As
Colombia Calls UN Council About Chavez, Silence on Korean Ships Shooting
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, November 10, updated
-- A war of words between Venezuela and Colombia
is on the radar of the UN Security Council, with contacts begun with
the Colombian side. But the actual exchange of
fire between South and
North Korean ships "has not been raised in the Council,"
this month's President Thomas Mayr-Harting told Inner City Press on
Tuesday. Video here,
from Minute 3:37.
The
Security
Council ostensibly deals with threats to international peace and
security. Shooting between ships, involving a country which has
ostentatiously tested what it calls nuclear missiles, would seem to
be a bigger threat than the most recent spat between Hugo Chavez and
Alvaro Uribe.
But
just as the
UN's approach to war crimes in selective, the range of conflicts
which never make it to the Council versus some countries no longer in
armed conflict which continue under a Council mandate and mission is
striking.
Inner
City Press
asked Ban Ki-moon's Associate spokesman Farhan Haq about the Korean
shooting, and he read out a bland statement. Video here.
Chavez at UN, Colombia and North Korea not shown
Inner City
Press followed up asking if there is any thought to replacing Maurice
Strong with a new UN envoy to North Korea. Apparently not, at least
for now. But Venezuela and Guyana have a UN envoy / expert. Go
figure.
Footnote:
when Inner City Press asked Mayr-Harting if as Council president he
had heard from Colombia, he said "we have been in formal
contact". Reporters afterwards asked, "in formal or
informal"? The latter seems more likely, but it sounded like the
former. Go figure.
Update of November 11 --
Ambassador Mayr-Harting approached Inner City Press during the
protection of civilians debate presided over by his foreign minister,
and clarified that he meant "informal." And there you have it.
* * *
On
Lebanon, Russia Resists Calling for Implementation of 1701
Resolution
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, November 10 -- When the UN Security Council met behind
closed door Tuesday about its Resolution 1701 and the situation
between Lebanon and Israel, there was a surprising blockage to even
calling for implementation of the Council's own Resolution 1701.
Diplomatic sources in the consultations meeting tell Inner City Press
that Russia opposed even the use of the word "implementation."
When
the UN's
Michael Williams emerged to brief the Press, he repeatedly took issue
with reporters who asked about what opposition parties in Lebanon
call his report's lack of balance. Every over flight of Lebanon, he
insisted, is a violation of 1701.
Of
the ship stopped
by Israel, Williams said it is beyond his mandate to comment on the
legality of the cargo or its seizure. Regarding the Israeli Army
chief of staff's comments that Hezbollah has rockets that can reach
Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, Williams answered that he has no way to know
of their range.
Inner
City Press
asked Williams about reports that Israel has asked for Italy to
continue to force commander of the UNFIL peacekeeping mission, rather
than pass the mandate to Spain.
UN's Ban in Lebanon, Russia and
implementation of 1701 not shown
Like you,
Williams replied, I read
colorful media reports. But it is up to the Secretary General and the
decision should be made in a few weeks. We'll see.
Footnote:
Russia also, behind the scenes, raised
issues recently about the UN's
panel of inquiry into the killing of civilians in Guinea. As with
the strange
pattern of the UN Mission anthrax scare, people are trying to
find a pattern here.
*
* *
Diplomatic
"Anthrax" Postmarked from Texas, France Says, UN Terror
Defenses Misused
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, November 10 -- At the UN Security Council stakeout the morning
after
the anthrax scare at the French, Austrian and Uzbek embassies, French
Ambassador Gerard Araud told the Press that the letters had been mail
from
Dallas. "Don't mess with Texas," he said in an exaggerated
drawl.
He
recounted how
the staff of the French Mission to the UN had been decontaminated
until 3:30 in the morning in a truck outside the Mission. Women
first, men after, he said, describing how people passed their
clothing into a small hole, and after decontamination put on plastic
suits.
The
geo-political
logic (of the three countries targeted) makes no sense, he said.
Austria has the Council presidency this month, and has its big event,
a debate on the protection of civilians, scheduled for November 11.
Others mused to Inner City Press about American bases in Uzbekistan. It
is a country
known for torturing political opponents, and shooting them in the
street.
The
NYPD quickly
concluded that the substance was not, in fact, anthrax. Because the
common denominator is the UN, missions to, in this publication it will
be called l'affaire Banthrax.
