UN Human Rights Envoys Strain to Praise Myanmar and
North Korea, Callibrated Capitulation?
Byline:
Matthew Russell Lee of
Inner City Press at the UN: News Analysis
UNITED NATIONS,
October 23 -- The UN system's surprising
craven stance toward Myanmar's military government was on display on
Thursday,
as the Special Rapporteur on human rights in that country, Tomas Ojea
Quintana,
spoke to the General Assembly's Third Committee and to the Press.
Quintana told
the Committee that "restoration of full democracy cannot happen
overnight;
it will take generations. In the meantime.... I am appealing to you all
to
assist the government of Myanmar."
Inner City
Press asked about assistance the military government has taken for
itself, in
the form of the 20 to 25 percent loss the UN suffered in exchanging
money
raised in the name of Cyclone Nargis into government-required Foreign
Exchange
Certificates, and only then into the local currency, kyat.
A UN memo leaked to Inner City Press
discloses the 25% loss. But Quintana refused to comment on this, or
even on how
he converted and spent money during his four day visit to Myanmar in
August. Video
here.
Likewise
when Inner City Press asked about reports of the government
conditioning the
distribution of UN aid on the recipients working on road projects for
the
military, Quintana said to ask elsewhere. So what does he, in fact,
cover?
Ban and Quintana, 25% loss to Myanmar's Than
Shwe government not shown
Also
speaking on Thursday was the Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in
North
Korea, Vitit Muntarbhorn. He has not
even been allowed into the country. Inner City Press asked him if there
are, in
fact, 300,000 people confined to 15 political prisons. He said that's
what he hears,
but cannot verify. Nevertheless he
recommends "a calibrated approach within the UN so as to utilize
leverage
through the UN system to influence positive changes in the country."
Does that mean, for example, that the UN
Development Program, which left the country after financial
irregularities were
exposed, should return to Pyongyang? While Muntarbhorn seemed to say
yes, later
on Thursday the Deputy Permanent Representative of Japan said that
there are
many issues to watch about UNDP, that there must be sticks as well as
carrots.
Both
envoys, but particularly Myanmar's Quintana, were full of carrots
Thursday,
going out of their way to offer praise to the regimes no matter how
flawed the
logic. Myanmar has at least 2000 political prisons, and recently
released
seven, one by mistake. Still Quintana praised the Than Shwe government.
Muntarbhorn
said "on the positive side, it can first be recalled that the DPRK is a
party to four human rights treaties." But seen from another angle, that
simply devalues the treaties.
Watch this site, and this Oct. 2 debate, on
UN, bailout, MDGs
and this October 17 debate, on
Security Council and Obama and the UN.
* * *
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Click
here
for a Reuters
AlertNet piece by this correspondent
about Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army. Click
here
for an earlier Reuters AlertNet piece about the Somali
National
Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's $200,000 contribution from an
undefined trust fund. Video
Analysis here
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