UN
Scandal in CAR Exposed, Demands
Made to Traveling Guterres,
UNresponsive Lacroix
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
June 6 – When Jean Pierre
Lacroix, the fifth French boss
of UN Peacekeeping (DPKO) in a
row, held his first press
conference in UN Headquarters
on May 24, Inner City Press
asked him to state what he
sees as the benefits of his
country controlling DPKO for
so long, compared to the
downside (for example the
French Force Sangaris rapes in
CAR), and if he didn't think
in an Organization of 193
states, with most peacekeeping
missions in Africa, the
position should belatedly be
rotated. Amazingly, Lacroix
refused to answer the
question. UN video here,
from 38:38. Now Lacroix' DPKO
has been exposed in a leaked
memo (1-pager here),
and it is Secretary General
Antonio Guterres and not
Lacroix who has received this
Code Blue letter. But Guterres
is once again setting out on a
long trip, this time to
Central Asia. Will the UN ever
be reformed? Can it be? One
nexus here: these abuses are
be troops from
Congo-Brazzaville, a country
like Cameroon and Gabon whose
abuses France covers up,
including in DPKO. Back on May
24 Department of Field
Support's Atul Khare said he
doesn't see Lacroix as French
- besides the point - and when
Inner City Press asked, So how
was a replacement of Herve
Ladsous recruited, UN Deputy
Spokesman Farhan Haq cut off
the follow up, as he hadn't
others. Then Inner City Press
asked lead (French) spokesman
Stephane Dujarric to provide
the response that Lacroix had
refused to. Dujarric declined
to confirm that his new boss
Antonio Guterres had asking
only France for candidates
(the others, Inner City Press
first reported, here
Jean-Maurice Ripert and Sylvie
Bermann). So how is Guterres a
reformer, if he kept this up
and his spokesman won't even
try to explain it? We'll have
more on this. The UN's
two-tier treatment in Mali and
elsewhere of African versus
European peacekeepers was
confirmed on May 19 by the
UN's Force Commander in Mali's
MINUSMA mission Jean-Paul
Deconinck. Video
here. Inner City Press,
now restricted
in the UN for reporting on
corruption, sought to go
across First Avenue to asking
him, though it would mean
re-entering with tourists and
missing most of an African
Group press conference. On the
way, the Department of Public
Information's Hua
Jiang, involved in the
15 months of restrictions on
Inner City Press, nodded; at
IPI Youssef Mahmoud told Inner
City Press to keep its
questions short. Even so, when
it asked of restrictions on
sharing technology with the
African contingents suffering
most of the casualties in
Mali, a crew of Caucasian UN
Peacekeeping supporters loudly
opined, "Irrelevant." On the
UN on May 22, Inner City Press
asked UN Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric about it, UN
transcript here:
Inner City Press: on Friday
across the street at IPI tothe
Force Commander of MINUSMA
[United Nations Stabilization
Mission] in Mali, I asked
something that I've asked you
here in this room about the
sharing of technology between
different contingents and the
complaint that, for example,
Chadians have… don't have
night-vision goggles and other
security equipment that the
European delegate… contingents
had. And he said that's
just how it is; every country
comes with their own
equipment, and he didn't
provide any provision for
trying to share it and kind of
equalize the degree of risk
covered. So can you
clarify? What is DPKO's
position on different
delegations from
different-incomed and
resourced countries coming to
serve in Mali and who faces
the risk of being blown up by…
Spokesman: Obviously,
I'm not going to contradict
what the Force Commander may
have said. But, as you
know, the troop-contributing…
the units come with their own
equipment. We,
obviously… also sometimes we
have to provide the
equipment. But it is
clear that the safety and
security of our troops is
something that is shared… that
concern is shared by the
mission as a whole, and any
mission as a whole will try to
protect all of the
troop-contributing countries
as much as possible.
Inner City Press: I'm
sure the concern is
shared. What I'm
wondering is whether the
night-vision goggles and other
equipment are, in fact,
shared.
Spokesman: Well, I think
the work that one contingent
may do to provide for the
security of the rest of the
mission is obviously of common
interest.
