At the UN, Indigenous Indignation, Revolving Door
Mysteries and Peace Pipe Belatedly Smoked
Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at
the UN
UNITED NATIONS, December 12 -- There were
more questions than answers at the UN on Tuesday. At a briefing on the deferral,
at the African group's request, of the draft declaration on the rights of
indigenous people, it was asked how many of the 270 million UN-counted
indigenous are on the Continent of Africa. The answer was not given. Video
here,
Minute 29:29, question, and Minute 31:28, "answer." But dissatisfaction at the
deferral was made very, very clear. Later the spokeswoman for the president of
the General Assembly was asked if the process is dead, and if the GA President
will convene a meeting between the resolution's proponents and the African
Group. From the
transcript:
Inner City
Press: The Mexican Mission held a press conference on the indigenous issues
declaration, saying the African Group expressed outrage over advocates of the
text. Is the General Assembly President involved, is there any process going on
between the African Group and the others? Mexico presented it as if nothing is
going forward. Is that your understanding?
Spokeswoman:
That is one viewpoint, yes. Many in the indigenous groups feel that way.
Before getting to this stage of finalization or the vote actually, the President
was very much involved. At this point, the feeling is that there wasn’t enough
of a broad discussion before it came to the vote and I think this is the hope,
that they’ll now have the opportunity to have that broad discussion. There is a
proviso in the resolution that everything should be completed at the end of the
sixty-first Assembly session. The hope is that that’ll happen. The other view
is the more bleak way of looking at it; but I think many feel that if you open
the discussion you’ll have a richer exchange and you’ll come to a conclusion
sooner, rather than later.
Inner City
Press: Will she convene such a discussion?
Spokeswoman:
She doesn’t have to convene it; the Member States have decided [and they will be
the ones to take the discussions forward.]. They may form a working group.
She’ll only become involved if they ask her to become involved.
We'll see.
Meanwhile Kofi Annan's
spokesman was asked, by Inner City Press, will the anti-revolving door policy
that's been promised by the end of the year include a two-year Ban on lobbying
the UN for decisions? "We'll have to wait and see," the spokesman said. "Who
pulls the trigger?" "The Secretary-General." So while we below have to wait and
see, those at the top already know. Why was the UN's Deputy Secretary General
meeting on Tuesday with a former UN envoy to Kosovo? We're told it was a
courtesy call. What about the case of
Callixte Mbarushimana,
the genocidaire to whom the UN was ordered to pay thirteen months'
salary? The spokesman promises as answer by Wednesday morning.
Rwandan
aftermath
Also at the noon briefing on
Tuesday, Mr. Annan's spokesman graciously made nice with Inner City Press,
contrary to UNDP's anti-press positions. As
quoted in the UN's transcript,
the spokesman told Inner City Press, "because
I had singled you out, I wanted you to know that, despite a few heated words
last week, that we do appreciate the work you do as a journalist, and since
you've come here, you’ve made it your business to pursue topics that might
otherwise be ignored." Like UNDP. Also at the briefing on Tuesday questions were
raised, and not only by Inner City Press, about whether the Secretariat's
spokesman can answer for UNDP, and why UNDP doesn't send a spokesman to the
briefings at least once a week. This was answered by referring to a briefing
sometime later in December, but some high level UNDP officials. Since it was
already announced, Kermal Dervis on December 18, this new vituperation may
indicate further backsliding. We'll see.
See,
Inner City Press' Ongoing UNDP Series --
Intro
followed by
second,
third,
fourth,
fifth,
sixth,
seventh,
eighth,
ninth,
tenth,
eleventh
Feedback: Editorial [at]
innercitypress.com
UN Office: S-453A,
UN, NY 10017 USA Tel: 212-963-1439
Reporter's mobile
(and weekends): 718-716-3540
At the UN, Questions of Congo Mass Graves and Kazana,
Mugabe and Forests and Rich German Ships
Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at
the UN
UNITED NATIONS, December 11 -- The UN's
deputy envoy to the Congo, Ross Mountain, said Monday that "outlaw" Laurent
Nkunda in fact has popular support in Eastern Congo, the underlying causes of
which must be dealt with. Asked about the recent discovery of mass graves in
Bavi in Irumu territory, and about the UN's knowledge and role in the
destruction of the village of Kazana on April 21, 2006 -- click
here for
previous story on this. On the latter, Mr. Mountain acknowledged that he'd
failed before to provide promised information to Inner City Press, and said he
will do so shortly.
On the
mass graves discovered
last month, Mr. Mountain emphasized that the victims hadn't been killed
recently, but rather "during the war." Video
here,
from Minute 33:44.
Inner City Press previously asked for and obtained some information about the
mass graves find:
Subject: Yr
questions at noon yesterday: DRC mass grave
From: [ at]
un.org
To: Inner City
Press
Matthew,
please find below a Q&A, provided by Monuc, on the discovery on the mass grave
in the DRC:
Q: When were
the graves discovered?
The graves were discovered the 22nd of November. A multidisciplinary
mission went to Bavi (Human Rights, MONUC Security, Military Prosecutor’s office
and a representative of the 1st integrated Brigade).
Q Any estimates
as to when the executions took place?
