For
UNSC, Italian
Gelato, Dutch
Football, Swedish
Flowers,
Kazakh Singer
at Plaza
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, June
27 -- In the
two contests
races for UN
Security
Council seats,
Italy gave out
gelato, the
Netherlands
played soccer,
Sweden did a
mid-summer
festival,
Thailand did
alot including
meeting with
African
Ambassadors
and Kazakhstan
had a live
singer at the
Plaza Hotel, Inner City Press
Periscope
video here. What
would it come
to?
On the way in,
Inner City
Press asked
Next SG
candidate Vuk
Jeremic how
it's going. He
said no one
can compete
with Helen
Clark's
resources from
UNDP, not to
mention New
Zealand, but
reminded Inner
City Press of
his answer,
that he would
defend
whistleblowers.
That would set
him apart from
the current
administration.
On May 24, the
second day of
UN Security
Council
election
debates
featured three
states -
Sweden, the
Netherlands
and Italy - on
May 24 vying
for two seats,
with the
voting set for
June 28. Inner
City Press is
informed that
most states
have already
committed
their votes,
and it is
unclear if
anything said
during the
debate would
sway such a
decision.
Italy
said it is at
the crossroads
of East and
West; it has
been on the
Security
Council six
times since
joining the UN
in 1955, the
most recent in
2007.
Sweden,
by contrast,
has been on
the Council
three times,
and also the
further back
in time, in
1997. For the
Netherlands
it's been five
times, the
most recent in
1999.
Sweden noted
that it has
recognized
Palestine -
perhaps
offsetting for
some its
dust-up with
Saudi Arabia.
Netherlands
candidly
brought up
Srebrenica, as
a dark mark on
its past; it
said as it had
set up
meetings with
states beyond
the Security
Council for
now Foreign
Minister Bert
Koenders when
he was un
envoy in Mali
and Cote
d'Ivoire, it
would do the
same in the
future. Italy
cited the
theft and sale
of cultural
heritage by
terrorists.
Among the
questions, UK
Ambassador
Matthew
Rycroft asked
the three, who
would come
onto the just
as the Next SG
will, how they
would work
with her.
Italy said it
has not spend
so much on its
campaign, it's
all part of
foreign
policy. A
contested
application in
the NGO
Committee
beckoned, and
so it was time
to go. What
remained
constant was
that due to UN
eviction and
censorship,
Inner City
Press was
required to
have a minder
to reach the
stakeout.
The day before
on May 23 when
Kazakhstan and
Thailand
debated, such
as it was, for
the Asia
Pacific seat
on the UN
Security
Council, Inner
City Press
again could
only reach the
stakeout with
a minder,
thanks to Ban
Ki-moon's and
Cristina
Gallach's
censorship.
Still, while
canned
questions were
posed by DPA
and others
inside,
outside
diplomats told
Inner City
Press this
“reform” was
more illusory
than real.
“We've
already made
up our mind,”
as one
diplomat put
it. Or as
another
specified,
votes for
Security
Council seats
are traded
early among
nations; no
debate a few
weeks out can
change it.
Still, Amnesty
International
asked about
about Morocco
and Western
Sahara, South
Sudan and
Malakal.
Kazakhstan
pointed out no
Central Asian
country has
yet served on
the Council.
Thailand cited
its pedigree.
Inner City
Press tweeted
these and got
push back. So,
somebody was
watching. Next
up is Sweden,
Netherlands
and Italy.
Watch this
site.
As Inner City
Press reported
long ago,
Susana
Malcorra is a
candidate to
replace her
former boss
Ban Ki-moon as
UN Secretary
General.
Early on
May 20 she
told Argentine
media that
President
Macri will
nominate her
later in the
day. She
herself is in
China, after
earlier trips
to other P5
capitals.
Sources tell
Inner City
Press of
attempts to
address in
advance the
Malvinas /
Falkland
Islands
issues, to
"put it in the
freezer," as
one source put
it.
Where
does she stand
on freedom of
the press -
generally and
in the UN?