France's Araud and UN's Ban: l'affaire Banthrax not shown
Meanwhile,
the UN Secretariat used the NYPD's anti-terroristic threat squad to
try to silence or back off a former UN staffer in the Democratic
Republic of Congo who wrote to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon among
other things that his family is still threatened in the region due
to the work he did for the UN. Click here
for that Inner City Press
exclusive story, and watch this site.
* * *
UN
Calls NYPD On Congo Staffer They Used Against Rebels, "UN Put My
Family in Danger"
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, November 9 -- While the UN Security
Council held
consultations Monday about its peacekeeping mission's involvement in
the armed conflict between rebel groups and the Congolese Army, a
related but more personal drama played out just outside the UN on
First Avenue.
The
UN summoned New
York City police officers to deal with John Dimandja Wembalonge. John
C.
Fernandez of the NYPD's Threat Assessment Unit counseled Mr. Dimandja
to "stay away from the UN," following an e-mail Dimandja
had sent to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, reproduced in full below.
In it
and related correspondence to the UN, Dimandja explained
that he was a national staff member of the UN Mission in the Congo
who had fled death threats after helping the UN disarm rebels in
Ituri in Eastern Congo.
Now
Dimandja's
family remains in the region at risk. "The UN is doing nothing,"
Dimandja told Inner City Press on First Avenue on Monday night. He
said that the chief of the UN's Department of Field Services Susana
Malcorra had, though an intermediary named Cedrick, told him to bring
in his internal UN employment file, called at PHP, that perhaps a job
could be found for him in New York and then his family brought.
"But
that will be too late," Dimandja told Inner City Press, and
Officer Fernandez.
According
to
Dimandja, while working for the UN in Ituri he was sent in to meeting
of Lendu militias to convince them to disarm..Dimandja took pictures
and video, and had, he says, much success in disarmament. But when
militia leader Mathieu Ngudjolo was indicted for war crimes, Dimandja's
video footage put him in danger.
"They
were
trying to kill anyone who had taken pictures," he told Inner
City Press. Who? "The militias had become soldiers in the
Congolese Army," he said. It was the same government soldiers
who the UN assists who were trying to kill him.
UN disarmament meeting in Ituri, protection
of UN national staff not shown
Dimandja
says a UN
official, Philip Toulet, advised him to pay a bribe to Congolese
police, and to get
paperwork to flee to the U.S. and seek asylum. He arrived in New
York a year ago, and went straight to UN headquarters. He says the UN
Office of Internal Oversight Services, ostensibly in charge of
investigations, referred him to the staff counsel. He got nowhere,
and lacking the funds to stay in New York City, he went upstate to
Rochester for three months.
Since
being back
in New York, he has sought to meet with Ban Ki-moon. But his e-mails,
culminating in a threat to step in front of Ban's motorcade, resulted
only in interventions by NYPD. "Stay away from the UN,"
Officer Fernandez advised him Monday night. "Perhaps this
gentleman can help you." Here's hoping.
Some of Dimandja's e-mails
Subject:
Urgent
From:
John Dimandja
Date:
Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 12:51 PM
To:
Ban Ki-moon, Susana Malcorra, DSG Migiro
Dear
Mr. Secretary General
Good
afternoon, I am John Dimandja UN staff from MONUC, I would like to
bring up to your attention that I have not a way to contact you due
to multiple obstructions on your way, have prevented me to meet with
you, and the New York local police is already informed about the plan
that I am going to make very soon for meeting you.
Dear
Sir, I am going to stop your vehicle everywhere I can, in way to put
myself in contact with you, it will appear like a terrorist act but I
am not a terrorist I am UN staff's member who is looking for a very
urgent assistance.
The
reason I am writing this mail to you is to inform you in advance that
this will surely happen, you are kindly recommended to inform your
security body about it, if they gunshot on me believe that you kill
your own staff member, please be advised that this E-mail is copied
to the local police of New York City in charge of the UN premises
security (17 precinct community affairs New York, NY 10022) The way
to avoid this sad event is to respond promptly to my request of
appointment.
I
would like again to inform you, Mr. Secretary General that my family
is living day after day in a permanent danger and in fear of death
because the community of rebels that wanted to kill me had his base
in UGANDA this is the reason why my family is hidden in UGANDA.
I
am expecting to hear very soon from you
Best
regards
John
Dimandja.
* * *
At
UN, Obasanjo Brags of Deadly Kimia II, LRA Not in Mandate, Mountain
in the Dusk
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, November 9 -- Only days after human rights groups
documented hundreds of killings of civilians by the UN-assisted
Congolese Army as part of Operation Kimia II, former Nigerian
President Olusegun Obasanjo told the Security Council that "Operation
Kimia II is achieving reasonable success."
