In
Afghanistan UN Abandoned Local
Staff Now US Meets Taliban As UN
Guterres Bans Press
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Video
Q&A
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Song
-
SDNY/FOIA
UN GATE, Oct 10 –
Each day, the current United
Nations gets worse. And Inner
City Press, banned now for the
1296th day by Secretary
General Antonio Guterres
continues to report on it, on
August 16 publishing a UN
internal memo about moving
international staff to
Kazakhstan. On August 16, 17
and 18 it in writing asking
Guterres and his UN
Spokesperson Stephane Dujarric
and Melissa Fleming about it -
no answer. And no one they let
in asked, or seemingly had the
memo.
On October
8 this from Guterres, while he
also dissembles
about press freedom: "The
Secretary-General condemns in
the strongest terms today’s
horrific attack at a mosque in
Kunduz, northern
Afghanistan... Stéphane
Dujarric, Spokesman for the
Secretary-General
New York, 8 October 2021."
Dujarric who refuses all of
Inner City Press' written
questions despite this
Now on
October 10, this: "On October
9 and 10, an interagency
delegation traveled to Doha,
Qatar to meet with senior
Taliban representatives. The
U.S. delegation focused on
security and terrorism
concerns and safe passage for
U.S. citizens, other foreign
nationals and our Afghan
partners, as well as on human
rights, including the
meaningful participation of
women and girls in all aspects
of Afghan society. The two
sides also discussed the
United States’ provision of
robust humanitarian
assistance, directly to the
Afghan people."
On August 30, the
UN Security Council after
significant watering down a
draft resolution on
Afghanistan nevertheless
witnessed abstention and
speech from China
name-checking, to denounced,
"ETIM," the East Turkestan
Islamic Movement. No one
mentioned the mass
imprisonment of Uighurs. And
Guterres' teams did not answer
any of Inner City Press'
written questions. Video
of Q&A for access. Song.
and now, podcast
here.
So during
the August 30 meeting, the
last in August, Inner City
Press wrote to the incoming
UNSC Presidency for September,
Ireland's Geraldine Byrne
Nason, and her spokesperson
Meghan Boroughs, for access at
least by WebEx to their
September 1 "press"
conference.
The
Mission's self-described
spokesperson replied that she
referred the request to MALU -
which does not response or
explain - and the Irish PR
held a presser with another
spokesperson, Irwin, and did
not answer written questions
on Haiti, Cameroon, South
Sudan, and Afghanistan. A fish
rots from the head. Watch this
site.
On August
18 Dujarric announced, as
news, the two day old memo.
Here is UNAMA's email:
" From:
Marija Sendekovic
<sendekovic@un.org> On
Behalf Of OSRSG-UNAMA Sent:
Sunday, August 15, 2021 5:07
PM To: UNAMA-All Staff
<unama-allstaff@un.org>
Subject: Message to all
staff
Message to all staff The
security and political
landscape has evolved quickly
and we may expect further
volatility in the immediate
period ahead. We understand
the anxiety this has caused to
all of you in face of such
uncertainty. Our top
priority remains the safety
and well-being of all
personnel. We have put
in place and implemented many
approaches and security
measures to help protect
staff. We will continue to
make all necessary adjustments
to procedures and work issues
in order to safeguard
personnel. Many colleagues
from field offices have been
involved in extensive
relocation actions. I thank
all the many teams across the
UN family who made the
relocations possible. I
recognize such moves can be a
real upheaval and stressful to
colleagues and their families.
Your safety is of paramount
importance to us and we will
continue to support you in
every way we can.
The relocations were
overwhelmingly successful with
the vast majority of
field-based personnel safely
moved out of immediate harms’
way. With a focus on keeping
personnel and their families
safe, we will be looking to
see most national personnel
mainly working from homes or
the place of relocation.
The UN’s leadership is
continuing to explore every
viable option to support
national personnel in the
challenging
circumstances. In order
to further reduce risks we are
also looking at options to
consolidate personnel
reporting to the office in to
fewer compounds within
Afghanistan. Another
step we are taking is to
continue to lower the
footprint of international
personnel in Kabul. No
evacuation is currently being
considered but it is prudent
that only senior management
and essential international
staff stay in Afghanistan for
the time-being. In
parallel to lightening of our
international footprint in
Kabul, we are setting up a
satellite office for the UN in
a nearby state in order for
some international staff to
support our work in
Afghanistan. Almaty in
Kazakhstan -that is less than
two hours flight time from
Kabul- has been identified as
the location from where a
small group of international
personnel can work. We
need to display patience and
fortitude in the period ahead.