We'll have
more on this,
and on
Slovakia, etc.
On May 10
before the
UN's Peace and
Security
meeting,
General
Assembly
President
Mogens
Lykketoft said
he's
scheduling
informal with
new Next
Secretary
General
candidates for
June 7.
The
session ended
with
Ethiopia's
Foreign
Minister
proposing that
the Security
Council submit
at least three
names to the
General
Assembly and
Ecuador saying
it should be
done by vote,
not
"acclamation."
Walking
by, working
the crowd, was
Argentina's
Foreign
Minister (and
former UN
chief of
staff) Susana
Malcorra.
Sigrid Kaag
was present,
saying
(correctly)
that today's
UN over
promises and
under
delivers.
Campaigning
online was
Italy, with a
photo of Leo
DiCaprio;
Dutch Foreign
Minister Burt
Koenders was
working the
halls.
Swedish
Foreign
Minister
Margot
Wallstrom
brought up
sexual
violence in
conflict; the
elephant in
and out of the
room, with a
man in a suit
with a red
file was UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous, who
has linked
rapes to
R&R.
With Burundi
troops accused
of raping
children as
part of UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous'
MINUSCA
mission in the
Central
African
Republic, as
well as
accused of
abuses in
Burundi
itself, a new
funding
question has
arisen,
involving
Commerbank.
And the
UN of Ban
Ki-moon moved
to evict Inner
City Press,
which is
asking the
question. It
happened on
April 16, video here and here
(Periscope).
On May 10,
Inner City
Press asked UN
General
Assembly
President
Mogens
Lykketoft,
just before
his thematic
debate on
Peace and
Security, what
the General
Assembly is
doing about
peacekeepers'
sexual abuse
and
exploitation,
and about UN
Peacekeeping's
Herve Ladsous
saying it
would take 18
months to
deploy 3,000
troops to
Burundi.
Lykketoft
acknowledged
that 18 months
is too long --
some think
Ladsous
overstated it,
to take the
option off the
table -- and
on sexual
abuse he said
beyond the GA
punishment is
up to the
Troop
Contributing
Countries.
Even
getting to the
stakeout to
ask Lykketoft
this question
was hindered
by Ban
Ki-moon's and
Cristina
Gallach's UN.
Now Inner City
Press can only
access the
Conference
Building's
second floor
with a Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit minder or
escort. But on
May 10 there
was none
available.
Inner
City Press,
needing to
cover the
stakeout,
asked the UN
Spokesperson's
office, which
had just
announced the
stakeout over
the same
public address
system it
announced the
January 29
event in the
UN Press
Briefing Room
for which
Inner City
Press was
thrown out.
But UN
Security said
only MALU
minders can
escort Inner
City Press.
This is called
targeting, and
is UN
censorship.
On May
4, Inner City
Press at noon
asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric to
confirm or
deny that
Herve Ladsous
told the
Security
Council it
would take 18
months to
deploy 3,000
to Burundi.
Inner
City Press
sources on
this say it is
troubling it
would take the
UN that long.
Others surmise
the Ladsous is
trying to
undermine the
proposal by
making it take
so long, or
saying it
would take so
long.
On May 3,
Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, UN
transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: on
Burundi,
various
countries have
spoken about
the
postponement
of the talks
that were
supposed to
begin in
Arusha under
ex-President
[Benjamin]
Mkapa.
Does the UN
have no
involvement in
them or no
view of
whether it's a
good or bad
thing that
they were
postponed?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I don't have
anything on
Burundi.
That's
an
understatement.
On May 2, the
US issued
this:
"While
the United
States
strongly
supports the
regionally
mediated
Burundi
dialogue, led
by former
President
Mkapa under
the auspices
of the East
African
Community, we
are
disappointed
the scheduled
dialogue did
not resume
today.
Postponement
of this
dialogue only
serves to
worsen a
crisis that
has already
resulted in
hundreds of
lives lost,
thousands
injured, more
than 260,000
Burundian
refugees
displaced, and
a worsening
economic
situation.
