ICP
Asked UN of Libya & Venezuela
Losing Vote in GA, Spox
Dujarric Spun Then Ran Out
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
February 24 – The UN quietly
announced that Libya, where it
has a mission, has lost its
vote in the UN General
Assembly for failing to pay
its dues, along with five
other countries: "the
following six Member States
are in arrears under the terms
of Article 19 and the General
Assembly decided that they
will not be permitted to vote
in the Assembly until the end
of its 71st session:
Libya, Cabo
Verde, Papua New Guinea,
Sudan, Vanuatu, Venezuela
(Bolivarian Republic of)."
After
reporting the above - and also
noting an UNsuccessful bid by
Morocco to replace it
Venezuela atop the C-34 on
Peacekeeping - Inner City
Press at the UN's February 24
noon briefing asked the UN's
holdover spokesman Stephane
Dujarric what notice countries
are given, and about the UN's
seeming increasing spending. Video here; from
the UN
Transcript:
Inner City Press:
I wanted to ask you to confirm
that six countries have now
lost the right to vote in the
General Assembly, including
Libya, Sudan, Venezuela,
Vanuatu, Papua New Guinea and
Cabo Verde, and whether there
are any moves afoot either to
get some of the countries'
votes restored or whether Mr.
Kobler has spoken to the
Government of Libya in terms
of… what's the…?
Spokesman: I will…
somebody from my office will
bring in the sheet, but I
think there are six
countries. So, by the
time the briefing ends, I will
have the update.
Question: And I guess
since people are asking for
your opinion… what's your
opinion?
Spokesman: That's why
I'm here.
Inner City Press: Do you
see a trend? I mean,
given that both Venezuela and
Libya have, you know, carbon
resources. What can you
say about this list?
What do you interpret
it? Do you think that
countries actually have…
you're always… you have this
honour roll. Is this a
dishonour roll? What…
what, please?
Spokesman: It's not a
matter of
interpretation. Member
States pay or… or… or not pay
for whatever reason, and there
is a procedure for them to…
for the… if I'm not mistaken,
for the General Assembly to
give them the right to vote
even if they don't pay for
certain economic
reasons. That's a
decision for the Member
States. I can't
interpret the reasoning.
Inner City Press: What's the
process for countries in which
the UN has a mission?
For example, Sudan and Libya
and Somalia have been given
the right to vote. Is
there a process for the
resident representative or the
SRSG [Special Representative
of the Secretary-General] to
speak to the Government and
say, you know, let's make a
deal or what's happening?
Spokesman: It's not up
for, to us to make, to
negotiate. The assessed
contributions are the assessed
contributions. If Member
States are not able to pay,
they are, there are articles
in the Charter. The
countries that we are, that
we're talking the about, as
you said, is Cabo Verde,
Libya, Papua New Guinea,
Sudan, Vanuatu and
Venezuela. There was a
resolution that passed in 2016
that allows the Comoros,
Guinea-Bissau, Sao Tome and
Principe, and Somalia to vote
in the General Assembly until
the end of the seventy-fifth
session, and that's a
resolution and a decision of
the Member States. It's
not one that involves the
Secretariat.
Inner City Press: Sure.
And just one other thing
because I see it as
related. There have been
these two announcements
recently by the
Secretary-General of new posts
and new offices. One is
the SRSG on Migration.
The other one is the new
Under-Secretary-General on
Counterterrorism. And I
guess I just… I've sort of
asked, you said he's going to
ACABQ [Advisory Committee on
Administrative and Budgetary
Questions] on both of
them. What does he think
that the impact on the UN's
budget of these two new
initiatives will be?
Does he think that the budget
that he's, that he is
constructing piece by piece
with these proposals is going
to be larger than the previous
year or smaller?
Spokesman: I think the
budget, as you know, for the
next biennium is in the
process of being
elaborated. It goes… it
goes to the General Assembly
at the end of this year.
We have not made any official
announcements. There are
discussions, obviously, with
the ACABQ. The
Secretary-General, I think, is
extremely conscious of the
value that the UN needs to
bring, right, and spending
money, and spending money
wisely. So, I would
encourage you to wait a little
bit and see how the structure
looks after we're done with
the process and what the new
budget looks like and where
the resources are allocated.
Inner City Press: Can you
just, this is the last one on
this. Can you just, is
there a way, maybe, of not
standing from the podium, but
today to give kind of a
ballpark figure of the cost of
the two initiatives that he's
announced? What he's
thinking of? The range?
Spokesman: Once, once
all the process is completed,
we may be able to do that.
