At
UN As Inner City Press Covers
Rwanda Genocide Then Gaza, UN
Requires Minder Then Hinders
Streaming
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
April 13 – The UN Department
of Public Information, acting
against Press coverage of UN
corruption cases, without
hearing or appeal had Inner
City Press physically
ousted from the UN.Audio
here.
Since then
DPI's requirement that Inner
City Press unlike other media
have minders to stake-out
public events in the UN has continued.
On April 13 Inner City Press
sought to cover the UN's
belated commemoration of the
Rwanda genocide - in which it
failed
- and then a media encounter
about Gaza. First, the UN
required Inner City Press to
get a minder, UNlike other
correspondents like Egyptian
state media Akhbar al Yom.
Inside the General Assembly
Hall, the President of the
General Assembly unlike so
many others in the UN admitted
the organization failed (not
only the Security Council but
also UNDP and other parts of
the System). Ironically, the
Rwanda event was MC-ed by
DPI's Alison Smale, who has
not in eight months responded
to detailed petitions
for content neutral media
access rules. Then over at the
UN Security Council stakeout
on Gaza, a UN Security officer
told Inner City Press not to
steam on Periscope. This is
straight censorship - it is
permitted to film at the
stakeout. Perhaps the UN wants
to cover up to whom it allowed
automatic passage through the
second floor turnstile now
locked to Inner City Press for
pursing the UN bribery story
of Ng Lap Seng. This include
people who are neither
diplomats nor staff nor
favored resident
correspondents. At the GA
Hall's Rwanda event, Inner
City Press saw a person
ostensibly a correspondent
show a badge and go through
and into the hall. The UN is
corrupt. On March 22 Inner
City Press sought to cover the
General Assembly event on
water, with for example Lake
Chad having shrunk by 90%. But
to get to the GA, unlike other
state and sycophant
journalists, Inner City Press
had to get a DPI minder, and
then had to build its own
cage, admitted of blue rope.
There were already journalists
there, with no cage, including
one from a country under
multiple sanction. But today's
UN trusts their state media,
not the investigative Press.
UNTV didn't even have Antonio
Guterres' speech on,
initially. But outside, even
behind the rope, Inner City
Press was approached by the
Permanent Representative of
out of the Lake Chad
countries, who said if nothing
is done in ten years the Lake
is gone. The decade of water -
will today's UN fail again?
The rapper Pitbull cancelled
on the UN, for an 11:15 am
press conference. The Dutch
scheduled an 8 pm event on the
North Lawn. But under Inner
City Press' still reduced
pass, it cannot re-enter the
UN after 7 pm. This is today's
UN. On March 5 Inner City
Press sought to cover an event
about Peacebuilding, featuring
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres and his Deputy Amina
J. Mohammed. Inner City Press
was told by DPI that the
meeting was closed to the
Press, and that it would
require a minder to even stand
near the entrance and try to
report on it. A special blue
rope was erected, which made
it impossible to even try to
ask a question of Amina J.
Mohammed and her deputy as
they wandered out, with
permanent UN Security detail
even inside the UN.
Ironically, despite banning
the Press, DPI's UNIFEED
issued video - but only of
Guterres speaking. And when
the meeting ended, Guterres
and Mohammed left by the other
door, far away from where
Inner City Press was required
to remain while other
correspondents with no
questions could walk freely.
To this has the UN sunk. Back
on 24 October 2017, Inner City
Press to cover the meeting of
UN Legal Advisers and
separately of Troop
Contributing Countries on the
Central African Republic was
required unlike other
correspondents to get a minder
from the Department of Public
Information, whose Number Two
official Maher Nasser had an
hour before tried to pre-empt
or discourage its questions, here,
and two work days ago
threatened its accreditation.
When the minder was ready,
Inner City Press set up in
front of both meetings. On
CAR, it got even under
surveillance comments on
Antonio Guterres' performance
in CAR. But then Inner City
Press was told it had to
leave, even as the Legal
Advisers meeting continued.
Inner City Press earlier on
October 24 published an exclusive
about France's former legal
adviser Beatrice Le Frapeur du
Hellen leaking documents
including UN documents to
then-ICC Luis Moreno Ocampo.
But now the UN / DPI is
banning it from speaking with
other countries legal adviser,
which even no-show Egypt state
media Akhbar al Yom, being
given Inner City Press'
office, is allowed to do
without a minder. This is
censorship. On October 23, the
work day after the UN again threatened
Inner City Press'
accreditation, this time
absurdly for reporting what
DPI official Maher Nasser said
about restricting Inner City
Press, and Periscoping during
Antonio Guterres photo ops on
the 38th floor, Inner City
Press needed to cover two
meetings on the UN's second
floor. It therefore, unlike
less present others, required
a minder. First there was
delay, then there was
surveillance. During this,
DPI's Maher Nasser blithely
floated by, later to brag
about a Chinese swimmer. But
on the General Committee's
meeting we can report that the
Moldova agenda item was
postponed, until December
we're told. But despite that
being on the record, we can't
run audio under the threat of
Nasser and Alison Smale's DPI.