They were four different executions (18, 9, 2, 1 people), according to two
witnesses, including one of two suspects currently under arrest for this.
They were carried out between July and November.
Q: How were the
victims killed: firearms, machetes, other weapons?
They used
barres a mines, a tool used by gold diggers [a crow bar].
Q Any estimate on how many perpetrators were involved?
One is responsible for giving the order, the Commander of the Bavi Battalion who
was put under arrest the 15th of November. As for the direct perpetrators, there
are many, but we don't have yet the numbers. There is also the case of the
accomplices, those who tried subsequently to cover up the killings by having the
bodies moved to a different location.
Q Have any
other arrests been made or are planned?
Two soldiers are under arrest are both Army captains. We believe that all the
officers of the Etat Major should be arrested, including the 2nd in command.
We are also trying to identify the direct perpetrators. We want to verify
if there is a peloton d'execution [a firing squad]. The detained captain
asserted that the 2 bodyguards of the Battalion Commander participated in the
killings.
Q Any details
on which unit(s) of the 1st brigade was/were involved?
The
Bataillon d'intervention.
To be sure,
MONUC forces have in the worked with the first integrated brigade since it was
the first that was deployed in Ituri. However UN peacekeepers never were and are
currently not deployed in Bavi at this particular location with this unit. The
closest MONUC deployment area is Aveba, some 15 to 20 kilometers away.
Q Has the
preliminary enquiry provided any details on the motives of these executions?
According to the statements of the witnesses, they were killed because they were
Ngiti, and Ngiti for them means militia.
This last, on motive, is reminiscent of the Congolese Army's operations with
MONUC that resulted in the
torching of Kazana in
April.
Justice
under MONUC's gun
As another Inner City Press source in the region has
pointed out:
"The FARDC
troops involved in these killings are from the very same units that took part in
the combined ops with MONUC earlier this year. The civilians being murdered are
the same as the inhabitants of Kazana and the locations are also very close.
This statement tells you plenty: 'According to the statements of the witnesses,
they were killed because they were Ngiti, and Ngiti for them means militia.'
This is exactly what happened in Kazana. The FARDC have been behaving like this
throughout, so the question remains: why does MONUC combine operations with
them? One major factor in FARDC abuses has to be lack of training. MONUC claimed
it was training the Congolese prior to operations, but they often didn't and
even if they did the efforts were cursory."
One week ago, Inner City Press asked Jane Holl Lute of the UN Department of
Peacekeeping Operations for more information about MONUC's findings about
Kazana, beyond the one-page self-exoneration previously released. We're still
waiting.
It
should also be noted that since the above Q&A was provided to Inner City Press
by the UN, two more bodies were found, according to the most recent
human rights report:
"Nine IDPs, initially reported abducted, are believed to be among at least
32 civilians summarily executed by FARDC soldiers of the Intervention
Battalion of the 1st Integrated Brigade in Bavi -- 50 km south of Bunia --
in mid-September. Bodies of at least 32 victims, including women and
children, were found in three mass graves near Bavi, on 22 November 2006.
The bodies had allegedly been moved to Bavi from their original location, on
17 November, after the military involved in the killings found out that
there was an investigation."
Despite the continued killing of civilians in
the Congo, the UN Security Council's recent statement on DRC are nearly all
positive. On the sidelines of the UN Security Council stakeout, Inner City Press
asked Germany's ambassador if how much his country will charge UN Peacekeeping
for its ships patrolling the coast of South Lebanon. "We did not talk about this
in the meeting," he responded. But that's not really an answer...
Monday in
an earlier briefing about the UN Forum on Forests working toward a non-binding
instrument of forest protection, Inner City Press asked about
opposition to
the process. Video
here.
The response, as
written up by the UN, was:
"Asked about criticisms from indigenous groups
over the fact that the instrument would be non-binding and would actually
'enshrine' the sovereignty of nations over forests, Mr. Hoogeveen said even
legally-binding instruments were not always implemented in the ways that had
been intended. For that reason, all such agreements depended on
political commitment to implement them."
So because some laws get broken, non-binding platitudes are not different than
laws? At Monday's UN noon briefing, the visit of the World Food Program's Jim
Morris to Zimbabwe was raised. From
the transcript:
Inner City
Press: Jim Morris of the World Food Program and also the
Secretary-General’s Special Envoy in southern Africa, was in Zimbabwe. Did
he meet with Robert Mugabe, and if so, what did they discuss?
Associate
Spokesman: Yes, Mr. Morris is in Zimbabwe as you noted, and he did meet
with President Mugabe and Zimbabwean Government ministers. Mr. Morris is
on a humanitarian mission. The goal is to urge Governments in the region,
he’s not just going to Zimbabwe but other countries in southern Africa as well,
and the goal of the mission is to urge Governments in the region and the donor
community, to take decisive action to tackle long-term development problems in
that region. He also raised, in his meeting with President Mugabe and
Zimbabwean cabinet officials, the issue of orphans in that country, children
that are otherwise vulnerable and people with HIV/AIDS. Mr. Morris tells
us that he was heartened by the close working relationship between the United
Nations and the non-governmental organization (NGO) community, who are both
working together to assist the people of Zimbabwe and to help avoid a serious
food crisis in that country. So his mission is essentially humanitarian,
and his focus so far in all these discussions has been to stress the
humanitarian concerns of both the United Nations and the international
community.
