Gaddafi
Gone
By Mid-July, Libyan Rebel Diplomat Tells Press at US Barbeque in NY
Zoo, of Penguins & Sudan
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
June 29 -- “We think we can take Tripoli by the middle of
July,” rebel
Libyan diplomat Ibrahim Dabbashi told Inner City Press
in New York's Central Park Zoo on Wednesday night.
“We were
supposed to have finished already, but because of lack of financial
resources, lack of arms, we were not able to make it to Tripoli yet.”
Waiters
offered
black and white chocolate bonbons. The venue was a barbeque hosted by
US Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice and her husband Ian Cameron.
It
was an eclectic crown. Not only Dabbashi, who defected from the
Gaddafi goverment, but also sitting Sudanese Permanent Representative
Daffa Alla Ali Osman were in attendance.
“It is not
easy,” Dabbashi continued. “Tripoli is huge. He [Gaddafi] managed
to put arms, mercenaries and soldiers everywhere. So to have success
uprising in Tripoli, uou need a lot of personal arms. Without help
from outside of the city, it is very difficult.”
In
the middle of
the Central Park Zoo seals swam in dark water. Several attendees,
sipping Heineken and Amstel Light, joked about the seals being Navy
Seals of the kind who killed Osama Bin Laden.
“We think we
can do it by middle of July,” Dabbashi repeated. “We have a city
in the west part, we aim to move forward in the next two or three
days. If we manage, the way is open... We are not counting on the
east, it is too far, a small army , not enough. In the western cities
-- we have enough people, we don't have arms.”
Earlier
in the
evening, after touring the air conditioned hall of polar birds, Inner
City Press was told by an African Deputy Permanent Representative
that France's admission it is dropping weapons in Western Libya
“must” be taken up by the Security Council's Libya sanctions
committee.
Inner
City Press
asked Dabbashi, what about recent speeches by India's
Permanent
Representative Hardeep Singh Puri, present for the barbeque, and by
African diplomats like Ruhakana
Rugunda of Uganda?
Of
the African
Union Dabbashi
told Inner City Press, “I talked with their ministers when here
[June
15], it is mostly personal reaction to their visit to Benghazi... We
don't have protocol, we are in shortage of diplomats there. They felt
they had been mistreated... I think with the warrant of arrest [of
the International Criminal Court for Gaddafi], they will cool down,
it will change them.”
Penguins at Central Park Zoo Wednesday night, (c) MRLee
Daffa Alla
Ali
Osman of Sudan moved through the crowd. In a parallel universe,
Georgia's Permanent Representative Lomaia and a minister in from
Tblisi thanked countries which voted for
or abstained from their
resolution to return internally displaced people to Abkhazia and
South Ossetia.
Inner
City Press
spoke with the Permanent Representative of the Maldives, who voted
for Georgia's resolution on “humanitarian grounds,” he said, now
that Maldives is a member of the Human Rights Council.
Papua New
Guinea voted with Russia last year, and this year abstained. “I'll
get a visit,” the genial Permanent Representative said. “But we
have to be for peace.”
Also
in the crowd
was Rwanda's Permanent Representative, who again reminded Inner City
Press of the Twitter back and forth with President Paul Kagame. Other
Permanent Representatives shook their heads, chewing on cheese
burgers, and some few on vegetable burgers.
“You have to
write
about the aqua economy,” Papua New Guinea's ambassador joked,
staring up at a blimp advertising Direct TV. Aqua economy indeed.
Germany
takes over
the Security Council on Friday, after the Golan Heights
peacekeeping
force resolution is slated for vote on Thursday. Will the rebels
take Tripoli by the middle of July? Will France face
consequences for
admitting dropping weapons into Libya, on which the Council voted an
arms embargo? Watch this site.
* * *
As
Ban
Claims Libya Talks Are Led by Khatib, Jordan Activities Still
UNexplained
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee, News analysis
UNITED
NATIONS,
June
19 -- As Libyan rebels deny negotiating with Gaddafi,
on June 18 UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's office issued a
statement that “the beginnings of a negotiation process are now
underway under the auspices of [Ban's] Special Envoy to Libya, Mr.
Abdul-Elah Al-Khatib.”
Khatib,
who
notably did not attend or engage with the African
Union ministerial
delegation to the UN in New York last week, has been allowed by
Ban
to continue as a paid Jordanian senator. Inner City Press has
repeatedly asked Ban's spokesperson how this double-service for the
UN and Jordan complies with the letter and spirit of UN rules.
While
Ban's lead
spokesperson Martin Nesirky took to saying that Khatib's contract
with the UN was still being formalized, a US diplomat on background
assured Inner City Press weeks ago that it would all soon be
normalized.
