As Burma
Ambassador in NY Fired NYT Errs and Says
Geneva Amid Silent Guterres Sleaze
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- ESPN
SDNY / UN GATE,
Feb 27 – After the Burma
coup regime fired its New
York-based UN ambassador U
Kyaw Moe Tun for his speech in
New York in the usually
scripted UN General Assembly,
the New York Times reported
that the speech had been in
Geneva.
Seven hours
later, that remained
uncorrected. And UN Sec-Gen
Antonio Guterres, a darling of
the NYT, was typically silent,
wanting a second five-year
term. All of this must be, and
is being, opposed.
But the
United Kingdom as President of
the UNSC for February, now
virtue signaling, did not even
push to have the February
meeting on Burma be open, and
UK Ambassador Barbara Woodward
on February 1 banned the Press
- which was given access to
Tuesday's background briefing
- from her UN "press"
conference (at which not a
single question on Africa, for
example, was taken).
Since then,
Woodward and her UK Mission
have not only refused to
circulate the letters and CVs
of opponents of Guterres -
they won't even confirm
receipt. Democracy indeed.
Here was
and is Inner City Press'
question to the UK, as UNSC
President: ""on
deadline, for
UK's response
to current
developments
in Myanmar /
Burma. Please
confirm
receipt." This
was sent on
January 31 to
PR Barbara Woodward,
Jaclyn Licht,
Sorcha Lowry
and Isabella
Olex; no
answer from
them or
"spokesman"
Mungo
Woodifield.
Later
at the
February 2 US
State
Department
briefing,
Spokesman Ned
Price said,
"When it comes
to Burma,
look, I don’t
think the
military
takeover, the
military coup,
is in the
interest –
it’s certainly
not in our
interest.
It’s certainly
not in the
interest of
our likeminded
partners.
I think you
will also find
that it’s not
in the
interest of
the
Chinese.
So our first
concern, of
course, is the
restoration of
civilian
leadership in
Burma.
Our concern,
consistent
with that, is
ensuring that
as we
undertake this
review, now
that we have
determined
that a coup
has taken
place on
February 1st,
the
civilian-led
government has
been deposed
by the
military – our
first concern
as we do that
review will be
to ensure that
of the $135
million we
contribute
annually to
the people of
Burma, that we
don’t do
anything that
would affect
the
long-suffering
people of
Burma,
including the
Rohingya in
this case." Inner
City Press will have more on
this.
***
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