Inner City
Press: Did the issue of that “operation clean up the trash” or “restore
order”, the mass evictions…did he raise that issue? And also, did the
issue of this Human Rights Council that some in the UN are working with the
Mugabe Government to create, were these discussed?
Associate
Spokesman: I don’t have that specific information on whether or not that
particular point was raised in that meeting with Mr. Mugabe.
Seven hundred thousand people evicted, and the issue is not raised by the UN's
humanitarian envoy? An explanation will be sought of this UN administration's
(in) action on Zimbabwe and other issues, before the end of the year.
The UN Development Program Is
Important For The Poor, It Therefore Must Be Made Transparent
Tenth Installment in Inner City Press' Ongoing UNDP
Series, Reported by Matthew Russell Lee:
Intro
followed by
second,
third,
fourth,
fifth,
sixth,
seventh,
eighth,
ninth
UNITED NATIONS, December 10 -- The UN
Development Program, a $5 billion agency whose Administrator Kemal Dervis has
not held a press conference in UN Headquarters for over 14 months, on December 8
issued a
press release attacking
Inner City Press by name. The same day, UNDP informed Inner City Press that it
would no longer respond to any requests for comments about seeming violations of
UN recruitment, hiring and promotion rules, and that it does not disclose to the
press or to the public its internal audits.
Given that it appears, at least for the short term, that UNDP will not be
providing even this basic information, despite its status as an international
agency funded by the publics of member states, Inner City Press has decided to
recapitulate the reasons that it began this series about UNDP on November 29,
and why it will continue. This brief overview inevitably may mention
UNDP's press release. But since UNDP did not contact Inner City Press for
comment before distributing its press release, and only provided the subject of
its statement with a copy six hours after it was released.
UNDP's
Kemal Dervis, at left - holding secret audits?
UNDP has an important role, including enabling development to benefit poor
people. It is therefore important that UNDP be transparent, both in its finances
and its hiring and promotion practices. UNDP often preaches to the governments
of developing countries that they must become more transparent. For example,
only last week Neil Buhne, UNPD's representative in Bulgaria and previously
Belarus, preached in Sofia on the topic of transparent administrative services,
saying that a lack of transparency can
intensity existing inequalities.
But this preaching must be applied all the more to UNDP itself. It is
particularly inappropriate for UNDP to now say that it will not release its
audits of its spending, nor comment on seeming violations of its own stated
rules against cronyism and sham competition in hiring and promotion.
There are many, many serious and well-meaning people within UNDP. Some of them
clearly see a need for improvements in how UNDP is run, and feel the threat of
retaliation if they make their views known in a way in which their supervisors
and other high UNDP officials could identify them. For this reason, Inner City
Press has been willing where necessary to use anonymous sources in the course of
this series. Inner City Press follows accepted rules of journalism, explaining
the reasons for which a source has requested anonymity. As one employee said,
"You will not get any on the record sources on this story. But everyone in this
workplace knows this is true."
This last quote was concerned widely-alleged sexual harassment by an individual
whom UNDP selected to head up its entire Europe and CIS States operation. It is
time, then, to explain why Inner City Press in this series has at time mentioned
sexual harassment. While this has provided a pretext for UNDP's Communications
Office, and also former UNDP Administrator, to try to portray the entire series
as salacious and as a violation of privacy, this aspect of harassment is
integral to the story. First, the incidents took place in the workplace. But
also, the fact that the incidents were allow to go on for so long, due to
connections to high officials of the UN and rich UN supporters, shows
inappropriate favoritism and lawlessness within this organization which so
impacts the world's poor.
A UN source generally respected by Inner City Press has explained that the UN is
"like a village," leading to upset at overly-personal investigative reporting.
This village analogy seems apt, not only among the press corps and members of
Security Council members' missions, but among the UN staff as a whole, for
example in the Headquarters cafeteria, or during this past summer's World Cup.
There is another aspect, though: some of the UN, particularly UNDP, is like a
*feudal* village, in which a small group and some courtiers who feel they are
protected are left outside of otherwise-applicable rules, and bristle if this is
ever reported.
To do such reporting, one must be in
the village, but not entirely of it. UNDP has asked Inner City Press,
"Who is telling you these things?" But Inner City Press will not sell out
its sources. UNDP has demanded to speak with editors or, it would seem,
corporate owners amenable to pressure. It is a dynamic well sketched by one of
the paragon American journalists, I.F. Stone, and it is not a demand to which
Inner City Press will acquiesce.
UNDP, even after declaring that is will not respond to questions about seeming
violations of applicable rules on hiring and promotion, has sent Inner City
Press a ludicrous list of supposedly required corrections. These include demands
that a headline, "UNDP Spent $567,000 on a Book to Praise Itself," be modified
since it is UNDP's position that despite the payments, the book is a work of
independent scholarship. Perhaps UNDP deserves this repetition of the argument.
But reasonable minds can and do
disagree with UNDP.