After
the Council
meeting, Inner City Press asked Obasanjo how this squares with the
killed civilians, which had so far led even the UN Mission in the
Congo to say it is suspending work with elements of the 213th
Brigade, for the killing of 62 civilians.
"I'm
telling
you what people told us," Obasanjo said, "operation versus
the FDLR is welcome."
What
about the 600
civilians who have been killed by the Congolese Army, documented by
Human Rights Watch? Obansanjo, rather than disputing the number,
played the ad hoc democracy card. "If the Congolese people says
its necessary, why should I say to MONUC, or to anyone else for that
matter, that what the Congolese people want they shouldn't get?"
Video here,
from Minute 7:19.
Given
the argument
that popular will trumps or supports the killing of civilians, Inner
City Press asked what Obasanjo's report was based on: a poll? "I
was there," Obasanjo said, as a staffer gestured for the
stakeout microphone to be taken away from Inner City Press.
Since
Obasanjo,
even inside UN headquarters, walked surrounded by bodyguards and
entourage, it's difficult to imagine him conducting a scientific man
and woman on the street poll in the Kivus. But as they say, you hear
what you want to hear. Obasanjo is stepping back from his UN Great
Lakes gig. We will follow his next moves.
Obasanjo at UN on Nov. 9, dead civilians and LRA not shown
As
he left, Inner
City Press asked, "What about the LRA," Lord's Resistance
Army? Video here,
from Minute 11:08. "The LRA is not part
of my mandate," Obasanjo said,
even though the Great Lakes include Uganda. If you design a mandate
narrowly enough, success is not so difficult. Many say -- another
scientific poll -- that Presidents Kabila and Kagame would have spoken
anyway. But for Obasanjo, next stop: Mo Ibrahim
prize?
This
month's
Council president Thomas Mayr-Harting of Austria read out a press
statement congratulating Obasanjo, as well as MONUC. Inner City Press
asked about the 600 dead civilians, and the report by MSF that the
Congolese Army used them as bait to attack civilians. Video here,
from Minute 1:58. He referred to
the press statement on the first, and said he hasn't seen reports of
the second. We trust he will.
Footnote:
When Inner City Press asked UN Spokesperson Michele Montas about the
MSF as bait story, she didn't answer, except to say that outgoing
MONUC deputy Ross Mountain would be in town this week and should
answer questions. Mountain was seen in the dusk outside the UN on
Monday night. When will the questions be answered?
* * *
On
UN, Congo Says All or Nothing, Silence on MSF "Bait"
Accusation, New P-5ers
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, November 9 -- While the UN Mission in the Congo will stop
assisting some units of Congo's 213th Brigade because they killed 62
civilians, according to top UN Peacekeeper Alain Le Roy, evidence
mounts of far more extensive murder by other brigades and units of
the Congolese army.
In
this context,
Inner City Press on November 5 asked the DRC's Ambassador to the UN
Atoki Ileka what he thought of Le Roy's announcement. Ambassador
Ikeka turned the question around, asking "how can you work with
only parts of an army?"
Inner
City Press
noted to him that this was similar to Human Rights Watch's position,
that MONUC should stop working with the Congolese Army as a whole, at
least as regards the Kimia II operation. Yes, Ambassador Ileka said,
on that we have the same position. Only at the UN.
Unprompted,
standing outside the UN General Assembly after the debate and vote on
the Goldstone report on Gaza, Ambassador Ileka told Inner City Press, Alan Doss, he has his own problems, I'm
not
going to add to them.
At
the November 6
noon briefing, Inner City Press asked
Inner
City Press: Medecins sans frontieres has said in great detail that a
vaccination campaign they conducted in October in FDLR-control areas
of [the Democratic Republic of] the Congo was used as “bait” --
that is the word they used. So that FARDC [the Congolese Armed
Forces] attacked the vaccination sites, killed some civilians and
sent others into the bush. It’s such a graphic allegation on their
part, I’m wondering what is MONUC -- is this a unit MONUC works
with? Does MONUC deny that it happened? What’s MONUC going to do
about that?
Spokesperson
Michele Montas: I’m going to get more information -- in fact, we
are going to have someone from [MONUC] coming to brief you on the
Congo shortly. Mr. Ross Mountain [Deputy Special Representative of
the Secretary-General for the Democratic Republic of the Congo] is
supposed to come next week and he will be briefing you on the Congo,
so I would suggest that you ask him the questions.
