At
UN, Mr. Sha's Meltdown Unseen or Excused, Congo Question Dangles, The
Who Recalled
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, December 8 -- A poster
denouncing China's censorship of the
Internet was removed by the UN last month from its Internet Governance
Forum event in Egypt in a widely publicized event. Also during the
conference, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's Under Secretary General
for Economic and Social Affairs Sha Zukang told the audience that
while he knew "I am offending everyone, I do not care, at all!"
Video here,
from Minute 1:40.
Mr.
Ban new
spokesman Martin
Nesirky was asked about the incidents on December 8:
Inner
City Press: Under-Secretary-General Sha [Zukang] was at this Internet
Governance Forum in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. Now somebody has posted
on YouTube footage of him gabbling and saying, complaining about the
security at the conference and saying “I don’t care if I’m
being rude”. Some have described him as sort of losing it. I
wanted to know whether the Secretary-General, was he aware of that
and what…? This was a conference at which a poster about Chinese
Internet censorship was removed. Some on the online world are saying
it was a new low. But I’m just wondering whether the
Secretary-General was aware of that or that just takes place out
there.
Spokesperson
Nesirky: Well, as you know, Matthew, there is an awful lot out there
online, and I can’t imagine that it would be fair to assume that
the Secretary-General is aware of absolutely everything that’s
online out there all the time. So we’ll need to take a look at
that and then we can get back to you. But thanks for raising it. Any
further questions? Okay, thank you very much.
Twelve
hours later,
Mr. Nesirky had not "gotten back" to Inner City Press with
anything about the incidents, nor about the Secretary General's
report on the Democratic Republic of the Congo, see below
UN's Ban swears in Sha Zukang, YouTube not shown
Inner
City Press: In your summary of the Secretary-General’s new report
on the Democratic Republic of the Congo that the country is largely
at peace, I believe you said it was in the Kivu, and maybe Ituri? What
was the second?
Spokesperson
Nesirky: I think it was Orientale. Orientale.
Inner
City Press: Okay, because there are these reports in Equateur
Province of the Government now sending 500 commandos and MONUC
sending 120 to try and put down unrest. I’m just wondering is it
that the UN doesn’t see that as… Is that the second reference or
do they not see that as being significant on an ongoing basis? There
was a helicopter, UN helicopter shot at recently there. Just
wondering…
Spokesperson
Nesirky: Let me check on that, Matthew. I’ll come back to you.
Given
the wide
availability of reports of unrest in Dongo in Equateur including a
UN helicopter being fired at, as reported by Reuters, and given top
UN Peacekeeper Alain Le
Roy's personal commitment that his department would quickly answer
questions going forward, it would seem this question could have been
answered in less than twelve hours.
While some
mutter the old Who
lyric "meet the new boss, same as the old boss," Mr. Le Roy
will appear as the guest as Wednesday's noon briefing. Watch this
site.
* * *
In
Somali Chaos, Japan and Germany Offer Separate Training, U.S. Cuts
Aid
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, December 8 -- Mirroring the chaos of the Transitional
Federal Government in Somalia, donors and vultures and purported
helpers are all working at cross purposes. Among the vultures we
place a company called "Phoenix,"
which brags of having
contracts with the TFG to train security forces in Jordan for
deployment in Somalia. We will have more on this.
Meanwhile
while
the UN claims that it alone is authorized to train Somali forces, a
senior UN official on Tuesday complained to Inner City Press that
Japan and Germany are moving toward doing their own trainings,
outside of Somalia.
This
has reportedly
angered the UN's envoy to Somalia Ahmedou Ould Abdullah enough that
he has traveled to Tokyo. His spokesperson has repeatedly declined to
answer questions from Inner City Press in the past.
Three
top UN
humanitarian managers for Somalia briefed the Press on Tuesday, about
shortfalls in fundraising. Inner City Press asked if they have solved
their dispute with the United States, which slowed aid because
transfers to Al Shabaab would violate U.S. anti terrorism laws. Mark
Bowden, the UN's Nairobi based humanitarian coordinator, confirmed
his talks with "donors," stressing that time is of the
essence.
Inner
City Press
asked Bowden about the UN urging the TFG president not to fire the
police chief of Mogadishu, which nevertheless took place. Bowden
confirmed the UN has concerned, but said they "come from the
political side." Then what is Ould Abdullah doing in Japan?