We have waited to the near-end of this column to sketch the history and motives
of Inner City Press. First, Inner City Press has long reported on and been
immersed in community development efforts. Among other things, Inner City Press
has investigated and reported on redlining by banks: their failure to lend
fairly to low income people. In connection with this reporting, Inner City Press
vindicated the rights to information of the wider press corps, for example in a
Freedom of Information Act win in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit, reported in the New York Times earlier this year. Click
here for
a more detailed write-up by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.
Inner City Press' investigative series on Citigroup, which like this series
included reporting on the nitty-gritty of employment practices, resulted in
Citigroup being held accountable to its overseer, the Federal Reserve Board,
which imposed a fine of $75 million and required detailed reforms. But where are
the overseers of UNDP?
In its UN reporting, Inner City Press most often focuses on human rights. In
fact, Inner City Press' first stories on UNDP involved the agency's funding of
disarmament programs in Uganda, where civilians have ended up killed in the name
of disarmament, as now confirmed by the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights.
UNDP's Communications Office repeatedly misstated and tried to downplay UNDP's
enabling of the Ugandan People's Defense Forces' disarmament programs, and
despite having quietly announced a suspension of funding in June, has most
recently reverted to entire denial. The issue will continue to be pursued so
that it is not repeated.
To avoid any misunderstanding, which some have tried to cause, that Inner City
Press is part of the so-called vast right wing conspiracy, we simply state that
Inner City Press has most often be placed in the public record on the left wing
side of the equation. That does not mean that lack of transparency and lack of
accountability in programs to benefit to the poor should be excused -- in fact,
quite the contrary, in fact. That is the motive and justification for this
ongoing series.
Some have asked, why UNDP and not (yet) other UN agencies. Only a few months
ago, Inner City Press inquired closely into the process for selecting Josette
Sheeran Shiner as the new head of the World Food Program. But the range of
issues at UNDP, from a lack of oversight on disarmament programs it funded in
Uganda, to allowing its head of European and CIS states to run wild (to choose
only two examples), may indicate that UNDP's amorphous mandate combined with a
lack of transparency and of independent press coverage have resulted a fiefdom
whose only response to questions is to attack the questioner. How
UNDP's December 8 press release
comports with the UN System's exhortations for journalistic freedom, or with
UNDP's own purported attempts to encourage governments in the developing world
to allow for media independence, remains to be seen.
Since we cannot resist further reporting, we feel that the following UNDP staff
email, the identity of whose sender we will protect due to fear of retaliation,
may show why we use anonymous sources and why UNDP's arbitrary employment
practices are a legitimate journalistic subject. This extended quote precisely
illustrated the reality of UNDP conduct in connection with the Millennium
Development Goals project.
Dear Matthew,
thanks for your recent coverage of UNDP HR policies. I would like to reconfirm
your information regarding the integration of the Millennium Project (MP) in
UNDP Bureau for Development Policy Poverty Group, directed by Nora Lustig.
The evidence
gathered in the adopted project document regarding Dr. Sachs' remuneration shows
that over 200,000 US Dollars are supposed to cover his services. I believe you
already have this document in your possession.
The problems
associated with the Millennium Project's integration go far beyond Dr. Sachs'
charity fees. Ms. Chandrika Bahadur and M. Guido Schmidt-Traub, who have been
working for the MP over the last years have benefited from the different
breaches of procedures during the merger. Their "new" positions with UNDP have
only been advertised for a week on a limited basis. There has not been a formal
panel interview process but a mere "desk review" of the different candidates.
Following that fast-track process, MM. Melkert and Gleeson recommended the
appointment of Ms. Bahadur and M. Schmidt-Traub as policy advisors and, for the
latter, head of the MDG support team. While both candidates show limited
professional and managerial experience, they have furthermore benefited from
promotions that are not linked with their background. Ms. Bahadur has been hired
as P4 though she does not have the minimum professional required for that level
(7 years). M Schmidt Traub has been appointed as P5 and head of MDG support team
though he has very limited managerial experience (this position involves
managing a team of 25 professional staff) no background in economics or
development (M. Schmidt Traub has a degree in Chemistry).... At the junior
level, some Research Associate staff do not even have master's degrees, which is
mandatory to be considered even for an internship.
Following
growing tensions among UNDP staff, M. Melkert, UNDP Associate Administrator, met
the extended Poverty group team on December 1. He took full responsibility for
the decisions made regarding the merger between the MP and the Poverty Group,
including HR management decisions. The Associate Administrator considers that it
is the role of UNDP's top management to make strategic decisions, including
breaking UNDP HR policies in the name of necessity and higher interests. This
approach is not acceptable within an international organization accountable to
member countries and publicly funded.
Hopefully
member states will take the opportunity of UNDP Executive Board meeting to ask
UNDP Senior management for clarification on these matters."
We share that final hope, and trust that this series will play some small role
in cleaning up UNDP, for the benefit of the poor. And so this series will
continue.
Here is / was UNDP's position on the
above-described:
From:
cassandra.waldon [at] undp.org
To: Inner City Press
Sent: Wed, 6 Dec 2006 6:27 PM
Subject: RE: Additional Qs re UNDP, response to your Q re deadlines,
thank you in advance
Dear Matthew,
For
the record, Jeffrey Sachs will continue to be involved with the UN’s effort on
the Millennium Development Goals. As of 1 January, he will serve as Special
Adviser to UNDP on the Millennium Development Goals. His salary will continue to
be $75,000 per year.... we have decided to merge the work of the Millennium
Project into UNDP. To this end, UNDP has set up a new sub-unit in our poverty
group, which will consist of some 20 positions.