We
call upon all
stakeholders
to ensure the
dialogue
resumes
immediately
and to commit
to
participating
without
preconditions
or redlines.
Burundi’s
political
leaders owe it
to their
citizens to
take concrete
steps to
resolve this
crisis as soon
as possible
within the
framework of
the Arusha
Accords, the
foundation for
peace and
stability in
Burundi.
Now is the
time for all
parties to
cease all
violence and
exercise
restraint and
engage in an
inclusive and
peaceful
dialogue."
But will the
US propose
anything in
the UN
Security
Council, or
encourage the
"penholder,"
France, to? On
April 29,
Inner City
Press asked
Ban's
spokesman, video here, UN
transcript
here:
Inner City
Press: I've
asked you
several times
about the
reported
non-payment of
Burundian
peacekeepers.
I have now
seen a
document that
more than $4
million has
been
transferred by
DPKO
(Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations) to
the Commerce
Bank account
in Paris that
I'd also asked
you
about.
Have they
gotten back to
you about the
multiple
reports that
this money, in
fact, doesn't
go to the
peacekeepers?
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric:
You know, we
pay the
Governments,
and we expect
the
Governments to
ensure that
the
peacekeepers
are given the
money that is
owed to
them.
Inner City
Press:
And if you
hear that they
don't or find
that they
don't, what
would you do?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
We would
expect that
they do, and
I'm sure the
issue would
then be
raised.
Since
the UN and Ban
Ki-moon are
embroiled in
their own
bribery and
corruption
scandal, the
issue was
raised to
Commerzbank,
which replied:
"Please report
potentially
fraudulent
activities to
[Link]"
But
Commerzbank's
link to report
fraud returns,
"The document
you requested
does not exist
on this
server."
For a
bank with
legal duties,
this is a
problem, as is
opening an
account to
receive the
UN's Herve
Ladsous'
payments to
Pierre
Nkurunziza for
troops accused
of rape in the
Central
African
Republic.
We'll have
more on this.
Update: after
this Inner
City Press
story and
complaint,
Commerzbank
belatedly
fixed it s
"Fraud" link.
But what about
the
substantive
behavior?
On April
22, after
three separate
screenings by
UN security,
Inner City
Press was
allowed to the
photo op of
Ban with Alain
Aime Nyamitwe.
Albert
Shingiro was
there too,
taking his own
smart phone
photo. There
was Jamal
Benomar, and
David Nabarro.
Tweeted
photo here.Periscope
video here.
Outside there
was Edmond
Mulet, Ban's
chief of staff
who has
received
correspondence
about the
eviction of
Inner City
Press.
What
would they
discuss?
Mugamba?
(Since Ban's
meeting,
General
Athanase
Kararuza who
spoke against
the killing in
Mugamba had
been
assassinated).
Even more
UNlikely,
press freedom?
On April 21,
amid
published
reports of up
to 150 people
detained
in Mugamba,
Inner City
Press asked
Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
it. He said he
hadn't heard
of it but
would check.
An hour after
the briefing,
this was sent
to Inner City
Press:
From: UN
Spokesperson -
Do Not Reply
un.org
Date: Thu, Apr
21, 2016 at
1:46 PM
Subject: Your
question on
Burundi
To:
Matthew.Lee
[at]
innercitypress.com
Cc: Stephane
Dujarric [at]
un.org
"Regarding
your question
at the noon
briefing: Our
human rights
office was
informed that
on 20 April
2016,
following a
security
incident that
occurred in
Mugamba
commune,
Bururi
province (an
exchange of
gunfire
between
unidentified
armed men and
military
elements,
during which
two people
including a
military lost
their lives),
three persons,
including a
teacher, were
arrested by
the police and
detained in
Mugamba police
station. No
charges were
retained
against them
and they were
finally
released on 21
April 2016
following an
intervention
by the
Regional
police
commissioner."
Is that
all that
happened?