Ross
Mountain will
immanently leave the MONUC mission, and more and more people say Alan
Doss should. Is there accountability in the UN system?
In DRC, Obasanjo arrives, FARDC civilian abuse not shown
On
November 9,
former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo strode into the Security
Council with an entourage, to brief about the Great Lakes region: how
many trip to how many heads of state. Some mused that one of his last
times at the UN, he was
questioned
about his role in now controversial Chinese infrastructure deals in
Nigeria, if that gave him a conflict in deal with Congo's similar
--
although now somewhat shrunken -- deal. Didn't he get mad? a
correspondent asked Inner City Press, the poser of the Chinese
dealing question. He should have seen it coming. And this time? Watch
this site.
Council
footnotes, or bookends: The grandly named new UK Permanent
Representative, Ambassador Mark Lyall "No Hyphen" Grant, is
said to have arrived in New York "at the weekend." He will
get accredited, some face time with Secretary General Ban Ki-moon,
and then assume his position in the Council. There are some hoping he's
adopt a less exclusive approach, at least to the media, than those
before him.
France's Gerard Araud,
who's said in French-only briefings to rebuff questions about poverty
and spending, for
example Sarkozy's on his EU Presidency stint, is still settling in.
And so Russia, with the longest serving Ambassador, and China, which
reportedly blocked consensus on the most recent Sudan sanctions
report, will some say have the P-5 upper hand for a while. We'll see.
* * *
UN's
Security Phase Confusion in Af-Pak Shown at Stakeout, Ban and Nambiar
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, November 6 -- In a press encounter that ended in disarray,
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Friday called the UN security
threat level in Afghanistan confidential, despite it being public in
Pakistan, and then described the reclassification, renovation and
vacating of various guest houses in Kabul.
His chief of staff Vijay
Nambiar rushed to the stakeout and gestured to spokesperson Michele
Montas to end it. Mr. Nambiar then told Inner City Press, we can't
tell them how to attack us.
Mr.
Ban had
emphasized the UN is not abandoning Afghanistan, that it cannot
curtail its development efforts there. Inner City Press asked about
northwest Pakistan, where the UN country office issued a press
release putting the threat level at Phase IV and suspending UN
development activities, and asked what the Phase is in Afghanistan.
Video here,
from Minute 6:42.
Mr.
Ban said that
security phases are "determined by DSS" [the Department of
Safety and Security] "after evaluating all situations." He
said it "needs not to be known publicly."
Inner
City Press
asked if there isn't a conflict of interest, like in Algeria before
the UN was bombed there, in which host countries doesn't want the UN
Security Phase raised, even if it's needed. Mr. Ban acknowledged that
this is "very sensitive," that host countries don't like
the level raised because it could effect "national prestige"
and "socio economic activities." He said, however, that the
UN sets its levels objectively.
Another
reporter
asked, in light of the UN's pulling out of Iraq after the bombing of
its Canal Hotel headquarters, what are the "red lines" that
would trigger a pull out from Afghanistan. Mr. Ban began to answer.
Inner City Press remarked to a diplomat at the stakeout, yeah, tell
the Taliban what it would take for the UN to leave.
Then,
as Mr. Ban
was describing the categorization of the UN's 93 guest houses into
those to be closed and those to be brought to "MOSS"
standards, Mr. Nambiar rushed back to the stakeout and gestured that
this should stop. Some thought this was because of Ban's next
appointment, with his advisory group of businesses on the
environment. But Mr. Nambiar explained, we cannot tell them how to
attack us.
UN's Ban and Nambiar leave Council,
divergence on disclosure not yet shown
While
this
statement was at the stakeout, with no mention of being off the
record or on background, some have since tried to say this was
implicit. For this reason, Inner City Press is not using the direct
quote. But in fact, it is not surprising that even the UN's 38th
floor would have divergent views on how much to disclose. Both
positions in this case could be defended. And
reporting these facts is to show how the UN actually functions.
Inner
City Press
asked this month's Security Council president, Austria's Thomas
Mayr-Harting, if Mr. Ban had told the Council in its consultations
what the UN Security Phase is in Afghanistan. He said he would rather
not "get into the details." Video here.