To complete the integration by the end of the year, UNDP management is
using an expedited competitive recruiting process for five lead positions. These
five positions have been advertised and are in the process of being filled.
Five other positions do not require a competitive process under UNDP
recruitment procedures and will be filled with people currently working for the
Millennium Project.
All other positions will be recruited according to standard UNDP
recruitment procedures, and this process is on-going.
and
then
In a message dated 12/8/2006 7:14:39 PM Eastern Standard Time,
cassandra.waldon@undp.org writes:
Dear Matthew,
UNDP is working to address the numerous questions you have asked us. As many of
your concerns touch upon similar kinds of issues we thought it might be helpful
if we were to state, for the record:
--That we will no longer be responding to unsubstantiated allegations about
UNDP’s recruitment and personnel practices. We urge you to desist from
publishing such allegations...
--That we do not release the reports of our internal audits and
investigations. The results of these reports are communicated on an annual basis
to the UNDP Executive Board in the form of an annual Administrator’s report on
Internal Audit and Oversight...
In this, UNDP lags behind even
the rest of the UN System. Compare to Secretariat's Office of Internal Oversight
Services (OIOS), under General Assembly Resolution 59/272 of December 23, 2004:
--
OIOS provides a summary of all of its reports to all member states as
well as the general public in its annual reports; whereas UNDP only provides
a summary of its reports to the limited membership of its executive board (with
not even summaries provided to the general public).
-- OIOS makes some reports available as public documents; UNDP makes no reports
available to the general public.
-- OIOS makes all non-public reports available to all member states at
their request; UNDP makes only summaries (and not the full text of reports)
available to only 36 out of 192 member states.
This is not to say that the UN Secretariat is transparent enough -- rather, that
UNDP is even less transparency, despite its $5 billion a year budget.
Developing.
Again, because a number of Inner City Press' UNDP
sources go out of their way to express commitment to serving the poor, and while
it should be unnecessary, Inner City Press is compelled to conclude this
installment in a necessarily-ongoing series by saluting the stated goals of UNDP
and many of its staff. As they used to say on TV game shows, keep those cards,
letters and emails coming, and phone calls too, we apologize for any phone tag,
but please continue trying, and keep the information, including but not limited
to withheld internal audits, flowing.
Other Inner City
Press reports are available in the ProQuest service and some are archived on
www.InnerCityPress.com --
At the UN,
Indigenous Rights Get Deferred, As U.S. Abstains, Deftly or Deceptively
At the UN,
Threat and Possible Statement on Fiji Spotlights Selection and Payment
of UN Peacekeepers
At the UN, China
and Islamic Dev't Bank Oppose Soros and World Bank On How to Fight
Poverty
At the UN,
Misdirection on Somalia and Myanmar, No Answers from UNDP's Kemal Dervis
UNDP Dodges
Questions of Disarmament Abuse in Uganda and of Loss of Togo AIDS Grant,
Dhaka Snafu
At the UN, The
Swan Song of Jan Egeland and the Third Committee Loop, Somalia Echoes
Congo
UN Silent As
Protesters Tear Gassed in Ivory Coast, As UNMOVIC Plods On and War
Spreads in Somalia
In the UN,
Uzbekistan Gets a Pass on Human Rights As Opposition to U.S. Grows and
War's On in Somalia
At the UN,
Cluster Bombs Unremembered, Uighurs Disappeared and Jay-Z Returns with
Water -- for Life
From the UN,
Silence on War Crimes Enforcement and Conflicts of Interest on Complaint
from Bahrain
En Route to
Deutsche Bank, the UN's Door Revolves, While Ban Ki-moon Arrives and
Moldova Spins
As Two UN
Peacekeepers Are Killed, UN Says Haiti's Improving, Ban Ki-moon on
Zimbabwe?
Nagorno-Karabakh President Disputes Fires and Numbers, Oil and UN, in
Exclusive Interview with Inner City Press
Inside the UN,
Blaming Uganda's Victims, Excusing Annan on Mugabe, and U.S. Blocked
Darfur Trip
U.S. Blocked
Council's Trip to Darfur Meeting, Brazzaville Envoy Explains After U.S.
Casts a Veto
At the UN,
Council Works Overtime To Cancel Its Trip About Darfur, While DC Muses
on John Bolton
UN Panel's
"Coherence" Plan Urges More Power to UNDP, Despite Its Silence on Human
Rights
On Water, UNDP
Talks Human Rights, While Enabling Violations in Africa and Asia, With
Shell and Coca-Cola
Will UN's
Revolving Door Keep Human Rights Lost, Like Bush's Call and WFP
Confirmation Questions?
On Somalia,
We Are All Ill-Informed, Says the UN, Same on Uganda, Lurching Toward
UNDP Power Grab
On WFP, Annan and
Ban Ki-Moon Hear and See No Evil, While Resume of Josette Sheeran Shiner
Is Edited
Would Moon
Followers Trail Josette Sheeran Shiner into WFP, As to U.S. State Dep't?
