In
Somalia, UN
Mine Action's
Bax Gives Info
to US, Travels
Armed with
Denel,
Whistleblowers
Tell ICP
By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS, June
22 – In
Somalia the UN
Mine Action
Service is
passing
along genetic
information
from bombings
to US
intelligence
agencies,
in a move some
say has
endangered the
lives of UN
personnel.
In
the wake of
the deadly
attack on the
UN compound in
Mogadishu, among
the victims
were three
employees of
South African
state owned
arms
manufacturer
Denel.
At
the UN in New
York, Inner
City Press
asked UN
Security
Council
president Mark
Lyall Grant (video
here from
Minute 4:30) then
UN spokesman
Eduardo Del
Buey about
Denel.
The
UN replied to
Inner City
Press,
“Regarding
your question
at noon about
the
contractors
killed in
Mogadishu on
Wednesday, we
can confirm
that the three
contractors
were employed
by MECHEM, a
demining
company based
in
South Africa.”
Now
Inner City
Press has
exclusively
been provided
by
whistleblowers
with
detailed
complaints
about the UN
Mine Action
Service's
David Bax,
including that
he shares both
genetic
information
and physical
evidence from
bombings with
American
intelligence
services,
including
through shadow
private
military
contractor
Bancroft
Global
Development.
According
to
the
whistleblowers,
this combined
with Bax and
“his” Denel
contractors
traveling
armed around
Mogadishu
leads to a
perception
that they and
the UN have
taken sides,
and helps to
make them a
target.
Earlier
this
month Inner
City Press reported
that the UN
Development
Program,
involved with
UNMAS and Bax,
was
soliciting
private
security
services
for the UN
Common
Compounds in
Somaliland.
While the
Request for
Proposal said
these services
would be
unarmed, Inner
City Press put
questions to
the UN that
have yet to be
answered.
The
UN has told
Inner City
Press that while it
does employee
private
military
contractors,
for example in
Iraq, it
is in an
unarmed
capacity. So
why would Bax
and the Denel
/ Mechem
contractors be
going around
Mogadishu
armed?
There
are other
complaints and
questions
about Bax and
UNMAS in
Mogadishu
which Inner
City Press has
put to the
Director of
UNMAS Agnes
Marcaillou and
to Dmitri
Titov of the
UN Department
of
Peacekeeping
Operations.
DPKO's
chief Herve
Ladsous has
said he will
not answer
Inner City
Press'
questions.
These three
are aware of
the
complaints.
Other
questions to
UN envoy to
Mogadishu
Nicholas Kay
have gone
unanswered. So
too has a
request for
confirmation
or denial sent
to the e-mail
address Bax
listed for an
April 2013 UN
Mine Action
conference.
But
the UN should
answer about
allegedly
providing
information to
US
intelligence
services,
about how
South African
Bax,
pictured here
with UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon,
hired the
South African
state
firm Denel,
and why they
go around
armed.
Here
(above) is Bax
at right with
Ban as well as
Qatar's
Nassir
Abdulaziz
Al-Nasser and
his then chief
of staff
Mutlaq M.
Al-Qahtani. by UN
Photo, Mark
Garten;
genetic
evidence and
Bancroft not
shown
The
whistleblowers
describe Bax
as “ruling
over” the UN
compound,
abusing his
power to
decide who
gets which
accommodation
and job, and
even
controlling
and profiting
from the sale
of liquor in
the UN
compound's
bar.
They
describe a
grisly video
of this weeks
bomb
attack and its
victims that
Bax made and
screened in
this UN bar.
They conclude,
“he's going to
get us all
killed.” What
will the
UN's Herve
Ladsous, the
head of the
Mine Action
Service and
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon do?
Watch this
site.
* * *
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are
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