In
belated
disclosure of how the TFG's parliamentarians were paid, Inner City
Press was told that when the parliament contained 250 members,
countries including the U.S., UK and Norway paid their salaries. When
the parliament swelled to 500, the UN Development Program started
paying, Inner City Press was told. UNDP itself has repeatedly refused
to answer questions about its funding in Somalia.
UN's Ban and Somalia's president, Germany and
Japanese training not shown
Al
Shabaab has
ordered the UN World Food Program to stop importing food, to buy
locally or not bring food in. The Food and Agriculture Organization's
Graham Farmer conceded that bringing in food aid during the harvest
season depresses the prices farmers get.
Does
WFP buy
locally in Somalia? Farmer said WFP tries to buy locally elsewhere,
but does not do so in Somalia. Why not? Watch this site.
Footnote:
Bowden's press conference was delayed, a spokesperson said, because
he was blocked at the UN's visitors' entrance. Afterwards, Bowden
told Inner City Press he showed his pass from the UN Office in
Nairobi, but that this wasn't accepted at the UN in New York.
Ironically, Kentucky Fried Chicken's Colonel Sanders impersonator got
into the building with no problem, but the UN's humanitarian
coordinator for Somalia was stopped...
* * *
UN's
Congo Expert Covers Up for MONUC, Chides Press He Was With Under
Other Name
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, December 7 -- The coordinator of the ostensibly independent
UN Group of Experts on the Democratic Republic of the Congo appeared
in the UN briefing room on Monday to criticize the Press for focusing
on portions of the Experts' report which show the UN working
with
murderous former rebels engaged in Congo mining.
Video here.
Even
before the
press conference, Dinesh Mahtani on December 4 declined to answer on
the record Inner City Press' questions about the UN's role in
providing logistical support to units of the Congolese army which
were until recently the rebel forces of Laurent Nkunda and indicted
war criminal Jean Bosco Ntanganda.
In
a large
conference call at the German Mission to the UN, filled with an
audience of several dozen, Mahtani said "I can't speak on the
record," and referred Inner City Press to his press conference
on Monday. Dinesh was introduced, by former head of UN Peacekeeping
Jean Marie Guehenno, as having been a journalist in the past.
Guehenno also declined to answer questions.
Three
days later,
when Mahtani took to the UN's rostrum accompanied by an employee of
the UN's Department of Political Affairs, he emphasized that the
Group is independent. He criticized press accounts of his report,
previously leaked to Reuters, BBC and others in Kinshasa, which
emphasized on the findings against the UN.
He
said the
report, now available online here,
is mostly about two groups, the
FDLR and the CNDP, that latter of which has become a part of the
Congolese army. The UN's Mission in the Congo, MONUC, provides
logistical support to these former CNDP units, for example one led by
Innocent Zimurinda, who identified as Zimulinda is charged by UN
Special Rapporteur Philip Alston with murder and multiple rapes.
Inner
City Press
asked Mahtani if he believes the UN should be working for example
with these "Innocent" units. Mahtani replied that his
report mentions Zimurinda several times. But should the UN be working
with him?
From
there, things
got more surreal. Mahtani told one long time wire service
correspondent that her question was "strange." Dinesh
Mahtani, as it happens, reported from the
DRC for Reuters, on other monkey
business, under the
name Dino
Mahtani. Why so defensive?
In Bunia, mine awareness- land mine, that is, Experts not shown
Mahtani
also
defended China, which is named in the report as flying in weapons
without accounting for them to the UN Sanctions Committee. Defending
itself is the company Niotan, identified as a wrong-doer in the
report: it claims it has another name, Refractory Metals Mining
Company Limited. Sort of like Zimulina and a certain Mahtani... To be
continued.
Footnote:
the Report at paragraph 119 zeroes in on a Western Union transfer to
"the program manager of the Ahadi Institute, Edison Bashimbe
Nshombo [whose wife] reportedly administers medical treatment to
wounded FDLR in the region." But, hat tip CanWest, the Ahadi
Institute has as a supporter the UN's own UNESCO, click here for that,
and watch this site.
* * *
As
Congo's Gold Hits 60 Minutes, UN Is Let Off Hook, Wal-Mart's 10%
Solution
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, November 29 -- The Congo's conflict gold was the
subject of a fifteen minute feature tonight on the American television
program Sixty Minutes. A former rebel said he used collected gold to
buy weapons and ammunition from the Congolese army. A woman said she
was raped by men in Army uniforms.
