Libya's
lawless power
struggle, the
UN engaged in
one of its
own.
After Inner
City Press
repeated asked
about it,
including at
the UN's noon
briefings on
August 11 and
13, on August
14 the UN said
Bernardino
Leon will take
over as its
Libya envoy on
September 1.
When Inner
City Press
asked if that
is really
Leon's
starting day,
given that
he's said
he'll go to
Tripoli as
early as next
week
representing
the UN, Ban
Ki-moon's
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq
said Leon is
merely
"familiarizing"
himself with
the work he
will be, and
Mitri remains
in place until
September 1.
Really?
Ignoring the
previous
questions and
the
power-play,
wire services
like Reuters
merely retyped
("reported")
the UN's
August 14
announcement
that Leon will
start
September 1.
And now?
Back
on August 1,
Inner City
Press exclusively
reported
that UN envoy
to Libya Tarek
Mitri was
being "pushed
out" of the
post,
including by
UK envoy to
Libya Jonathan
Powell, and
cited his
brother Lord
Powell's
extensive
business in
Libya through
Magna
Holdings.
The UK
mission,
usually
responsive,
did not
provide
comment on
written Press
questions on
this; at UN
Ambassador
Mark Lyall
Grant's August
4 press
conference
Inner City
Press asked
about Powell's
and Mitri's
relationship,
without
direct answer,
seehere.
Then the UK's
Ambassador to
Libya Michael
Aron has announced,
on Twitter no
less,
that Mitri is
out and Ban
Ki-moon has
installed a
new UN envoy,
former
Zapatero
diplomat
Bernardino
Leon Gross.
The UN, at
least at its
August 8 noon
briefing and
in emails
since, has not
announce
anything about
replacing
Mitri, much
less by whom.
In
2011 when
France had
already gotten
its Jerome
Bonnafont in
place to
replace its
Alain Le Roy
atop UN
Peacekeeping,
Bonnafont's
bragging about
it in India,
where he was
French
Ambassador,
led to Ban
rescinding the
"offer."
So Ban has
accepted or
done nothing
to stop this
P3 power grab
to oust Mitri.
But can "his"
successor be
pre-announced
and Ban accept
that too?
Footnote:
Inner City
Press is
exclusively
informed that
UNSMIL deputy
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
also has
business,
literally:
fisshing
business. Ban
and those in
control of
this play
accept that
too? Watch
this site.
Background:
Inner City
Press on
August 1 asked
UN spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric what
UN envoy Tarek
Mitri is
doing;
Dujarric said
he was not
aware but
would check.
Inner City
Press had
reported that
Mitri, unlike
the other UN
international
staff who
relocated to
Tunis, went
back to his
native
Lebanon.
Sources in the
region
exclusively
told Inner
City Press
that Mitri had
been hoping
for a
government
post in
Lebanon,
describing him
as less than
committed to
remaining with
the UN.
Now we can
report more.
These
knowledgeable
sources say
that Mitri is
being "pushed
out," mostly
they say by
the UK's envoy
to Libya,
former Tony
Blair aide
Jonathan
Powell.
"Mitri was
expected to
take on a
mostly support
function," one
source told
Inner City
Press. "He
stood up and
said no,
headquarters
didn't back
him up and now
he's being
pushed out."
We'll have
more on this.
It was nine
days after
Libya's
foreign
minister
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz at the UN
Security
Council
stakeout told
the Press
his country
wanted
international
help to
protect oil
fields and
ports,
including
airports, that
the US
announced it
had relocated
its Tripoli
embassy staff
out of the
country to
Tunisia.
Inner City
Press asked,
where is UN
envoy to Libya
Tarek Mitri?
He briefed the
Security
Council from
Beirut --
sources tell
Inner City
Press he has
been on
vacation
there, and
this deputy,
too, was out
of the
country.
Back on July
17 when
Libya's
foreign
minister
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz emerged
from the UN
Security
Council to take
questions from
the media,
Inner City
Press asked
him to be more
specific about
what type of
“support”
force he is
asking for.
Mohamed
Abdel
Aziz replied
that the
request is not
for a
“military”
force -- but
then went on
to say say the
force should
protect oil
fields and
ports. If
that's not
military, what
is it?
Inner
City Press
also asked
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz for
Libya's
current
position on
the US
arresting Abu
Khatallah.
Compared to
the complaints
of others,
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz said that
even though
under
international
law it is
unacceptable,
since Libya
can't protect
witnesses,
maybe it is
okay.
Given
the current
state of
affairs, what
is “Libya's”
position?
Meanwhile
on
July 17 the
UN's envoy to
Libya Tarek
Mitri told the
Security
Council -- by
video from his
native
Lebanon, while
other UN
international
staff are in
Tunisia --
that the
fighting has
“cast a shadow
over the
election on 25
June of the
200 member
Council of
Representatives.”
Ya don't say.
Mitri
said
that barely
forty percent
of the 1.5
million
registered
Libyans went
to the polls.
He said 12
seats will
remain vacant;
41 candidates
were
disqualified
under the
post-Gaddafi
Law on
Political and
Administrative
Isolation.
Final results
are supposed
to be
announced on
July 20. Watch
this site.