At the UN,
Positions Are Up For the Grabbing, Sun's Silence on Censorship, Advisor
Grabs for Gun
In WFP Race,
Josette Sheeran Shiner Praises Mega Corporations from Cornfield While
State Spins
At the UN,
Housing Subsidy Spin, Puntland Mysteries of UNDP and the Panama Solution
In Campaign to
Head UN WFP, A Race to Precedents' Depths, A Murky Lame Duck Appointment
At the UN,
Gbagbo and his Gbaggage, Toxic Waste and Congolese Sanctions
WFP Brochure-Gate?
John Bolton Has Not Seen Brochure of "Official" U.S. Candidate to Head World
Food Program
Ivory Coast
Stand-Off Shows Security Council Fault Lines: News Analysis
At the UN,
It's Groundhog's Day on Western Sahara, Despite Fishing Deals and
Flaunting of the Law
"Official" U.S.
Candidate to Head WFP Circulates Brochure With Pulitzer Claim, UN Staff
Rules Ignored
Senegal's
President Claims Peace in Casamance and Habre Trial to Come, A Tale of
Two Lamines
A Tale of Two
Americans Vying to Head the World Food Program, Banbury and Sheeran
Shiner
At the UN, the
Unrepentant Blogger Pronk, a Wink on 14 North Korean Days and Silence on
Somalia
At the UN,
Literacy Losses in Chad, Blogless Pronk and Toothless Iran Resolution,
How Our World Turns
Sudan Pans Pronk
While Praising Natsios, UN Silent on Haiti and WFP, Ivorian Fingers
Crossed
UN Shy on North
Korea, Effusive on Bird Flu and Torture, UNDP Cyprus Runaround, Pronk is
Summoned Home
At the UN,
Silence from UNDP on Cyprus, from France on the Chad-Bomb, Jan Pronk's
Sudan Blog
Russia's Vostok
Battalion in Lebanon Despite Resolution 1701, Assembly Stays Deadlocked
and UNDP Stays Missing
As
Turkmenistan Cracks Down on Journalists, Hospitals and Romance, UNDP
Works With the Niyazov Regime
At the UN,
Darfur Discussed, Annan Eulogized and Oil For Food Confined to a
Documentary Footnote
With All Eyes
on Council Seat, UN is Distracted from Myanmar Absolution and Congo
Conflagration
As Venezuela and
Guatemala Square Off, Dominicans In Default and F.C. Barcelona De-Listed
At the UN, North
Korea Sanctions Agreed On, Naval Searches and Murky Weapons Sales
At the UN,
Georgia Speaks of Ethnic Cleansing While Russia Complains of Visas
Denied by the U.S.
At the UN,
Deference to the Congo's Kabila and Tank-Sales to North Korea, of
Slippery Eels and Sun Microsystems
At the UN,
Annan's Africa Advisor Welcome Chinese Investment, Dodges Zimbabwe, Nods
to Darfur
At the UN,
Richard Goldstone Presses Enforcement on Joseph Kony, Reflecting Back on
Karadzic
UN Defers on
Anti-Terror Safeguards to Member States, Even in Pakistan and Somalia
Afghanistan
as Black Hole for Info and Torture Tales, Photos and Talk Mogadishu, the
UN Afterhours
Amid UN's Korean
Uproar, Russia Silent on Murder of Anna Politkovskaya, Chechnya Exposer
UN Envoy Makes
Excuses for Gambian Strongman, Whitewashing Fraud- and Threat-Filled
Election
Sudan's UN
Envoy Admits Right to Intervene in Rwanda, UNICEF Response on Terrorist
Groups in Pakistan
At the UN, As
Next S-G is Chosen, Annan Claims Power to Make 5-Year Appointments,
Quiet Filing and Ivory Coast Concessions
Chaos in UN's
Somalia Policy, Working With Islamists Under Sanctions While Meeting
with Private Military Contractors
U.S. Candidate
for UN's World Food Program May Get Lame Duck Appointment, Despite
Korean Issues
At the
UN, U.S. Versus Axis of Airport, While Serge Brammertz Measures
Non-Lebanese Teeth
Exclusion from
Water Is Called Progress, of Straw Polls and WFP Succession
William Swing
Sings Songs of Congo's Crisis, No Safeguards on Coltan Says Chairman of
Intel
Warlord in the
Waldorf and Other Congo Questions Dodged by the UN in the Time Between
Elections
In Some New
Orleans, Questions Echo from the South Bronx and South Lebanon
In New Orleans,
While Bone Is Thrown in Superdome, Parishes Still In Distress
At the UN, Tales
of Media Muzzled in Yemen, Penned in at the Waldorf on Darfur, While
Copters Grounded
US's Frazer
Accuses Al-Bashir of Sabotage, Arab League of Stinginess, Chavez of
Buying Leaders -
Click
here for
video file by Inner City Press.