Dujarric also
at the April
21 briefing,
when Inner
City Press
asked why its
office has
been seized -
to be resold,
it seems -
while that of
South South
News, named in
October 2015
in the U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York as Ng
Lan Seng's
vehicle to
bribe the UN,
still has its
office, said
“You have been
afforded quite
a lot of
courtesies.”
Like ouster
by eight UN
DSS guards?
Five boxes of
files dumped
out onto First
Avenue?
On April
20, Inner City
Press asked UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
hate speech, UN transcript
here.
Inner
City Press'
sources say
many
opposition
leaders are
worried about
Ban Ki-moon's
typically
waffling
three-option
report because
"the report is
a proposition
to a dictator
rather than
being a
decision
against him...
The corpse of
Jean De Dieu
Ndayikungurukiye
who was
stabbed and
killed by
Imbonerakure
four months
ago in
Nairobi, is
still in
detention.
According to
family members
and other
Burundian
Refugees in
Nairobi,
Burundian
Embassy in
Nairobi
recommended
this
detention."
Hours
after these
claims, and in
retaliation,
the UN sent
Inner City
Press an
eviction
notice for
April 16,
which despite
push back they
implemented.
Even as the
European Union
considers
changes to it
payments for
Burundi
peacekeepers
in AMISOM in
Somalia, so
that less of
the money is
taken by the
Nkurunziza
government for
repression, UN
Peacekeeping
under Ladsous
and Maria
Costa have
made their
pay-out to
Nkurunziza's
government -
no longer
through the
Burundi
National Bank
but through a
bank account
in Paris, at
Commerzbank.
On April
11, Inner City
Press asked UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
this: why is
the money not
being paid to
the Burundi
Central Bank?
Would Ladsous
pay to an
offshore bank,
in Antigua and
Barbuda or
Panama for
example,
without
looking into
it?
Dujarric said
he does not
have details
on member
states banking
relations; he
did not answer
on offshore
banks. Here
are some
photos, here.
Meanwhile some
also say that
those
repatriated
from CAR under
allegations of
abuse, for
example First
Major Srgt
Zepherin, are
just re-sent
by the
Nkurunziza
government for
“service” with
AMISOM in
Somalia. We'll
have more on
this, too.
On Burundi
Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric on
March 31 about
the death in
prison of
Jacques
Bihozagara.
Unlike several
member states,
but not the
Security
Council's
penholder
France, the UN
had
only this:
"We obviously
would hope
that his death
will be
investigated
in as much of
a public
manner as
possible."
Now the
inadequacy of
the UN's
response is
even more
clear in light
of this
report:
"During his
detention,
Bihozagara was
visited by
several
diplomats who
were assured
he was in safe
custody. On
Saturday
night, reports
indicated that
Burundi
official
demanded that
the deceased’s
family sign
documents
indicating
that he died
of natural
causes or
forget asking
for the body."
On April 5,
Inner City
Press asked UN
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq
about it, UN transcript
here.
We'll
have more on
the UN's
actual
position on
that sort of
practice, or
these type of
offers.
In a
smaller but
similar way,
the UN on
February 19
told Inner
City Press
that if it did
not move eight
years of
investigative
files out of
its UN office,
even the offer
of a reduced
non-Resident
Correspondent
accreditation
would be
withdrawn.
Now
while
threatening to
throw or move
everything
out, the UN is
making even
more troubling
"offers."
Perhaps this
is why the UN
Secretariat
cannot
criticize
Pierre
Nkurunziza's
Burundi;
instead Ban
Ki-moon
praised
Nkurunziza for
half
re-opening a
mere two of
four radio
stations he
closed. New
low for the
UN.
Ban
Ki-moon, his
deputy and
chief of staff
have received
this
sample letter
to reverse
Gallach's
outrageous
decisions,
concluding,
"Your decision
to restore
ICP's full
accreditation
and office
will be highly
appreciated by
many
Burundians
crying out for
peace and
protection
while
promoting the
freedom of
press in
Burundi." As
of this
writing, still
no response
from Ban.