The US blocked UN
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres' nomination of the
Palestinian Authority's Salam
Fayyad to be UN envoy to
Libya.
On
February 20, Inner City Press
asked UN deputy spokesman
Farhan Haq if there was any
progress in replacing Fayyad
as candidate -- apparently not
- about an assassination
attempt and travel ban on
women in the East. From the UN transcript:
Inner City Press:
I wanted to ask about
Libya. Do you have
anything on the attempted
assassination attempt against
Mr. Serraj? And, also,
there’s a reported ban on
women… unaccompanied women
traveling from the east.
Do you have anything either on
that? And any update on
the selection of an SRSG that
was previously blocked?
Deputy Spokesman: Well,
regarding the selection of an
SRSG, that process… the
consultations are ongoing, and
I don’t have any… any further
details to share for you
beyond what the
Secretary-General himself said
to the press on this over the
weekend.
Regarding… regarding the
assassination… the reports, I
don’t have a confirmation of
those reports, so I don’t have
any reaction to provide at
this point.
Inner City Press: And I’ve noticed
that António Guterres has put
out a sort of a global call,
generic call, for SRSGs to be
in some sort of pool to become
UN envoys to conflict
zones. I wanted to know,
like, on the Libya one, given…
given the apparent
miscommunication about whether
it would be accepted or
blocked, is there any thought
of doing an open process such
as is being done with
Department of Management and
Department of Public
Information, or is there any
thought of having that more
public or at least routinized
process as opposed to a
behind-the-scenes process?
Deputy Spokesman: If
there’s any changes to make in
the current process, we’ll
announce it. We don’t…
while we’re considering
certain things, there’s
nothing to announce at this
point.
On
February 13 Inner City Press
asked Guterres' deputy
spokesman Farhan Haq to
explain what the "usual
consultations" mentioned in
the February 8 letter to the
Security Council from Guterres
consisted of. Haq refused to
elaborate, nor to explain
Guterres reportedly preparing
to give the top post in UN
Peacekeeping to France to the
fifth time in a row. Video
here.
Questions
for once came in fast and on
the same topic at the day's UN
noon briefing. Many
questioners bemoaned what
they've described as "Trump
blocking a Palestinian." Among
those lines, Inner City Press
notes in light of the reports
and questions about Tzipi
Livni being offered an Under
Secretary General job, and an
arrest warrant in Belgium,
this line from the vacancy
notice of noted UN censor
Cristina Gallach:
"Individuals who
are either nominated by Member
States or who seek to serve
with the United Nations in any
individual capacity will be
required, if short-listed, to
complete a self-attestation
stating that they have not
committed, been convicted of,
nor prosecuted for, any
criminal offence and have not
been involved, by act or
omission, in the commission of
any violation of international
human rights law or
international humanitarian
law."
Sources
tell Inner City Press that
under consideration for the
Libya envoy post is a
Tunisian; we note Guterres
transition team member
Radhouane Nouicer of whom no
more has been said since the
transition ended January 31.
We'd ask, but Guterres' two
spokesmen answered only two
and a half of Inner City
Press' 22 questions, and his
deputy on February 13 when
Inner City Press asked about
the spending of UN funds said
"get
over it."
Meanwhile
Guterres' holdover UN spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric selectively spins
that Guterres had somehow
received a "green light" from
the US - like when Ban Ki-moon
invited Iran to the Syria talks
in Montreux, then disinvited
them on Monday.
This time,
Dujarric "told" at least three
favored media the exact same
thing: "Based on the information
available to him at the time,
the secretary-general had the
perception, now proven wrong,
that the proposal would be
acceptable to Security Council
members." Why not send this out
more widely? To Inner City
Press, Dujarric answered a mere
two and a half of twenty-two questions.
These holdovers have no
credibility.
One of the
two to which Dujarric doled out
his quote went on to quote
French Ambassador Francois
Delattre as having "full
confidence" in the UN chief's
personnel appointments. But of
course: France stands poised to
get the top UN Peacekeeping job
for the fifth time in a row.
The stories
did not mention that the UK had
- and now maybe still has - its
own candidate for the UN Libya
envoy post, Nicholas Kay.
Clearly the UK didn't think
Fayyad was best for the post.
We'll have more on this.
Inner City
Press on-camera
asked the UN about the
nomination earlier on February
10, noting that its sources told
it the nomination was really by
Jeffrey Feltman, the Obama
administration's appointee to
head the UN Department of
Political Affairs. Can Feltman
stay on, given the new
Administration in Washington?