Third Day of UN
General Debate Gets Surreal, Canapes and Killings, Questions on Iran and
Montenegro and Still Somalia
On Darfur, Hugo
Chavez Asks for More Time to Study, While Planning West Africa Oil
Refinery
At the UN, Ivory
Coast Discussed Without Decision on Toxic Politics, the Silence of
Somalia
Evo Morales
Blames Strike on Mobbed-Up Parasites, Sings Praise of Coca Leaf and Jabs
at Coca-Cola
Musharraf Says
Unrest in Baluchistan Is Waning, While Dodging Question on Restoring
Civilian Rule
At the UN, Cyprus
Confirms 'Paramilitary' Investigation, Denies Connection to Def Min
Resignation, CBTB Update
A Tale of Three
Leaders, Liberia Comes to Praise and Iran and Sudan to Bury the UN
UN Round-up:
Poland's President Says Iraq Is Ever-More Tense While Amb. Bolton Talks
Burmese Drugs, Spin on Ivory Coast
As UN's Annan
Now Says He Will Disclose, When and Whether It Will Be to the Public and
Why It Took So Long Go Unasked
At the UN,
Stonewalling Continues on Financial Disclosure and Letter(s) U.S.
Mission Has, While Zimbabwe Goes Ignored
At the UN,
Financial Disclosure Are Withheld While Freedom of Information Is
Promised, Of Hollywood and Dictators' Gift Shops
UN's Annan Says
Dig Into Toxic Dumping, While Declining to Discuss Financial Disclosure
A Still-Unnamed
Senior UN Official in NY Takes Free Housing from His Government,
Contrary to UN Staff Regulations
UN Admits To
Errors in its Report on Destruction of Congolese Village of Kazana,
Safeguards Not In Place
As UN Checks
Toxins in Abidjan, the Dumper Trafigura Figured in Oil for Food Scandal,
Funded by RBS and BNP Paribas
Targeting of
African Americans For High Cost Mortgages Grew Worse in 2005, While Fed
Downplays Its Own Findings
The UN and
Nagorno-Karabakh: Flurries of Activity Leave Frozen Conflicts Unchanged;
Updates on Gaza, Gavels and Gbagbo
The UN Cries
Poor on Lawless Somalia, While Its Ex-Security Chief Does Business
Through Ruleless Revolving Door
At the UN,
Micro-States Simmer Under the Assembly's Surface, While Incoming Council
President Dodges Most Questions
"Horror Struck"
is How UN Officials Getting Free Housing from Governments Would Leave
U.S., Referral on Burma But Not Uzbekistan
Security Council
President Condemns UN Officials Getting Free Housing from Governments,
While UK "Doesn't Do It Any More"
At the UN,
Incomplete Reforms Allow for Gifts of Free Housing to UN Officials by
Member States
Rare UN Sunshine
From If Not In Chad While Blind on Somalia and Zimbabwe, UNDP With Shell
in its Ear on Nigeria
Annan Family
Ties With Purchaser from Compass, Embroiled in UN Scandal, Raise
Unanswered Ethical Questions
At the UN, from
Casamance to Transdniestria, Kosovars to Lezgines, Micro-States as
Powerful's Playthings
Inquiry Into
Housing Subsidies Contrary to UN Charter Goes Ignored for 8 Weeks, As
Head UN Peacekeeper Does Not Respond
On the UN -
Corporate Beat, Dow Chemical Luncheon Chickens Come Home to Roost
Stop Bank
Branch Closings and Monopolies in the Katrina Zone, Group Says,
Challenging Regions- AmSouth Merger
Ship-Breakers
Missed by UN's Budget for Travel and Consultants in Bangladesh, Largest
UNIFIL Troop Donor
With Somalia on
the Brink of Horn-Wide War, UN Avoids Question of Ethiopian Invasion
In UN's Lebanon
Frenzy, Darfur Is Ignored As Are the Disabled, "If You Crave UNIFIL,
Can't You Make Do With MONUC?"
UN Decries
Uzbekistan's Use of Torture, While Helping It To Tax and Rule; Updates
on UNIFIL and UNMIS Off-Message
On Lebanon,
Russian Gambit Focuses Franco-American Minds, Short Term Resolution Goes
Blue Amid Flashes of Lightening
Africa Can Solve
Its Own Problems, Ghanaian Minister Tells Inner City Press, On LRA Peace
Talks and Kofi Annan's Views
At the UN, Jay-Z
Floats Past Questions on Water Privatization and Sweatshops, Q'Orianka
Kilcher in the Basement
In the UN
Security Council, Speeches and Stasis as Haiti is Forgotten, for a
Shebaa Farms Solution?