Another
reporter
remarked to Inner City Press that "it is easy enough to learn
the UN Security Phase." But why then be so secretive? In fact,
Inner City Press is informed that the Phase in Afghanistan, even
after the killing of five UN staff in a commando style raid by the
Taliban, was kept at Phase III, while it was raised to Phase IV in
Pakistan. Is this objective? Watch this site.
* * *
IMF's
Report Buries Its Icesave Conditionality, Enforcer's Duplicity?
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, November 3 -- While the IMF has acknowledged that its second
round of disbursements to crisis-hit Iceland was delayed for months
by the country's failure to placate those in the Netherlands and UK
who did business with IceSave, the IMF's just released report on
Iceland buries the issue on page 30 of the 98 page report. The IMF
states that
"[t]he
terms and conditions of Nordic loans, amounting to $2.5 billion, have
been finalized. Their disbursement has been linked to resolution of
the Icesave dispute with the U.K. and Netherlands over deposit
insurance liabilities. After protracted discussions, the three
governments have reached an agreement on this"
Once
that
agreement was reached, on October 18, the IMF then went forward with
a letter of intent and memorandum of understanding for the second
tranche of financing. But, as with the IMF's moves in Latvia for
Swedish banks, some see the Fund operating as an enforcement or
collections agent for creditors who even less would like to show
their hand.
Iceland / Icesave protest, but is the heartfelt sign true?
Since
the IMF does
not like to admit or reveal its degree of control over the countries
it lends to, the de facto conditions for loans, such as paying off on
IceSave, are often not explicit in what purport to be full agreements
containing all express and implied terms.
In
fact, the IMF
has claimed that it "no longer" engages in conditionality.
But the Iceland report has an entire chart about conditionalities.
It's just that the most important one was left unsaid. Is this
diplomacy or duplicity?
The
IMF's Iceland
report continues, about other loan requests including from Russia:
"A
loan from the Faroe Islands ($50 million) has already disbursed, and
a loan from Poland has been agreed ($200 million), and will disburse
alongside the next 3 program reviews. A $500 million loan originally
committed by Russia is no longer expected, but the $250 million in
over-financing in the original program, an expected
macro-stabilization loan from the EU ($150 million), and use of an
existing repo facility with the BIS ($700 million, of which $214
million is outstanding) will more than offset this."
Offset may be the right
word. Last year, in the midst of Iceland's abortive run for a seat on
the UN Security Council, the country announced it had to seek a $4
billion loan from Russia. It was after that that the IMF loan
commitment was made -- an "offset," some saw it -- and
after talks in Istanbul, on October 15 the already whittled down loan
request to Russia was formally rejected.
Then the deal
with the UK
and Netherlands, and the IMF's releasing. While the IMF calls these
types of moves only technical, others call them power politics. Watch
this site.
* * *
IMF
Plays Ukraine, Zim and Pakistan As "Technical" Questions,
Pushes Tax Hikes in Serbia
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, October 22 -- Are the International Monetary Fund's
negotiations with countries about the level of taxes and salaries for
public sector employees, the pricing of electricity and the
privatization of social services political, or merely "economic
and technical"? The questions arose Thursday in connection with
Ukraine, Zimbabwe and Pakistan, among others, in the IMF's first
press briefing since its annual meeting in Turkey.
IMF
spokesperson
Caroline Atkinson fielded questions for half an hour, leaving
unanswered one submitted by Inner City Press about Serbia, where the IMF's
Paul Thompson has been quoted that "if the Serbian
delegation has a concrete pan for decreasing expenses, we will
support it, if not, they
will have to agree with us and think about
increasing taxes." Left unanswered: how is raising taxes merely
"technical"?
Ms.
Atkinson did
respond to Inner City Press' questions about Ukraine, Zimbabwe and
Pakistan. While a full transcript is available online here,
and video here,
in sum the Q & A went as follows:
Inner
City Press asked, In Ukraine, the opposition party is critical of the
IMF as funding the campaign of Tymoshenko. What is the IMF's response
to the opposition's criticism? Ms. Atkinson replied that IMF funds go
to the central bank, and that the IMF has a team on the ground in
Kiev for a third review.
The
opposition was
not, it seems, saying that money from the IMF is being used by
Tymoshenko for advertisements or to pay poll workers, but rather "MP
and opposition government's finance minister, Mykola Azarov, said
this at a meeting with delegates of an IMF mission, 'We must say that
the program of cooperation with the IMF has turned out to be
ineffective, and nothing is left but to consider the IMF's
assistance
as politically motivated, as funding of one of the candidates running
for the presidency.'"