On March 25,
Inner City
Press' sources
reported to it
that "Around 4
am today,
heavily armed
police
surrounded the
zone of
Musaga,
searched homes
without
warrants,
arrested
around five
young men and
killed an old
man by
shooting him
purposeful on
First Avenue
Musaga. Among
the arrested
young men, two
are related as
a sister and a
brother -- the
shocking story
behind these
two is that
the old
brother Arnaud
was shot and
killed by the
police during
the
demonstration."
Meanwhile to
cut off
further
protests, the
government is
regulating SIM
cards - and,
some say, the
French firm
SG2 may be
engaged in
wire tapping
in
Burundi:
"several
technicians of
local
companies have
confided that:
'We were
obliged to
provide SG2
with some 200
free numbers
and to
authorize
their
technicians to
access our
networks. They
connected
their own
systems. We
are sure that
they have the
technology to
carry out
phone-tapping.'
Since the
introduction
of this
system,
international
calls to
Burundi have
become very
expensive, and
Burundians in
the diaspora
now choose to
use Skype or
other calling
systems
(Viber,
WhatsApp,
etc). Soon
people will do
this for local
calls as well,
to avoid being
tapped."
When Burundi
was belatedly
discussed at
the UN Human
Rights Council
in Geneva on
March 22, the
UN Special
Rapporteur on
extrajudicial,
summary or
arbitrary
executions
Christof Heyns
urged the
government of
Pierre
Nkurunziza
against
reprisals on
those who talk
with the UN
Panel of
Experts. But
how will that
be enforced?
On March
22, Inner City
Press was
entirely
unnecessarily
restricted
from reaching
the UN
Security
Council
stakeout to
cover a
meeting on
Western
Sahara, Periscope
on YouTube
here. What
will the US
Mission do?
In
Geneva, Heyns
had to leave;
Rwanda and
South Africa
were added to
the speakers'
list, but only
for the
afternoon
session. Watch
this site.
A week ago
Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric,
about UN (in)
action in
Burundi. UN
transcript
here.
A week
later from
Dujarric, who
threw Inner
City Press out
of the UN
Press Briefing
Room, there
has been no
answer, as on
so many Press
questions to
Ban Ki-moon's
UN on Burundi.
So on March
21, Inner City
Press asked
Dujarric's
deputy Farhan
Haq, UN
transcript
here.
As Burundi's
Pierre
Nkurunziza
government
stepped up the
killing and
censorship of
opponents, its
lobbyists in
the U.S.
capital,
Scribe
Strategies,
were paid
$60,000 to
among other
things set up
interviews
with
US-government
broadcaster
Voice of
America and
the French
government's
France 24.
Nkurunziza's
party the
CNDD-FDD paid
Scribe
Strategies
$59,980 on
November 10,
2015. Scribes
has this month
disclosed, for
the six month
period ending
January 31,
2016, that in
exchange for
this money it
arranged for
example for
Nkurunziza's
adviser to be
"interviewed"
on Voice of
America and
France 24.
Scribe
Strategies
also, during
the reporting
period, was
paid to
arrange for
Sam Kutesa, a
former
President of
the General
Assembly who
was involved
with many of
the same
donors named
in the
corruption
case against
his
predecessor
John Ashe, to
be
"interviewed"
by Voice of
America about
his tenure as
PGA, during
which he was
as now foreign
minister of
Uganda.
On
February 19,
Inner City
Press was
thrown out of
the UN on two
hours notice.
Audio
and petition
here. On
February 22
Inner City
Press was told
it was Banned
from all UN
premises.
After three
days reporting
on the UN from
the park in
front of it,
and stories in
BuzzFeed
and Business
Insider,
Inner City
Press
re-entered the
UN on a more
limited
"non-resident
correspondent"
pass, under
which on March
10 UN Security
ordered it to
leave the UN
as it worked
in the UN
lobby at 8 pm.
Video
here; UN
Spokesman Stephane Dujarric's March 11
justification
here.
The
underlying UN
rule only says
that
non-resident
correspondents
can only come
into the UN up
until 7 pm.
But the UN's
goal, it
seems, is to
prevent or
hinder
coverage of UN
corruption,
which usually
doesn't take
place in the
UN Press
Briefing Room.