While
Antonio Guterres' deputy
spokesman dodged Inner City
Press' question at noon on
February 10, and his lead
holdover spokesman Stephane
Dujarric waited more than 10
hours to respond to Inner City
Press' question tweeted at him
that evening, an arch and in
context laughable response was
mass-emailed 11 hours later.
It sounded
reasonable - but why then for
example is Guterres restricting
his "search" for a head of UN
Peacekeeping to a single
country, France? As Inner City
Press has exclusively reported,
the three candidates are all
French: Jean Maurice Ripert (who
previously stood up the UN in
Pakistan), Jean Pierre Lacroix
and probably winner Sylvie
Bermann. There are other
examples.
Some cynics
wonder if this wasn't done as
theater, just before Guterres' 12-day
trip to Turkey, Saudi
Arabia, Qatar and the UAE, where
the UN's previous Libya sell-out
Bernardino Leon is getting paid.
Meritocracy, indeed.
Many
including those given offices by
the UN professed surprise at
Haley's statement, even
misunderstood it as mere regret
and not blocking. But neither
did they cover the long failure
of the UN in Libya. Ban Ki-moon
appointed then undercut Tarek
Mitri.
Ban was
pushed to appoint Bernardino
Leon of Spain, same as he
appointed and used that
country's Cristina Gallach to
evict the Press which asked of
their corruption. Then Leon sold
out to the UAE, and Martin
Kobler was put in.
Now
Guterres, replacing Ban but
leaving too many of Ban's
officials in place, from
spokesman Dujarric to DPA's
Feltman, bumbled again on Libya.
The UN has lost credibility. It
should focus and start over - as
well as reversing censorship.
Watch this site.
After Nikki
Haley's announcement, Israeli
Ambassador Danny Danon issues a
statement "on the announcement
by Ambassador Haley of the US
move to block the appointment of
former Palestinian Authority
Prime Minister, Salam Fayyad as
the Secretary General's Special
Envoy to Libya: 'This is the
beginning of a new era at the
UN.'"
So did
Antonio Guterres err in
nominating the PA's Fayyed on
February 8, then heading out on
a 12-day trip just as the US
expressed disappointment and
blocked the nomination? Inner
City Press has asked
Guterres' Office of the
Spokesperson, and Stephane
Dujarric personally, for a
comment. None yet received.
Nikki Haley, US Permanent
Representative to the UN,
issued a statement on the
evening of February 10 that
“The United States was
disappointed to see a letter
indicating the intention to
appoint the former Palestinian
Authority Prime Minister to
lead the UN Mission in Libya.
For too long the UN has been
unfairly biased in favor of
the Palestinian Authority to
the detriment of our allies in
Israel. The United States does
not currently recognize a
Palestinian state or support
the signal this appointment
would send within the United
Nations, however, we encourage
the two sides to come together
directly on a solution. Going
forward the United States will
act, not just talk, in support
of our allies.”
That the UN would
be naming a successor as its
Libya envoy to Martin Kobler
of Germany was reported
by Inner City Press in
December along with the name
of one of the candidates, the
UK's Nick Kay.
Later,
after Antonio Guterres took
office at Secretary General, a
Permanent Member of the
Security Council confirmed to
Inner City Press the candidacy
of Kay adding that there was
"another strong candidate"
while declining to name that
candidate.
Guterres
wrote to the Security Council
that "following the usual
consultations" he is giving
the post to longtime
Palestinian Authority
politician Salam Fayyad, some
are asking of just what these
consultations consisted.
Some in
Libya opposed Fayyad's the
nomination; others linked it
to Jeffrey Feltman, the Obama
Administration's head of UN
Political Affairs who has
arranged to stay on until July
4 so that his UN pension
vests. How will that use of
funds now sit with Washington?
On
February 10, Inner City Press
asked the UN spokesman about
it, Transcript
here.
They note
that the Trump administration,
in its draft
Executive Order,
proposes cutting US funding to
any UN entity which allows the
Palestinian Authority as a
member, and is discussing
cutting funding to the PA. Was
the US
Mission to the UN
consulted? Which Mission?
And what
of Nick Kay, formerly UN envoy
to Somalia, now back with the
US FCO? Does Kobler return
immediately to the German
foreign service, where he
still has a position as he
told Inner City Press when
questioned about his
predecessor at UNSMIL
Bernardino Leon selling out to
the UAE diplomatic academy?
What Under Secretary General
post will Germany get in the
UN? Watch this site.
***
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