Myanmar
Authorities
Brag UNICEF
Won't Say "Rohingya,"
As $87,000
Rent
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, June
7 -- In
Myanmar, now
UNICEF has
apologized for
using the term
"Rohingya,"
authorities
have bragged.
This comes as
UNICEF pays
$87,000 a
month to rent
its office,
and pay it to
a landlord
with links to
the Than Shwe
military junta.
UNICEF has
tried to
explain away these
$87,000
monthly
payments. But
to agree to
censor the
very name of
the Rohinga
minority?
The local
report says,
"The head of
the United
Nations
Children’s
Emergency Fund
(Unicef) in
Myanmar,
Bertrand
Bainval,
personally
apologised for
the use of the
term ''Rohingya'
at a June 4
press
conference on
Unicef’s plan
to help
children
Myanmar’s
second poorest
sate,
according to
Rakhine State
officials."
Some human
rights
industry
profilers on
June 6
immediately
praised Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon
tapping
Jordan's
Prince Zeid to
replace Navi
Pillay as High
Commissioner
on Human
Rights by
saying that
"as a Muslim,"
Zeid will
acting on the
Rohingya
issue. How
about UNICEF
reportly agreeing
to not even
use the word
Rohingya?
Back
on May 23, Inner
City Press
asked Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, to
put the
question to
Ban's “Good
Office” envoy
to Myanmar
Vijay Nambiar.
Are these Good
Offices? And
what is
Nambiar's and
the UN's
response to a
new
report
documenting
the UN's
troubling role
during the
final stage of
Sri Lanka's
conflict in
2009?
UNICEF
on
its website
acknowledges
then spins:
“$
87,000 per
month...
Standard due
diligence on
the owner and
her family
concluded that
none of the
international
sanctions in
place until
recently had
been levied
against the
landlady or
her immediate
family and no
criminal
charges were
extant.
Although
allegations
against a
member of her
family who was
once a member
of the
previous
military
regime
surfaced, the
official had
since left
public office
and was not
subject to any
criminal
charges or
international
sanctions.”
Is
that the UN's
standard --
member of
previous
military
regime is fine
to pay $87,000
a month to, as
long as no
current
criminal
charges?
And what now
of the report
UNICEF agreed
not to use the
word Rohingya?
This
is what Inner
City Press
asked Ban's
spokesman, on
May 23:
Inner
City Press: on
Myanmar,I
wanted to ask
it here,
because
there’s a good
offices
mandate of the
Secretariat.
UNICEF has
acknowledged
that it’s
paying $87,000
a month in
rent to a
former member
of the
military
Government of
Myanmar. And,
although they
say that they
did a
sanctions
check and
found… they
acknowledge
that the
person was a
member of the
junta, they
say that it’s
okay. And I
wanted to
know, is this
sort of,
UN-wide, does
the UN in
terms of
looking at its
business
relationships
and the
payments of
those types of
money — is
just not being
on the
sanctions list
enough? Or is
there some
higher
standard?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
Let me look at
what UNICEF
has said and
if I have
anything, I’ll
get back to
you.
Inner
City Press:
And maybe ask
Mr. [Vijay]
Nambiar. That
was my
thought.
Spokesman:
Would be happy
to.
Inner
City Press:
And about the
Sri Lanka
report, as
well.
Spokesman:
Yes.
But
these, like
Inner City
Press'
repeated questions
about the new
report on Sri
Lanka, by a
member of
Ban's only
Panel of
Experts,
have gone
unanswered.
The
issue of rent
and war crimes
has arisen
before at the
UN in
connection
with Sri
Lanka. In 2011
the president
of the UN
Correspondents
Association
agreed with
Sri Lanka's
Permanent
Representative
Palitha Kohona
to screen a
government
film denying
war crimes in
the Dag
Hammarskjold
Library
Auditorium.
This was
agreed to
without asking
other UNCA
executive
committee
members like
Inner City
Press -- which
since quit
UNCA and
co-founded the
Free
UN Coalition
for Access
-- and without
disclosure or
recusal. Inner
City Press
reported a
previous
financial
relationship
-- rent --
between Kohona
and the UNCA
president. The
subsequent
attempts to
censor Inner
City Press are
sketched
here and
have continued
since, sometimes
comically.
But this is
not fUNny.
This is the
UN. Watch this
site.
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