When
another
reporter asked a follow up question about Ukraine, wondering if with
the IMF mission on the ground, the upcoming election "is an
issue," Ms. Atkinson said the IMF does not comment while a
mission is in the field, negotiating a program, but that information
-- and one hopes some questions and answers -- will be provided once
the mission is completed
IMF points the way, in budgets... and politics?
On
Zimbabwe, Inner
City Press asked, "NGOs are critical of the IMF for, they say,
pushing Zimbabwe to privatize its social services system. Has the IMF
pushed for that, and how does it respond to the criticism?" Ms.
Aktinson, while saying she can get back to Inner City Press with more
information, argued that the IMF does not favor or disfavor
particular privatizations, but must be pushing to strengthen the
social service sector to help the poor.
But
speaking just
ahead of civil society's consultative meeting with an IMF team under
Article IV of the Fund's Articles of Agreement, NANGO said
"'we
are opposed to some IMF polices such as privatization of basic social
services. We know it from the past that some IMF policies have worked
against people in this country. They have affected the social
services sector and their polices are anti-people and negative'...
[NANGO] said some of the IMF instigated polices which had brought
suffering to the people were the Economic Structural Adjustment
Programme (ESAP) and Zimbabwe Programme for Economic and Social
Transformation (ZIMPREST)." It's a pretty specific critique,
and we'll publish the IMF's response upon receipt.
Following
up on
Inner City Press' questions and article from August 2009, it asked
"in Pakistan, the IMF in August extended for a year the
country's time to eliminate electricity subsidies. Now, while the
IMF
says 2 price increases will be implemented, others say this is not
possible politically. What is the IMF's thinking on consumer power
pricing in Pakistan?"
Ms.
Aktinson
replied that "as I believe you know, the issue of issue of
electric subsidy is typically done by the World Bank and Asian
Development Bank," that IMF gets involved due to the budget."we
will be having another review of the Pakistan program in early
November." We'll be there....
* * *
On
Food Speculation, UN's Expert Says Nothing's Being Done, S. Korean Land
Grabs from Madagascar to Sudan, Brazil on Ethanol
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, October 21 -- After many speeches at the UN about the need
to crack down on financial speculation in food, nothing has been
done, the UN's expert on the right to food told Inner City Press on
Wednesday.
Olivier de Schutter, a Belgian law professor just back
from a visit to Brazil about, among other things, the loss of land
for food to ethanol, replied that "nothing is moving at the
inter-governmental level." This despite a statement by the G-20
in April favoring the regulation of hedge funds which present
systemic risk. The argument is that commodities index funds which
speculate in food present systemic risk to net food importing
countries. But nothing has been done.
De
Schutter spoke
about the monopolization of the seed industry, and made a slew of
recommendations for governments. The three top monopolizers --
Monsanto, Dupont and the Swiss-based Syngenta -- are all members of
the UN Global Compact, and claim to comply with human rights. De
Schutter pointed out the antitrust law is directed as national and
not global or subnational markets. It is all very heady but one
wonders what effect it has.
Brazil
might be
one of de Schutter's claims to impact. He spoke glowingly of
President Lula, saying that Brazil has said that only 19% of land can
be used for sugar cane for ethanol, and has committed to monitor
labor rights. But what about, for example, Indonesia and Malaysia?
De Schutter, action on food speculation not shown
After
De
Schutter's briefing, Inner City Press asked his staffer for an update
on the proposed land grab in Madagascar by South Korea based Daewoo,
which was reputed after the coup in that country. De Schutter had
been scheduled to visit, but it was put off by the coup. The same
thing happened in Honduras. So perhaps De Schutter does have an
effect after all, mused one wag.
Footnote:
immediately after De Schutter's briefing, the UN's Haile Menkerios
was scheduled to speak to the Press about Madagascar. While the UN
usually compartmentalizes its work such that a rapporteur looks at
land grabs, while the Secretariat remains on "political affairs"
narrowly defined, this land grab played a role in the change of
government. Now it's said the South Korean deal is being pursued from
India, while South Korea appears to have moved on to 690,000 hectares
in Sudan. Watch this site.
* * *
UN's
Indigenous Expert Stymied in Russia, Does Not Engage in Myanmar, Will
Visit Ecuador
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, October 19 -- Russia blocked the UN's expert on the rights
of indigenous people from visiting the site slated
for the Evenki dam
in Krasnoyarsk Territory, it emerged at the UN on Monday.