(January
29, 2016
and September
8, 2011 --
Frank Lorenzo,
UNdisclosed
-- are notably
exceptions.)
Lobbying the
deciding UN
official,
Under
Secretary
General for
Public
Information
Cristina
Gallach, were
the honchos of
the UN
Correspondents
Association,
including
France 24 and,
as in 2012,
Voice of
America.
Scribes
Strategies'
disclosures do
not (have to)
mention the
Nkurunziza
government's
lobbying in
and around the
UN. We'll have
more on this.
Back on
March 9 when
the Burundi
configuration
of the UN
Peacebuilding
Commission
met, the
conference
room was too
small and the
meeting was
not televised,
at least not
to the outside
world (see
below). There
was talk of
Burundi's
Pierre
Nkurunziza
have allowed
two of four
closed radio
stations to
re-open.
But Special
Adviser Jamal
Benomar said
these two
stations were
not critical
of the
government;
beyond that,
it has emerged
that the
stations'
directors had
to sign a
commitment
about their
future
coverage. Some
in the UN, it
is clear,
would like to
do just this -
in fact,
that's why
Inner City
Press could
not watch the
meeting on UN
in-house TV in
its shared
office the UN
has seized,
and so came to
the meeting.
In
Conference
Room 8, the
Permanent
Representatives
of Tanzania,
Belgium,
Burundi,
Norway, The
Netherlands,
and others,
and Deputies
from France,
Rwanda and
others. France
was given the
floor first in
the debate;
its Deputy
Alex Lamek
after a bland
speech left
the meeting,
his seat taken
by another
French mission
staffer.
Belgium called
for a
re-opening of
all media
without
restriction.
There
were other
speeches, but
Inner City
Press had to
go upstairs,
with its its
currently
reduced access
pass, and ask
the UN's
Deputy
Spokesperson
why Ban had
praised the
re-opening,
with
restrictions,
of only two of
the four radio
stations
closed. Vine
here; UN transcript
here
Deputy
Spokesman
Haq:
Ultimately,
what we want
is for the
media to be
free to do
their work
unconditionally.
On
December 16
Inner City
Press was
banned from
questions to
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon, but
learned from
the mission
MINUSCA that
Baratuza was
already in
Entebbe. Inner
City Press
asked several
Security
Council
members, then
Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric on
December17.
Dujarric told
Inner City
Press
Baratuza's
deployment is
suspended and
he is being
repatriated:
"based on the
information
we've received
regarding the
Lieutenant
Colonel, his
deployment has
been
suspended, and
he will be
repatriated
back to
Burundi." Video here. Dujarric told Inner
City Press
this shows the
UN system
working - on a
day when a
report on
rapes was
issued showing
UN
Peacekeeping
under Herve
Ladsous not
sufficiently
vetting for
human rights.
We'll have
more on this.
Amid the
escalating
killings in
Burundi,
summary
executions in
neighborhoods
opposed to
Pierre
Nkurunziza's
third term
stand out. But
Burundi Army
spokesman
Gaspard
Baratuza was
quoted on
December 12
blaming all of
the deaths on
attempts to
steal weapons
to free
prisoners.
Inner City
Press heard
that Mr.
Baratuza was
already in the
process of
being deployed
to the UN
Peacekeeping
mission in the
Central
African
Republic
(MINUSCA) even
when he was
giving these
quotes,
issuing
statements and
speaking to
state-owned
radio, and so
asked
MINUSCA's
acting
spokesperson,
“Is Gaspard
Baratuza of
Burundi's army
getting a
MINUSCA job?”
Ultimately,
after the
questioning,
he didn't.
But the UN
should have to
say more.
Inner City
Press has
repeatedly
asked the UN
how its
Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations
under Herve
Ladsous vets
those who
deploy to UN
missions;
Inner City
Press exclusively
reported
on an October
1, 2015
meeting in
which Ladsous
told Burundi's
Vice President
Joseph Butare
that he is
“pragmatic” on
human rights.