We'll have more on this. On
October 18 to cover an event
of Africa Week, Inner City
Press was required to get a
minder or escort which is not
required, for example, of the
Egypt state media Akhbar al
Yom which rarely comes in,
never asks questions. Then
Inner City Press was told that
it would have to leave at 11
am. This is censorship. (See
October 17 video here.)
On October 17 to cover an
Africa Week speech by Deputy
Secretary General Amina J.
Mohammed at 3 pm, Inner City
Press showed up well before at
the DPI Media Accreditation
and Liaison Unit to get the
still required minder. But the
office was empty, and remained
so well after 3 pm despite
multiple messages. Six weeks
of petitions to the new head
of DPI have still not been
responded to. This is
censorship. On October 6 to
cover Mohammed's speech about
changes to the development
system, UNlike other
journalists Inner City Press
had to go get a Department of
Public Information minder.
Then as it covered or tried to
cover the meeting, UN Security
demanded to see its badge,
wrote down information and
conferred with others while
correspondents who rarely come
in and never ask questions
breezed and in one case rolled
by. Under these conditions, of
censorship targeted for
covering UN corruption, Inner
City Press nevertheless was
approached by a number of
Permanent Representatives and
other sources with concerns.
Inside the meeting, the US
spoke against duplication and
waste; Russia demanded to know
what the authority is, to
shift the resident
coordinators away from UNDP,
citing GA document A/51/950
and GA resolution
A/52/12.
It's a question Inner City
Press first covered, here
- but is now constrained from
covering. No response from the
new head of DPI, Alison Smale.
Another report is due in
December. Rwanda as the last
speaker noted Mohammed going
all over to consult on these
changes; good. But what about
the UN's absurd and unseemly
censorship? She heard, for the
African Group, from Egypt to
whose state media Akhbar al
Yom, which rarely comes in and
never asks questions, the UN
is trying to give Inner City
Press' long time office, and
continue to restrict it. We'll
have more on this. On
September 12 as Inner City
Press went to cover Secretary
General Antonio Guterres'
speech on Dag Hammarskjold's
death in the General Assembly
lobby, a UN Security officer
stopped it from entering,
immediately after another
correspondent had answered.
The officer's supervisor said
that "Protocol" told Security
to specifically stop Inner
City Press. But an official
from Protocol on the scene
denied it was them. So who was
it? The day before, Inner City
Press exclusively
covered a "split" between
Guterres and his deputy Amina
J. Mohammed, in the murky
process of picking a new
leader of UNFPA; also, Inner
City Press formally petitioned
Guterres' new head of Global
Communication (f/k/a DPI),
Alison Smale, who has not
responded. Or has she? This
must be fixed. On August 29 as
Inner City Press covered the
UN Security Council debate in
the run-up to an emergency
meeting on North Korea, an
Ambassador walked down the
second floor. A slew of
correspondents took off in
pursuit, including "non
resident correspondents" who
only come in for North Korea
meetings. While awaiting the
end of the double standard
between it and other
UN-favored correspondents, it
seemed obvious to Inner City
Press it must be treated like
other non-resident
correspondents. But no - a UN
Security officer in front of
the ECOSOC chamber, after
letting other non-resident
correspondents by, stepped out
and stopped Inner City Press.
This is pur censorship, for
covering the UN's (expanding)
corruption. On August 28, as
Inner City Press with its
still required DPI minder /
escort covering the UN General
Assembly meeting on South
South Cooperation, a UN
Security supervisor had the
DPI minder order Inner City
Press to stop filming and
covering - from a roped-in
stakeout. When Inner City
Press asked the UN Security
officer for his name, he
refused (so, this
Vine video), finally saying
"You talking to me?" then
walking off. Further requests
for the UN officer's /
censor's name were not
responded to when raised to
DPI, including Darrin Farrant
who's been at the right hand
of three DPI Under Secretaries
General in a row. Incoming USG
Alison Smale is going to have
to deal with this censorship,
these double standards. This
as UN Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric has refused to answer
how events held in the UN by
groups show to be connected to
now conficted Ng Lap Seng are
vetted and paid for. The UN is
corrupt. "New" UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres on
May 25, told
Inner City Press that his
reform proposals are public.