Inner City
Press asked James Anaya, the UN's Special Rapporteur on the situation
of human rights and fundamental freedom of indigenous people, if he
had in fact been allowed to visit the site. The Russian
press had
quoted Igor Kurtushin, deputy head of the territorial
administration’s department for external relations that "it
would not be easy to visit the Evenki sites due to peculiar weather
patterns."
Inner
City Press
asked if Anaya had visit the contested
site, from which indigenous people would be evicted. No, he said,
it wasn't
in the agenda we were able to negotiate. Video here,
from Minute
30:53.
Was
this, in fact,
due to the weather, Inner City Press followed up. "The weather
was good was I was there," Anaya answered, describing two
flights in Krasnoyarsk and an outdoor meal of reindeer parts. Video here,
from Minute 36:29.
This
can be
contrasted to Panama, where the government allowed Anaya to visit the
site of a proposed dam. When Inner City Press asked about Ecuador and
conflicts there, Anaya said he is going in December, invited by the
government.
To
some, Anaya
seems too accommodating of governments. When Inner City Press asked
about Canada's refusal to sign on to the Declaration of the Rights of
Indigenous People, Anaya said Canada is moving in the right
direction, that he doesn't criticize countries if there is the
"possibility" of movement.
Likewise,
when
Inner City Press asked about the position of Botswana that nearly all
people there are indigenous, Anaya responded that he hadn't seen a
need to contest this position during his recent visit there. Given
that the position almost derailed the Declaration, it seems strange
to some to be so accommodative of it now.
Reindeer, UN's Anaya and Russia permit to visit not shown
But
it is to and
within the UN system that Anaya is most accommodative. Inner City
Press asked about the UN's REDD program, which was protested earlier
this month. Anaya said that the UN agencies want to address
indigenous issues. When Inner City Press asked about indigenous
people in Myanmar, Anaya responded that since there is another
rapporteur on Myanmar, he does not engage in Myanmar. Video here,
from Minute 49:22.
First, this
deference is not required: for example, the UN's expert on children
and armed conflict engages with Myanmar, rather than deferring.
Particularly given the issues that have arisen about the UN's special
rapporteur on Myanmar, for Anaya to say he'll do nothing in or about
the country ill-served indigenous people. Watch this site.
* * *
As
France is Asked about Evictions in Calais and Chad, UN Cuts Off
Questions, Jumps for Kouchner
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, October 19 -- In his first media availability at the UN, new
French Ambassador Gerard Araud marked the International Day for the
Eradication of Poverty with a press conference on October 19.
Inner
City Press asked Ambassador Araud about his country's eviction of
immigrants from a camp near Calais last month, about the drowning of
residents of the Comoros trying to get to the French island of
Mayotte, and about mass
evictions in the capital of Chad, where the Idriss Deby government
receives substantial French support. Video here,
from Minute 25:32.
Ambassador
Araud
said immigration is an issues throughout the developed world, quickly
equating the drowning of those seeking to get to Mayotte with deaths
of African in the Mediterranean.
He said that
the "dismantling"
of the camp was because immigration should be restricted to that
which is legal, so that Europeans don't "become violent."
He said it was fair to be critical, he has seen such criticism of
U.S. policies as well, but these countries are democracies.
Araud
said that
"answering about Chad is the easiest," and then proceeded
to say that his Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, the moment he got
the post, took in the lead is setting up peacekeeping mission in
Eastern Chad, first through the European Union and then the UN.
A
follow-up
question was cut off by the UN's moderator, Rachel Mayanja. She said,
"before we proceed... I am surprised none of you want to take
advantage" of the boy on the panel, from Dominica, to "expose
his journey." Video here,
from Minute 31:55. But she had begun
by saying that the youth would be accompanied by a chaperrone from
ChildFund Caribbean, who was not on the podium.
After
a more
compliant correspondent dutifully asked the boy about photography --
ChildFund saved him from being a criminal, he equally dutifully said
-- Inner City Press asked Ambassador Araud about the evictions done
by French ally Idriss Deby, did he have any answer? He shook his head
no. And the press conference was over. Video here,
from Minute 34:49.
Afterwards,
one of
the French journalists opined that Ms. Mayanja may have been trying
to protect or please France, a Permanent Five member of the Security
Council, by shifting from questions about France's record to what she
wanted journalists to ask and write about. This has become more
prevalent at the UN.
France's Gerard Araud at the UN on Monday,
Chad eviction answers not shown
We
note that Ms.