UN Knew of Child
Soldier Use by Two Warlords Whose Entry into Congo Army the UN
Facilitated
Impunity's in the Air, at the UN in Kinshasa and NY, for Kony and Karim
and MONUC for Kazana
UN Still Silent on Somalia, Despite Reported Invasion, In Lead-Up to
More Congo Spin
UN's Guehenno Says Congo Warlord Just Needs Training, and Kazana Probe
Continues
With Congo Elections Approaching, UN Issues Hasty Self-Exoneration as
Annan Is Distracted
In DR Congo, UN Applauds Entry into Army of Child-Soldier Commander
Along with Kidnapper
Spinning the Congo, UN Admits Hostage Deal with Warlord That Put Him in
Congolese Army
At the UN, Dow Chemical's Invited In, While Teaming Up With Microsoft is
Defended
Kofi Annan Questioned about Congolese Colonel Who Kidnapped Seven UN
Soldiers
UN Silent As Congolese Kidnapper of UN Peacekeepers Is Made An Army
Colonel: News Analysis
UN's Guehenno Speaks of "Political Overstretch" Undermining Peacekeeping
in Lower Profile Zones
In Gaza Power Station, the Role of Enron and the U.S. Government's OPIC
Revealed by UN Sources
UN's Corporate Partnerships Will Be Reviewed, While New Teaming Up with
Microsoft, and UNDP Continues
BTC Briefing, Like Pipeline, Skirts Troublespots, Azeri Revelations
Conflicts of Interest in UNHCR Program with SocGen and Pictet Reveal
Reform Rifts
UN Grapples with Somalia, While UNDP Funds Mugabe's Human Rights Unit,
Without Explanation
UN Gives Mugabe Time with His Friendly Mediator, Refugees Abandoned
At the UN, Friday Night's Alright for Fighting; Annan Meets Mugabe
UN Acknowledges Abuse in Uganda, But What Did Donors Know and When?
Kazakh Questions
In Uganda, UNDP to Make Belated Announcement of Program Halt, But
Questions Remain (and see
The
New Vision, offsite).
Disarmament Abuse in Uganda Leads UN Agency to Suspend Its Work and
Spending
Disarmament Abuse in Uganda Blamed on UNDP, Still Silent on Finance
Alleged Abuse in Disarmament in Uganda Known by UNDP, But
Dollar Figures Still Not Given: What Did UN Know and When?
Strong Arm on Small Arms: Rift Within UN About Uganda's Involuntary
Disarmament of Karamojong Villages
UN's Selective Vision on Somalia and Wishful Thinking on
Uighurs
UN
Habitat Predicts The World Is a Ghetto, But Will Finance Be Addressed at
Vancouver World Urban Forum?
UN's Annan Concerned About Use of Terror's T-Word to Repress, Wants
Freedom of Information
UN
Waffles on Human Rights in Central Asia and China; ICC on Kony and a
Hero from Algiers
UN
& US, Transparency for Finance But Not Foreign Affairs: Somalia,
Sovereignty and Senator Tom Coburn
Human Rights Forgotten in UN's War of Words, Bolton versus Mark Malloch
Brown: News Analysis
In
Praise of Migration, UN Misses the Net and Bangalore While Going Soft on
Financial Exclusion
UN
Sees Somalia Through a Glass, Darkly, While Chomsky Speaks on
Corporations and Everything But Congo
Corporate Spin on AIDS, Holbrooke's Kudos to Montenegro and its
Independence
The Silence of the Congo and Naomi Watts; Between Bolivia
and the World Bank
Human Rights Council Has Its Own Hanging Chads; Cocky U.S. State
Department Spins from SUVs
Child Labor and Cargill and Nestle; Iran, Darfur and WHO's on First with
Bird Flu
Press Freedom? Editor Arrested by Congo-Brazzaville, As It Presides Over
Security Council
The Place of the Cost-Cut UN in Europe's Torn-Up Heart;
Deafness to Consumers, Even by the Greens
Background Checks at the UN, But Not the Global Compact; Teaching
Statistics from Turkmenbashi's Single Book
Ripped Off Worse in the Big Apple, by Citigroup and Chase: High Cost
Mortgages Spread in Outer Boroughs in 2005, Study Finds
Burundi: Chaos at Camp for Congolese Refugees, Silence from UNHCR, While
Reform's Debated by Forty Until 4 AM
The Chadian Mirage: Beyond French Bombs, Is Exxon In the Cast? Asylum
and the Uzbeks, Shadows of Stories to Come
Through the UN's One-Way Mirror, Sustainable Development To Be Discussed
by Corporations, Even Nuclear Areva
Racial Disparities Grew Worse in 2005 at Citigroup, HSBC
and Other Large Banks
Mine Your Own Business: Explosive Remnants of War and the
Great Powers, Amid the Paparazzi
Human Rights Are Lost in the Mail: DR Congo Got the
Letter, But the Process is Still Murky
Iraq's Oil to be Metered by Shell, While Basrah Project Remains Less
than Clear
Kofi, Kony, Kagame and Coltan: This Moment in the Congo and Kampala
As
Operation Swarmer Begins, UN's Qazi Denies It's Civil War and Has No
Answers if Iraq's Oil is Being Metered
Cash Crop: In Nepal, Bhutanese Refugees Prohibited from
Income Generation Even in their Camps
The Shorted and Shorting in Humanitarian Aid: From Davos
to Darfur, the Numbers Don't Add Up
UN Reform: Transparency Later, Not Now -- At Least Not
for AXA - WFP Insurance Contract
In the Sudanese Crisis, Oil Revenue Goes Missing, UN Says
Empty Words on Money Laundering and Narcotics, from the
UN and Georgia
What is the Sound of Eleven Uzbeks Disappearing? A Lack
of Seats in Tashkent, a Turf War at UN
Kosovo: Of Collective Punishment and Electricity; Lights
Out on Privatization of Ferronikeli Mines
Abkhazia: Cleansing and (Money) Laundering, Says Georgia
Post-Tsunami Human Rights Abuses, including by UNDP in
the Maldives
Citigroup Dissembles at United
Nations Environmental Conference
Other Inner City
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