At
UN
on Korean Crisis, After US Rebuffs Russia, a Sunday Meeting
Set
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December 18 -- With tensions escalating on the Korean
Peninsula, in New York on Saturday Russia's Permanent Representative
to the UN Vitaly Churkin asked this month's Security Council
President, the United States, to call an emergency meeting. According
to Churkin, the US refused to convene the meeting.
At
4:50 pm on
Saturday afternoon, the Russian Mission to the UN told the Press that
Churkin would be making a statement at the Mission, on 67th Street in
Manhattan, in less than an hour. The statement criticized the US for
failing to call the meeting, and announced one for Sunday at 11 am.
The
US Mission
told some reporters about the meeting. It was not clear if US
Permanent Representative to the UN Susan Rice was or will be in town.
On Friday afternoon, Deputy Permanent Representative Rosemary DiCarlo
chaired the Council. She emerged at 6 pm and read a press statement,
but walked away as Inner City Press began asking a question.
Alongside
the
Korean situation, in Cote d'Ivoire Laurent Gbagbo has ordered the UN
peacekeeping mission in that country to leave. This too seems like an
emergency, though neither the US nor Russia nor France has called for
a meeting. Might it be discussed on Sunday? Watch this site.
* * *
Mogadishu
in
Manhattan,
After Cops Called on DPR, TFG
Says Controls 55%
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
December
17 -- Days after a fight in the
Somali Mission to
the UN in New York, reported exclusively by Inner City Press, the
new
Somali Minister of Information, Post and Telecommunications
Abdulkareem Jama came to the UN to describe the new government he is
a part of.
He
said that many of the 18 new ministers are from the
Somali diaspora. Of former Deputy Permanent Representative Idd Beddel
Mohamed, who showed up at the Somali Mission saying that the new
foreign minister gave him authorization to return, only to have the
police called to throw him out, Abdulkareem Jama said that wasn't yet
decided.
The
chaos
of Mogadishu, then, is echoed in Manhattan.
Abdulkareem
Jama
put
a relentlessly upbeat spin on Somalia, saying that Mogadishu is
55% controlled by the Transitional Federal Government. Inner City
Press asked about reports of the TFG and Puntland using private
military contractors or mercenaries.
Abdulkareem
Jama
said
that the contractor's work involves training for “VIP
protection” and for a coast guard. He did not address whether the
arrangement, which is shielded in secrecy, may violate the UN's
Somalia sanctions regime.
Inner
City
Press
asked about the memorandum of understanding between the World Food
Program and the Organization of the Islamic Conference to deliver
food in areas controlled by Al Shabab, which has barred WFP.
Abdulkareem Jama spoke favorably of the deal. But WFP still refuses
to provide a copy of the MOU -- Inner City Press has asked -- and
even the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs says
it has not seen the MOU.
Following
the
Obama
administration naming the TFG as a user of child soldiers, Inner City
Press asked Abdulkareem Jama for the update. He said that child
soldiers have been identified and are being kept in a camp until they
reach the age they can decide what they want to do. Video here.
Abdulkareem Jama at
UN, 55% control & OIC MOU not shown
Of
once and
perhaps future UN official Charles Petrie, whom the UN claimed would
be working for the UN in Mogadishu, Abdulkareem Jama said Petrie
will be working for the EU or someone else, not the UN.
Of
the TFG's
deputy minister for water barring work by UNICEF and others and then
rescinding the order, Abdulkareem Jama said that the deputy minister
had been frustrated but had taken the order back. Again, the chaos of
Mogadishu, reflected in Manhattan. We wait to hear from Idd Beddel
Mohamed. Watch this site.
Footnote:
Somalia's
Permanent
Representative said that on December 22, the
Security Council “will” pass a resolution authorizing 4000 more
troops for AMISOM. While technically the resolution is not yet agreed
to (or “in blue”) Council sources tell Inner City Press that is
the number: 4000. We'll be here.