At
UN
on Liberia,
Euros Play
Cheapskate for
8 Month
Renewal, US
Wants 12
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
September 16
-- Rarely is
Liberia and
the UN Mission
there a
controversy in
the UN
Security
Council. But
for this
renewal,
European
Council
members broke
silence and
tried to limit
the renewal
from twelve
months to
merely eight.
Outside
the
Council on
Friday
afternoon
Inner City
Press asked
Portugal's
Permanent
Representative
Cabral, why?
He said the
Council should
be
able to review
the mission is
less than a
year.
"Is
that to
save money?"
Inner City
Press asked.
Cabral
nodded,
saying that
"our
countries" are
suffering
financial cut
backs.
Moments
later,
Inner City
Press asked US
Ambassador
Susan Rice,
"On Liberia,
eight months
or twelve
months, which
better?"
"Twelve
months,"
Rice said
decisively.
"And I think
that's what
we'll be
voting on."
While
one wag
noted that
Liberia,
unlike for
example Cote
d'Ivoire, was
not a
European
colony,
another
wondered what
with US budget
cutbacks and
calls
for more in
the
Republican-led
House of
Representatives,
leading the US
to oppose a 3%
raise for UN
professional
staff, about
the US
aligning
itself with
other Council
members, who
pay less, in
wanting 12
months.
Liberia is a
priority.
Similarly,
France
for example
behind closed
doors lobbied
for fewer
rather than
more
peacekeepers
in Sudan's
Abyei region,
which remains
contentious.
Watch this
site.
* * *
In
DC,
UN Funding
Questioned, As
Pascoe Lame
Ducks on
Palestine, Ban
Dodges on
Haiti &
Ladsous, Goes
Social
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
WASHINGTON*
DC,
September 13,
updated
-- With UN
Peacekeepers
in Haiti
charged with
sexual abuse
and fathering
children with
under-aged
Haitian girls
and little
transparency
about how
public money
is spent, on
consultants
and flying
part time
envoys around,
on Capitol
Hill today
Congress
members are
putting
forward their
bill
to make
funding of the
UN a la
carte, i.e.
based on
performance.
According
to the
sponsors, the
bill includes
"opposition to
new or
expanded
peacekeeping
missions until
reforms are
instituted,
including the
adoption of a
universal code
of conduct."
And see
updated bill
summary, here,
esp. Title X.
This comes as
Haitian
elected
officials move
to strip the
UN of its
immunity after
Uruguayan UN
peacekeepers
engaged sexual
abuse, and
barely pay
child support
for their
offspring with
under-aged
Haitian girls.
At
the UN on
September 12
Inner City
Press posed
the question
to Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Martin
Nesirky: "I
wanted to ask
here at
Headquarters,
is it the UN’s
position that
the payment of
child support
after sex by
peacekeepers
with underage
people in the
countries in
which they are
serving, is
sufficient, is
that a lack of
impunity?"
Nesirky
did not answer
at the time,
but after
Inner City
Press left the
UN and New
York inserted
into the
transcript
"that the
investigation
had in fact
concluded and
that the issue
of financial
support for
the mother and
the child by
the soldier
involved was
one of the
outcomes of
this process,
independent of
whatever other
punishment is
meted out."
But
as appears to
be the case
with Sri
Lankan
peacekeepers
merely
"repatriated"
after
documentation
of sexual
abuse of
minors in
Haiti, there
appears to
have been, nor
that there
will be, any
additional
punishment.
Even
in this
context many
have mocked
the idea of
conditions on
UN
peacekeeping
and political
missions and a
la carte
funding. The
UN seems to be
going on as
ever, with
simultaneous
canned social
media
responses from
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon at
#AskTheSG and
some in the UN
Correspondents'
Association
saying they'll
"urgently"
meet on a
draft
statement to
journalists
about what
they should
publish, and
who and what
they should
use as
sources, explicitly
in response to
complaints
from a particular
country's
mission to the
UN.
(That
would be France,
which has
controlled UN
Peacekeeping
during all
this, and
whose new DPKO
head Herve
Ladsous was
chief of staff
to French
minister
Aliot-Marie as
she flew Air
Ben Ali to
Tunisia --
none of which
Ban seems to
have reviewed
or yet
answered for.)
Ban previously
in DC, new
climate and
DPKO head not
shown
But
given the
make-up in
Congress, and
President
Barack Obama's
recent move
rightward on
issues ranging
from the
environment,
where he
kiboshed the
proposed ozone
rules, and tax
cuts,
complacency at
and around the
UN may be
misguided.
For
now the
speakers in
favor of the
legislation, H.R. 2829,
are all
Republicans,
including
Illeana
Ros-Lehtinen,
Dan Burton,
Peter Roskam
of Illinois,
Steve Chabot
and Jean
Schmidt of
Ohio, Scott
Garret of New
Jersey,
Michael Grimm
of New York,
and Robert
Dold and Allen
West of
Florida.
But
already the US
Mission to the
UN's new
Ambassador on
Management is
criticized a
proposed 3%
pay raise at
the UN -- only
for
Professional
level staff,
Inner City
Press notes,
and not the
General
Service staff
that would
need it more
-- and has
called for
more
transparency
at the UN
Development
Program.
Simultaneously,
sources
tell Inner
City Press,
the
Administration
is taking a
hard look at
their main
American Under
Secretary
General Lynn
Pascoe of the
Department of
Political
Affairs.
Wikileaks has
released a
cable
summarizing a
US Ambassador
Rice meeting
with Pascoe at
which he
claimed credit
for working
with the
government of
Zimbabwe. Rice
asked
pointedly
about the
wisdom of
throwing
Robert Mugabe
a lifeline.
Since
then, Inner
City Press has
told, Rice has
indicated that
meeting with
Pascoe is not
for her, and
largely left
it to deputy
Rosemary
DiCarlo. Now
DPA sources
say Pascoe is
a lame duck.
At a press
briefing at
the UN on
September 12,
Pascoe
repeatedly
(lame) ducked
and weaved
past questions
about the
request for
state status
by Palestine,
another topic
at Tuesday's
Capitol Hill
hearing. Watch
this site.
*
- with
reporting from
Washington DC.