As
Trump Tips
Nikki Haley
For USUN,
Should Cut
Guards &
Banning of
Press
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
November 23 --
Following the
election of
Donald Trump
on November
8-9 UN high
officials, one
of them told
Inner City
Press on
November 14,
“have been
freaking out.
They don't
know how much
is going to be
cut, and from
where.”
Now on
November 23 it
is reported
that Trump has
chosen as his
Ambassador to
the UN Nikki
Haley, the
Governor of
South
Carolina.
We'll repeat
our first,
simplest
suggestion: to
save
taxpayers'
money, and to
send a needed
message, the
new US
Ambassador to
the UN should
not follow
outgoing
Ambassador
Samantha
Power's
practice of
using (and
having the
taxpayers'
pay) up to
three
bodyguard even
while inside
the UN. No
other country
does it.
Turkey and
Qatar go with
one bodyguard
each; others
have none.
We'll have
more on this.
As to the UN
itself, here's
a suggestion
for the first
cuts, based
not only on
Inner City
Press' personal
experience at
the UN (NYT
here) but
interviews
with staff,
diplomats and
elected
officials: if
there is one
UN Department
to be cut,
even
eliminated, it
is the
Department of
Public
Information
(DPI).
Since Cristina
Gallach of
Spain took DPI
over, as Ban
Ki-moon's
attempt to
ingratiate
himself to
Spain during
its now-ending
UN Security
Council term,
it has not
only evicted
the
investigative
Press without
any due
process or
appeal, it
has most
recent named
as the UN's
gender
empowerment
ambassador not
an actual
person but
rather a
cartoon
character, Wonder
Woman.
Gallach, after
not consulting
with staff or
even the top
of UN Women,
ignored the
staff and
mission
protest to her
ceremony
promoting a
forthcoming
movie.
In terms of
outright
corruption,
even the UN's
Office of
Internal
Oversight
Services audit
of the John
Ashe / Ng Lap
Seng ongoing
bribery case
found that
Gallach did no
due diligence
of at least
two Ng Lap
Seng funded
events in the
UN, including
involving the
UN's slavery
memorial.
Three strikes
and you're
out.
By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Follow Up on
Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 25, more
here --
Amid charges
that the UN in
Sudan,
including
Herve Ladsous'
UN
Peacekeeping
in Darfur, has
colluded with
the
authorities in
Khartoum to
cover up rapes
and killing,
now the UN's
Resident
Coordinator
Ali Al Za'tari
has been
ordered to
leave Sudan by
January 2,
Inner City
Press first
reported
earlier today.
On December
24, Inner City
Press
similarly exclusively
reported
and then asked
UN Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
UNDP Country
Director
Yvonne Helle
being ordered
out of Sudan,
citing her and
Al-Za'tari's
e-mails. Video
here.
A full day
after that,
Reuters
reported on
Helle's ouster
-- typically,
for Reuters, with
no credit
to the Press'
prior
exclusive
story.
(Reuters' UN
bureau chief
has said he
has a policy
of not
crediting
Inner City
Press'
exclusive, and
has gone to
far as to
censor,
Sudan-style,
his "for the
record"
anti-Press
complains to
the UN, click
here for that,
via EFF's
ChillingEffect.org).
Now,
after UN
Spokesman
Dujarric issued
two statements
on the
afternoon and
evening
of December 25
responsive to
the question
Inner City
Press asked at
the December
24 noon
briefing,
Reuters has run
a piece with
no fewer than
eight
journalists
listed,
and of course
no credit.
This is
policy,
untransparenty
(when Inner
City Press
asked top
Reuters brass
including
Stephen J.
Adler for
Reuters policy
on crediting,
none was
provided.)
But
eight
journalists?
The
above-referenced
Reuters UN
bureau chief,
it must be
noted, under
his own byline
sought to
exonerate
Ladsous,
reporting
without
context
complaints
made to
Ladsous about
another UN
staff member,
without
mentioning
Ladsous' own
role in
covering up
rapes in the
DR Congo and
now Darfur.
Reuters has
not reported
the complaints
against
Ladsous, even
as a Permanent
Three mission
on the
Security
Council has
confirmed to
Inner City
Press its
receipt of the
letter.
On December
24, Inner City
Press asked UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
Sudan
having just
similarly
"PNG-ed"
or declared
persona
non-grata the
Sudan Country
Director of
the UN
Development
Program Yvonne
Helle, with
Za'tari barely
pushing back
against the
government.
Dujarric said
that host
countries'
ordered to PNG
a UN staff
member are
treated
seriously and
should be sent
to, and
considered and
acted on by,
Ban's
Secretariat in
New York. But
Dujarric in
the 18 hours
after Inner
City Press
asked about
Helle has not
returned with
any
information or
answer. Then
Reuters
published its
story, with no
credit.
* * *
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reports
are
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News and on Lexis-Nexis.
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for Sept 26, 2011 New Yorker on Inner City
Press at UN
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for
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Corruption
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