On
CAR Alleged
Rapes, ICP
Asks Samantha
Power of CAR
Untold,
Ladsous v
Leaker
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
May 8 --
French
soldiers in
the Central
African
Republic
allegedly
sexually
abused
children, as
exposed in a
UN Office of
the High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights report
leaked to the
French
government by
longtime OHCHR
staffer Anders
Kompass. The
UN did not,
however, give
the report to
the host
country
authorities in
CAR. And
according to UN
documents,
UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous then
urged that the
whistleblower
Kompass be
made to
resign.
(Ladsous
denied this.)
On May 8,
Inner City
Press asked US
Ambassador
Samantha Power
about both
issues - the
UN's failure
to tell the
CAR
authorities,
and Ladsous'
"surprising"
role, as High
Commissioner
Zeid put it
earlier in the
day. Video
here and
embedded
below.
Inner
City Press:
One issue that
has arisen
that may not
even need to
wait for an
investigation
is that the
Central
African
Republic says
that they were
never told of
this, and
given that
these were
their
citizens, I
wonder if
you—does the
U.S. think
that when the
UN system
becomes aware
of charges
such as these,
that the host
country should
be told?
There’s also
this issue, in
the UN Dispute
Tribunal
ruling, that
the Under
Secretary
General of
Peacekeeping
was reported,
and the UN
didn’t seem to
dispute it, to
have said that
the
whistleblower
should resign
or be
suspended. And
I wonder, this
seems like a
pretty serious
charge. What
do you think
of that? Do
you think that
that is
appropriate?
What do you
think of the
treatment of
the
whistleblower
who brought it
to light?
Ambassador
Power: "I
think, on a
lot of these
issues, we’re
all going to
be better off
if we allow an
impartial
investigation
to take hold.
And, I think,
you raise a
really, really
important
issue about
host country
involvement,
and we’d want
to, again, get
the facts on
that.
Certainly, it
is the case
that the host
country
itself, of
course, has
the sovereign
responsibility
for the
protection of
its citizens,
and so,
looking at
what role
Central
African
Republic
authorities
played or
didn’t play
has to be part
of this.
"And then, in
terms of the
individual who
disclosed the
allegations,
who worked for
the Office of
the High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights, again,
it’s extremely
important that
any individual
who comes into
possession of
allegations of
this gravity
acts swiftly.
It is also
extremely
important that
victim and
witness safety
be a very
significant, a
primary
consideration
as well. And
so again, the
impartial
investigation
will look at
the handling
and how both
the issue of
speed and the
issue of
victim and
witness
protection—how
those issues
were handled."
It is an
answer that
may move
things
forward.
Ladsous, it
should be
noted, just
this week
snubbed a Joe
Biden-linked
Hemispheric
peacekeeping
conference in
Uruguay,
wasting an
$8,000 first
class plane
ticket and
angering many
troop
contributing
countries. He
refuses to
answer Press
question, for
example on
rapes in
Minova, DRC
and Tabit in
Darfur.
As noted, on
May 8, High
Commissioner
Zeid held a
press
conference,
and twice
refused to
comment on why
Ladsous was
said to have
pressured to
fire or
suspend the
whistleblower.
Inner City
Press has
covered
Ladsous' role
from the
beginning, and
highlighted
his appearance
in Paragraph 9
of the UN
Dispute
Tribunal
ruling
reinstating
Kompass. On
May 7, Ladsous
told Inner
City Press, "I
deny that" -
then refused
to take
questions.
Zeid
was asked, and
first time
said he should
first give his
view of the
pressure to
the
investigator,
not the media.
The
second time,
he said he was
surprised to
read it -- his
Office did not
contest that
part of the
ruling,
effectively
admitting it
-- and that
the head of UN
Peacekeeping
should not
have been
intervening
about a non-UN
force. Video here.
Neither
he nor the
questioners in
the room in
Geneva said
the obvious:
Ladsous is a
longtime
French
diplomat; it
is not rocket
science to
read Paragraph
9 as him
(inappropriately)
still working
for "his"
country.
Zeid
said other
things we'll
report later;
he alluded to
the need for a
Commission of
Inquiry. Some
ask, will
Ladsous quit
before then?
Or after?
Early on May
8, UN system
staff
complained to
Inner City
Press that UN
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights Prince
Zeid of
Jordan, in a
closed staff
meeting on May
8, tried to
downplay the
scandal, going
so far as to
blame imams in
Bangui for not
playing their
role.
But it was
OHCHR which
didn't even
give the
report of the
rape of CAR
children to
CAR
authorities,
only to the
French.
In places,
Zeid appeared
to try to use
his record ten
years ago on
sexual abuse
to shift the
blame to
imams.
Inner City
Press has
shown a
failure by his
Office to act
on past
leaking, to
Morocco. We'll
have more on
this.
On May 7,
Inner City
Press asked
more questions
about this -
including to
Herve Ladsous
himself.
After a long
closed-door
consultation
meeting of the
Security
Council,
Ladsous
emerged. Inner
City Press
asked him,
based on
Paragraph 9 of
the UNDT
ruling, Why
did you ask
Kompass to
resign?"