After
UNHCR
Staffer
Deletes Call
for
Repression in
Cameroon,
Cover
Up or
Investigation?
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
September 11 – How does the UN
respond when its staff call
for "harder repression" of
their opponents, linking
themselves with the UN? How
should the UN respond? Inner
City Press asked the UN
Spokesman Stephane Dujarric
three times, and he finally
walked out without explaining
or addressing the outrage of
those targeted. UN video here.
In the case of a Francophone
Cameroonian UNHCR staffer who
called for more of the
crackdown already underway
from the Paul Biya government
in Anglophone Cameroon,
deriding the Southern
Cameroons movement as not a
popular movement, the UN three
times refused to answer Press
questions. Then, as outrage
grew, UNHCR told Inner City
Press that the staff had
deleted the Facebook post. But
is that enough, when UNRWA has
done more? Is this all that
would be done if the post were
about the Rohingya and
Myanmar? Inner City Press
asked four spokespeople at
UNHCR, and on September 12
received this from spokesman
Babar Baloch: "The UNHCR
social media policy includes
an obligation for staff to act
with impartiality, to exercise
discretion and to refrain from
making public statements on
personal accounts on
controversial matters. Any
violation thereof may be
considered as misconduct, and
complaints will be
investigated as such.
Complaints about possible
misuse of social media or
possible misconduct on social
media platforms are referred
to UNHCR’s Inspector General's
Office." So have these
complaints about the Cameroon
post been referred to UNHCR’s
Inspector
General's
Office? We've
asked. Dujarric
dodged the question of UN-wide
policy on September 11 then
amid follow up questions from
Inner City Press, he simply
walked out, saying, "I'm
done." UNTV video to follow,
unless they edit it out. UNHRC
- and ex-chief now UN
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres and his spokesman
Stephane Dujarric appear to
believe that initially
refusing to answer, then
merely deleting the post while
essentially justifying it is
enough. Would this be the
approach at UNRWA? Even at
UNHCR, would it be the
approach if the group targeted
by the staff member was, say,
the Rohingyas in Myanmar, with
the staffer making a
broad-brush characterization
as "terrorist" and not a
popular movement and calling
for harder repression? It
seems not. So why does the UN
system, including it seems
UNHCR, treat this struggle
differently? We'll have more
on this. Inner City Press has
asked five UNHCR spokespeople:
"I'm still left wondering what
UNHCR's (and, if different,
the UN's) policy is, when
staff members link themselves
on social media with the UN.
Is it still a 'personal' page
if as here it lists the UN,
four times ? Even if they are
angry at a flier - which Inner
City Press would like to see,
if you can forward it - should
a person self-identifying as
with the UN call for harder
repression? Is UNHRC's
response here consistent with
what's done at other
UN-affiliated organization,
and if not how are staff
members to know what to do?"
We are awaiting
response. In New York at
the September 6 UN noon
briefing Inner City Press
asked Secretary General
Antonio Guterres' lead
spokesman Stephane Dujarric
about something it first tried
to ask UNHCR in writing: a
self-described UNHCR
"Community Protection Officer"
Nadine Njoya born in Yaounde
calling Anglophone protesters
and urging a "harder
repression." Inner City Press
then tweeted the photos, here.
Dujarric said he would look
into it. But when Inner City
Press asked again on September
7, he passed the buck to UNHCR
- and the UN transcript edited
out Inner City Press saying it
HAD asked, or tried to ask,
UNHCR (by emailing the photos
to Antonio Guterres former
spokesperson and adviser
Melissa Fleming). So Inner
City Press emailed not only
Ms. Fleming, the long time
spokesperson for now-Secretary
General Antonio Guterres, but
also three other UNHCR
spokespeople, and has just
received the response below:
"Dear Matthew, The
comments posted were not a
UNHCR position and were done
in staff member’s personal
capacity. Please note that the
staff member has since deleted
the post, after realizing it
was inappropriate and also
receiving death threats. We
are sharing with you below her
response on the issue. “…..I
do confirm that I did a
comment on Tuesday 05/09 on my
personal Facebook account.
That comment was to give my
opinion on the content of some
flyers carrying threatening
messages that are currently
dispatched by unknown people
in my country (Cameroon). I
have attached the flyers here
to and as you will notice,
parents are warned not to send
their children to school and
the unknown persons behind the
flyers, clearly promise to
kill the children that would
be sent to school or anyone
who will not comply with their
“ghost town” instruction.
Therefore, my comment was to
condemn the authors of those 2
flyers, as I felt that the
rights of the Cameroonian
children to safety, life and
education were violated and
fear/terror among the
population was disseminated!
It’s unfortunate that my words
were taken out of their
context. I do take note of
your advice and please be
informed that I had to delete
my Facebook account
yesterday……” On the
Burundian refugee returns from
Tanzania: UNHCR stands ready
to assist any refugee who
expresses the desire to return
to Burundi – as long as the
decision is voluntary. In a
recent meeting with UNHCR on
August 1, Burundi and Tanzania
reaffirmed their commitment to
the principle of voluntary
repatriation of refugees. The
two countries also
acknowledged that while some
refugees may opt to return,
others may still have
well-founded reasons for not
returning." We'll let it speak
for itself, except for asking,
When did UNHCR know about
this? Why was the question
never answered until Inner
City Press asked four UNHCR
spokespeople? Is this how, for
example, UNRWA or even other
UN agencies operate? Finally,
for our readers to comment on
online on Twitter and
elsewhere, is UNHRC's and UN's
response appropriate? Watch
this site.
***
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