As representatives of the
United Nations we need to
remain level-headed and all
work together to shape these
events so that they produce
the best possible outcome for
Afghanistan under the
circumstances. These are the
moments where the United
Nations is called on to
perform; let us strive to do
our best to meet the great
expectations that the Afghan
people have on us."
The UN has
neither
responded to
or offered any
explanation
when a
lawyer's
letter - to UN
official
Fleming, and
Tal Mekel, and
to each UNCA
Executive
Committee
member - urged
them to have a
dialogue about
ending the
UN's banning
and censorship
of Inner City
Press.
On
August 9, an
independent
(minded)
journalist
asked Dujarric
about the
letter, video
here,
transcript:
Question:
My second
question is
the law firm
‑‑ what is it
called? ‑‑
Quinn Emanuel
wrote a letter
to the UN
asking about
reinstatement
of our
colleague
Matthew Lee
into the UN
press corps.
Do you have
any comment on
that?
Spokesman:
No. All I can
tell you is
that we've
received the
letter, and
I'm not aware
of any change
to his
status.
Question:
You're not
aware? I mean,
aren't you
part of the
group that
decides the
fate of... or
even the
negotiations...
The letter
calls for
renegotiation
[Cross
talk]
Spokesman:
I decide the
fate of no
one.
[Laughter]
Trust me,
trust me, my
authority is
extremely
limited,
whether at
home or at
work.
What I can
tell you and,
joking aside,
is that the
letter has
indeed been
received, and
I'm not aware
of any... and
there has been
no change in
Mr. Lee's
status.
Question:
Has the letter
been answered?
Do you plan to
answer
it?
Spokesman:
It's been
received.
Whether or not
it's been
answered, I
don't know
yet.
The
letter was
received by
the UN's
Melissa
Fleming, Maria
Luiza Vioti
and Tal Mekel
and to each
UNCA Executive
Board member,
to them citing
UNCA's stated
goals that it
has a charter
to supposedly
uphold.
What's
next? Since
the letter,
Inner City
Press has
published
exclusive
stories not
only from the
U.S. court
systems but
about the
United
Nations,
including its
agencies UNOPS,
UNFPA,
UNITAR
and UNESCO.
(Also credited
in AP,
Daily
Mail, and
Nigeria's
Sahara
Reporters,
amid answers
from the IMF.)
But
none of its
written
questions have
been answered
by the UN
Spokespeople,
and it remains
banned from
entry to the
UN's
briefings.
This must
end.
Having
asked for a
colleagial
discussion,
and while
still offering
it, things
must turn to
the law. UNCA
is a New York
State
non-profit
which has not
only not
abided by its
stated goals -
it has
tortiously
interfered
with a
journalist's
right to cover
the United
Nations.
The United
Nations itself
propounds
Article 19 of
the Universal
Declaration of
Human Rights,
and has other
legal duties
that must be
addressed by
national
courts,
particularly
in the UN's
host
country...
Those
in receipt of
the first,
friendly
letter:
melissa.fleming@un.org,
marialuiza.viotti@un.org,
mekel@un.org,
malu@un.org,
and
UNCA
Valeria
Robecco, ANSA
News Agency,
Nabil Abi
Saab,
Al-Araby,
Jianguo Ma,
Xinhua News
Agency, Edith
Lederer,
Associated,
Giampaolo
Pioli,
Quotidiano,
Linda Fasulo,
Ibtisam Azem,
Al-Araby
Al-Jadeed
Newspaper, Ali
Barada, France
24, Asharq
Al-Awsat;
Oscar Bolanos,
OMB News,
Sherwin
Bryce-Pease,
SABC South
Africa -
Alexander
Hassanein, The
Tokyo Shimbun,
Maria
Khrenova,
TASS, Philippe
Rater, Agence
France-Presse,
Kaori Yoshida,
Nikkei, Betul
Yuruk, Anadolu
Agency at
president@unca.com,
valeria.robecco@gmail.com,
nabisaab@gmail.com,
mjg222888@gmail.com,
elederer@ap.org,
giampioli@aol.com,
lindafasulo@gmail.com,
ibtisam.azem@alaraby.co.uk,
abarada@hotmail.com,
ombyvozque@gmail.com,
s.brycepease@gmail.com,
alexander@tokyoshimbun.us,
khrenova_m@tass.ru,
philippe.rater@afp.com,
kaori.yoshida@nex.nikkei.com,
byuruk@aa.com.tr
We'll have
more on all
this. Watch
this site.
***
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