Sixty
Minutes
accepted UN escort and showed a UN camp, but neglected to mention
that the UN now provides logistical support to the Congolese army,
which beyond weapon sales and rape has been documented for the mass
murder of civilians, by the UN's own special rapporteur and experts.
But the UN's
top envoy to the Congo Alan Doss has
told Inner City Press there is not
enough evidence, and has yet to act on Special Rapporteur Philip
Alston's report detailing mass rape by Congo's Army. (Click here for
coverage of Congo trip by Inner City Press.)
Rather
than at
least mention this perversion of the UN's peacekeeping mandate, Sixty
Minute showed a UN camp to which 13,000 internally displaced people
fled. Bags of flour and beans and cooking oil were distributed on the
day of filming, for the first time in five months.
Neither
Sixty
Minutes nor the two non governmental organizations which appeared on
screen, HRW and the Enough Project, explained the starvation
just outside a UN camp.
UN's Ban and Doss in Congo, continuing support of
rogue Army units not shown
The point of
the show was that just as conflict diamonds were focused on seven
years ago, conflict gold now cries out for action.
Sixty
Minutes said
without explanation that the UN tries to stem the flow of conflict
gold. But if the UN is supporting Army units which rape, kill and
sell weapons, and which themselves control mines, how is the UN
trying to stop the flow?
Footnote:
Back in the U.S., Sixty Minutes quotes Tiffany's as identifying the
source of nearly all of its gold -- in Utah -- while Wal-Mart will only
say
that it will track the source of 10 percent of its gold by next year.
If it were rap music with profanity, Wal-Mart would take action. But
conflict gold from the Congo? Ten percent sourcing, maybe, by next
year...
* * *
IMF
Murky on Angola's Oil, Bond and China Deals, Doles Out $1.4 Billion
By
Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, November 25 -- Days after announcing a $1.4 billion
arrangement with Angola, the International Monetary Fund held a press
conference call to offer explanations. At the end, things were
murkier than before. Inner City Press asked if the IMF had been able
to fully assess the income and distribution of revenue from the state
owned oil company Sonangol.
The
IMF's Lamine
Leigh, who led the Fund's missions to Angola in August and September,
replied that "in the context of our negotiations, Sonangol
participated fairly well." Inner City Press asked, since
Sonangol has accounts in off shore financial centers and tax havens,
if the IMF had gotten to the bottom of these accounts.
After
a long
pause, Lamine Leigh proffered another answer, that the government has
"committed to steps in the more general area of resource revenue
transparency." But what about the Sonangol accounts?
Oil in Angola, Sonangol's accounts not shown
Inner
City Press
asked about the statement
by IMF Deputy Managing Director and Acting
Chair Takatoshi Kato that in Angola "measures will be taken to
strengthen further the regulatory and supervisory framework."
The IMF's Senior Advisor on Africa Sean Nolan replied that the IMF
analyzed the effect of the exchange rate on borrowers and "on
the banks."
In
fact, Angola's
government has gotten billions in pre-export oil loans from, for
example, BNP Paribas, Standard Chartered and Deutsche Bank. The
latter has made similar loans in Turkmenistan, assailed by
transparency and human rights advocates. How much of the IMF's new
arrangement benefits these banks?
In
fact, the
questioner after Inner City Press, cutting off follow up, was from
Standard Bank. Other than Inner City Press, the only other media
questioner was from Reuters.
Before
the call
ended, Inner City Press was able to ask about Angola's reported $4
billion bond sale planned for December. Sean Nolan said that the
IMF's "understanding" with Angola does involve a
"fundraising effort," but that the timing was not agreed
to, the IMF does not "micromanage" to that extent. Nolan added
that there is an agreement on an "overall limit."
"Is
it four
billion dollars?" Inner City Press asked.
Nolan
replied that
the precise limit will be "clear in the documents," which
have yet to be released. Why play hide the ball?
Nolan
praised the country for "appointing reputable financial and legal
advisers for the transaction" -- JPMorgan Chase will be the manager.
Nolan
continued
that the actual size of the bond sale will depend on how much
"concessionary lending" Angola gets from "countries
with a strong record of financial support to Angola."
Inner
City Press
asked if the size of China's loans to Angola -- China gets 16% of its
foreign oil from Angola -- were known by the IMF or considered.
"That
hasn't
figured in our discussions," the IMF's Nolan responded. Why not? Watch
this site.
* * *
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.
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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