But Guterres' holdover
spokesman Stephane Dujarric
refused to give Inner City
Press even a copy of Guterres'
budget speech, much less a
chart of who he has hired on
the 38th floor. Later on May
25 an NGO
representative - who wrote
to Dujarric to get Inner City
Press thrown out of the UN -
was allowed through the
turnstile onto the UN's second
floor, where Inner City Press
cannot go without one of
Guterres' minders. This is a
new low, after Guterres put
out a statement that "on World
Press Freedom Day, I call for
an end to all crackdowns
against journalists – because
a free press advances peace
and justice for all." What
about the UN's crackdown on
the Press, without hearing or
appeal, and the crackdowns of
WIPO and FAO Inner City Press
has asked the UN about, on
before of the Free UN
Coalition for Access whose
sign DPI threatened to tear
down, before evicting Inner
City Press without a hearing
or appeal? We'll have more on
this. For now, 7-minute video
here.
Petition
here. On the afternoon
of April 26 to cover a UN
Security Council meeting about
peacekeeping in Africa, Inner
City Press unlike other media
was required to get a minder,
which was not immediately
available. After several
Ambassadors spoke to Inner
City Press, about that
meeting, Western Sahara,
Syria, North Korea, the UN's
lack of reform and other
issues, the DPI minder or
escort told Inner City Press
it had to leave. This as
Morocco state media, that used
to work for the UN, walked up
and down the second floor
freely, along with other
correspondents. This came
after Inner City Press was
banned in the morning from an
"open" meeting of the Burundi
Peacekeeping Commission, which
it covers; it asked holdover
spokesman Stephane Dujarric
without response. While DPI
"Officer in Charge" Maher
Nasser's lone response
has been "Matthew U
have same access as 3000
other journalists," that is
false. As simply one example,
on April 25 when the UN
Security Council met on
Western Sahara, Morocco state
journalists were allowed free
access up and down the second
floor of the UN, and Inner
City Press was not. On April
26, despite claims by DPI that
DSS "gives priority" at the
metal detectors, there was a
single long line and Inner
City Press despite arriving
early was late to cover the UN
Security Council. It appears
that the DPI executive who use
accreditation as their
personal or national way to
settle scores don't even watch
the UN noon briefing, where
Inner City Press asks the most
questions. Or maybe that's the
reason for these ongoing
restrictions and threats or
worse. We'll have more on
this. Another new low: after a
few days of Inner City Press
using a table left by the UN
in the UN lobby to work,
including editing videos of
Antonio Guterres' spokesman's
non-answered about censorship
in Cameroon, on April 18 the
UN Department of Public
Information which evicted
Inner City Press for reporting
on corruption told it
"multiple people" want it to
stop using the table. On what
basis? If UN staff and others
use it? Apparently the goal is
to, post-eviction, make Inner
City Press disappear, or to
stop it from being contacted
by sources about UN
corruption. A diplomat, told
of DPI's "disgusting"
statement Requests have been
made to the top floor of the
UN. Watch this site. Also,
unlike other media, now Inner
City Press has a "witching
hour" of 7 pm, after which its
pass does not work. This
meant, for example, that the
"Peace Is" event in the
General Assembly lobby,
ironically overseen by the
Department of Public
Information and its Officer in
Charge Maher Nasser, Inner
City Press could only cover
until 6:56 pm, in the middle
of a performance of flutes and
dancers. Periscope video here.
The Officer in Charge has
still not substantively
responded to the straight
forward requests
submitted to him in writing 11
days ago. We'll have more on
this.
On April
7, the annual Rwanda genocide
commemoration by the UN which
failed so badly in 1994 took
place in the Trusteeship
Council Chamber. To cover it
as it has in previous
years, Inner City Press
was required to get a DPI
minder to escort it; the
minder stayed while diplomats
approached Inner City Press to
speak, including about the
UN's current failures on Burundi
and Cameroon
as well as Yemen and Syria.
Then the DPI minder said, You
have to go, and escorted Inner
City Press back outside the
turnstile. When the event
ended Secretary General
Antonio Guterres, who had sat
on the podium with the DPI
Officer in Charge Maher Nasser
who has had before him for a
week Inner City Press' formal
request
for restoration, gave through
the turnstiles to head to the
elevator. He passed, seemingly
oblivious, by the very
location of censorship,
chatting with a staffer whose
promotion Inner City Press has
covered (which Guterres'
holdover spokesman Stephane
Dujarric called "despicable").
This is today's UN.
Back on
April 3, the continuing
restrictions by DPI meant that
after entering through the UN
metal detectors and having its
backpack / office searched in
detail, Inner City Press has
to request a DPI "minder" to
stakeout the day's meeting on
UN Security Council reform. As
other correspondents walked by
without minders, Inner City
Press was behind a red rope.
When a Latin American
country's Permanent
Representative approached
Inner City Press to ask
questions - ironically, one
was about DPI's censorship - a
UN Security official came over
to "break it up." This is
censorship, and has been
raised.
***
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