The Force
Commander will speak to the
Security Council on May 22.
But will he take Press
questions? Amid attacks on and
mismanagement from UN
headquarters of the UN
peacekeeping mission in Mali,
MINUSMA, an "extraordinary"
meeting for troop contributors
was held on January 27.
Inner City
Press, which has covered the
disparate treatment in MISUSMA
between for example troops
from Chad and Europe, wanted
to cover it. But due to a
retaliatory eviction
order
by the UN's Cristina Gallach,
it could only do so with the
UN "minder."
Even so,
UN Security officials demanded
to know where its minder was,
cutting off several diplomats
who had approached Inner City
Press to give it information.
As the meeting wound
down, Inner City Press worked
around the minder to learn --
from UN official Atul Khare to
his credit -- that there is
discussion of moving the
Senegalese "quick reaction
force" from Cote d'Ivoire to
Mali.
It was not
possible yet to ask about the
recent mutiny / unrest in Cote
d'Ivoire. Khare had to go, and
Herve Ladsous refused to
answer any Press questions,
having been exposed
linking peacekeepers' rapes
to "R&R."
Other
diplomats, even as Inner City
Press was being told to leave
the second floor where other
journalist were free to stay
(though none were in fact
staking out the Mali meeting),
told Inner City Press that
Egypt is offering a battalion.
Troublingly, to some, Sri
Lanka is being recruited by
Ladsous' UN to provide "convoy
protection," despite its
military's record of killing
in northern Sri Lanka in 2008
and 2009
and abuses since, to say
nothing of sexual
abuse in Haiti.
Inner City
Press wants to do more
reporting into the UN's
engagement with the Sri Lankan
military. But Gallach's minder
ordered Inner City Press to
leave. This is censorship.
To be continued.
As in The Gambia Yahya Jammeh
moved on December 1 to shut
off the Internet (and Viber,
etc) for the / his election,
there was again a deafening
silence from the UN and its
“communications” chief
Cristina Gallach.
On January
5, Inner City Press asked
holdover UN spokesman Stephane
Dujarric, video
here, UN
transcript here:
Inner City Press:
about Gambia. The
electoral commission chief has
gone into hiding, and the
Government has closed three
radio stations, one of which
reopened with no news on
it. So what's the status
of the UN's work on this
holdover presidency?
Spokesman: We've had…
various UN officials have had
contacts with parties
involved, and obviously we
would like to see and are very
keen to see a peaceful
resolution to the current
crisis in the Gambia and,
notably, the… for the
President… the outgoing
President to leave way for the
President that was just
elected.
As of
January 7, new Secretary
General Antonio Guterres had
yet to speak publicly about
Jammeh and Gambia. Meanwhile
the US issued a travel
warning:
"The U.S.
Department of State warns U.S.
citizens against travel to The
Gambia because of the
potential for civil unrest and
violence in the near
future. On January 7,
2017, the Department of State
ordered the departure of
family members and authorized
the departure of all employees
who need to accompany those
individuals from the country.
The security situation in The
Gambia remains uncertain
following December 1, 2016
presidential elections.
On January 10, the Supreme
Court is scheduled to hear the
current president’s petition
contesting the election
results, which is a potential
flashpoint that could lead to
civil unrest. The
sitting government has begun
taking restrictive measures,
which include shutting down
and restricting radio
stations, and making
politically motivated
arrests. The Economic
Community of West African
States (ECOWAS) has stated it
may intervene if the president
does not step down by January
18.
U.S. citizens should consider
departing on commercial
flights and other
transportation options now, as
airports and ferry terminals
may close unexpectedly in the
event of unrest. All
U.S. citizens should have
evacuation plans that do not
rely on U.S. government
assistance. U.S.
citizens should ensure that
travel documents (passports
and visas) are valid and
up-to-date. Consular
services, already limited
throughout the country due to
very poor transportation
infrastructure and security
conditions, may be further
limited, including in Banjul
itself.
U.S. citizens who decide to
remain in The Gambia should
prepare for the possible
deterioration of security."
We'll have
more on this.
***
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