Mayanja's cutting off of questions cannot necessarily be ascribed to
Araud. The UN may offer protection where none is even requested. If
Ms. Mayanja wanted to play up the boy's story, why have him appear at
the French Ambassador's first press conference?
Another
reporter
told Inner City Press that Bernard Kouchner called Ban Ki-moon
recently and told him the UN should launch an investigation of the
recent killing of some 150 protesters in Guinea Conakry. Ban did just
that; when Inner City Press asked, his spokesman said that it was at
the request of ECOWAS. But why didn't the UN launch any inquiry into
the tens of thousands of civilians killed in Sri Lanka earlier this
year?
Just
as the UN on
Monday sought to limit questions to the right kind of poverty, it
will only investigate the killings of the right victims: it all
depends on who the perpetrator is, and who provides protection.
Footnote:
also on the Chad evictions, Inner City Press asked this question last
week to Habitat's New York representative, and for an update on what
if anything Habitat did to follow up on supposed commitments by
Angola not to continue evictions. Video here.
A response was promised, but has
not been received. What was that again, about eradicating poverty?
* * *
At
UN, Iran's Mottaki Says Protesters Are Dealt With, Nuclear Sites All
Reported
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, October 1 -- In Iran "there are some people, a limited
number of people, who look for trouble and want to create unreal,"
Iranian foreign minister Manouchehr Mottaki told the Press on
Thursday. "It is very clear how they should be dealt with."
Video here,
from Minute 31:55.
During
a Q&A
session at the UN in New York, nearly all of which dealt with nuclear
issues, Inner City Press asked Mottaki about a story of
post-election
torture, rape and exile, which Inner City Press heard from Ebrahim
Sharifi by cell phone on September 21. Sharifi states that he
joined
the non violent street protests then was picked up, blindfolded and
held for a week.
Inner
City Press
asked Mottaki if he acknowledged the veracity of any such charges, if
people can file complaints in Iran and what he thinks of the call for
a UN General Assembly special envoy to Iran on human rights issues.
Video here,
from Minute 25:43, Mottaki's
reponse here from Minute
27:08.
Mottaki's
more then
five minute answer became with calling the June elections "the
most glorious presidential elections in the history of the Islamic
Republic of Iran." Mottaki claimed the skeptics, once they
received an explanation, were convinced. This left a few trouble
makers -- "it is very clear how they should be dealt with."
UN's Ban, Ahmadinejad, Motakki and Zarif, pre election violence
Mottaki
said that
Iran has vibrant NGOs, which rather than complain in Geneva to the
Human Rights Council come to the UN in New York to participate in
workshops about the rights on women.
On
Iran's nuclear
program, Mottaki said that other than Qom, there are no other sites
not reported to the IAEA. The press conference ended with a report
for a newspaper in Israel calling for the floor, without receiving
it. He was told by the UN's spokesperson that the UN is an
"inter-governmental body... we cannot do anything about what
member states do." Apparently not.
Footnote: Mottaki,
before traveling to DC, wiled away the evening of September 29 at
Indonesia's Independence Day celebration in the UN Delegates' Dining
Room. There were satays, rice and noodles. One attending, chewing,
snarked that at such receptions, the quality of the food is in inverse
proportion to the amount of democracy in the hosting nation.
Inner City Press has previously written about, and
sampled, Iran's
kebab diplomacy, click here for that. Seven thousand years of
culture...
Click
here
for an Inner City Press YouTube channel video, mostly UN Headquarters
footage, about civilian
deaths
in Sri Lanka.
Click here for Inner City
Press' March 27 UN debate
Click here for Inner City
Press March 12 UN (and AIG
bailout) debate
Click here for Inner City
Press' Feb 26 UN debate
Click
here
for Feb.
12 debate on Sri Lanka http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/17772?in=11:33&out=32:56
Click here for Inner City Press' Jan.
16, 2009 debate about Gaza
Click here for Inner City Press'
review-of-2008 UN Top Ten debate
Click here for Inner
City Press' December 24 debate on UN budget, Niger
Click here from Inner City Press'
December 12 debate on UN double standards
Click here for Inner
City Press' November 25 debate on Somalia, politics
and this October 17 debate, on
Security Council and Obama and the UN.
* * *
These
reports are
usually also available through Google
News and on Lexis-Nexis.
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
Feedback: Editorial
[at] innercitypress.com
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Other,
earlier Inner City Press are listed here, and some are available
in the ProQuest service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
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2006-08 Inner City Press, Inc. To request
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