But
nothing has
been said by Ban's office. The Obama administration has nevertheless
reflexively quickly supported Ban's campaign, announced June 6, for a
second five year term as Secretary General.
As
Inner City
Press reported, Khatib after Ban hurriedly hired him refused to give
up or suspend his political work and business in Jordan. Inner City
Press asked Khatib on camera about protests and democracy in Jordan
itself, and Khatib minimized the protests. Since then, with the
King's convoy stoned by protesters, media that reported it were
cracked down on.
Ban's
office has
dodged even specifying which exemptions or special powers they may be
invoking to be declaring as a UN Under Secretary General and staff
member a sitting politician.
Ban and Khatib, explanation of continued Jordan
business not shown
Similarly,
when
asked throughout last week what safeguards will be imposed on the
lobbying of Ban by his son in law Siddarth Chatterjee now that he's
confirmed as hired as “Chief Diplomatic Officer” of the
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies,
Nesirky has simply said there are rules and we'll comply with them.
What
rules? How
can the UN preach rule of law when it would even describe it own
processes with regard to lobbying of the UN by members of the
Secretary General's immediate family and double service for the UN
fraught with conflicts of interest? Watch this site.
* * *
At
UN
on
Libya, African Council Members Want Statement on Compliance With
Resolution 1973,
US Said to Oppose
By
Matthew
Russell
Lee,
Exclusive
UNITED
NATIONS,
June
14
-- When African Union ministers wanted to come
engage with the UN Security Council about NATO's bombing of Libya,
the United
States
wanted
to keep the meeting behind closed doors, the
UK even suggesting it merely be a lunch, sources told Inner City
Press.
Now
in advance of
the June 15 meeting, which will be a briefing and “interactive
dialogue,” sources tell Inner City Press that the US is opposing an
African proposed Presidential Statement, which would reiterate the
importance of compliance with Council Resolution 1973.
Below is a
copy of the draft, obtained by Inner City Press, which among other
things “reaffirms that
resolution 1973 (2011) explicitly excludes a foreign occupation force
of any form on any part of Libyan territory.”
The
three African
members of the Security Council -- South Africa, Nigeria and Gabon --
are proposing the Statement. The US is apparently saying they cannot
decide on the draft in 24 hours. (Others note that recently on Sudan,
US Ambassador Susan Rice put forward a draft Presidential Statement
at 2 pm and asked for it to be adopted that day.)
The
timing excuse,
some feel, is a ruse: the US is hoping that Gaddafi can be killed and
taken from power before the Security Council issues any further
statement on Libya.
Before
publication
of
this
story, Inner City Press asked US Mission to the UN in writing
to answer three questions, including this one. While the Mission's
spokesman provide an interim answer to one of the three questions,
there was not answer to the request for denial or confirmation and
comment on the US "opposing on Libya a proposed statement reiterating
compliance with Resolution 1973, and why."
Inner
City
Press
spoke
to an anti-Gaddafi member of Libya's Mission to the UN, who
confirmed the African proposed statement and that the US will not
accept it. He said, “the freedom fighters are now within 40
kilometers of Tripoli.”
Neither
Libyan
side,
he
predicted, will speak in the interactive segment of the June
15 meeting. “We don't have credentials,” he said. Previously, the
UN let Ambassadors Shalgam and Dabbashi speak, but no more. Nor does
Gaddafi have a representative at the UN, after Nicaraguan former
president of the General Assembly Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann was
blocked, with Susan Rice saying his tourist visa would be revoked if
he tried to speak for Gaddafi.
Footnote:
No
other
than
Louis Farrakhan of the Nation of Islam has moved to
hold a press conference at the UN. As it happens, it will not be
inside the UN but rather across the street. Watch this site.
Here
is
the
African-proposed
Draft Presidential Statement on Libya
At
the
_____th
meeting
of the Security Council, held on 15 June 2011, in
connection with the Council’s consideration of the item entitled
“the situation in Libya”, and having received a briefing from a
ministerial delegation of the African Union High-Level Ad-hoc
Committee on Libya, the President of the Security Council made the
following statement on behalf of the Council:
The
Security
Council
expresses
its deep concern over the continuation of
violence in Libya, and reaffirms its commitment to the full
implementation of United Nations Security Council resolutions 1970
(2011) and 1973 (2011) in letter and spirit to ensure protection of
civilians in Libya. The Security Council reaffirms that resolution
1973 (2011) explicitly excludes a foreign occupation force of any
form on any part of Libyan territory.
The
Security
Council
demands
a complete end to violence and all attacks
against and abuses of civilians, perpetrated by all parties and the
establishment of an immediate and comprehensive ceasefire. They
stressed the need for such a ceasefire to be credible and verifiable,
and encouraged the African Union and the United Nations, as well as
other stakeholders, to spare no efforts in achieving this objective.
The Security Council further demands a speedy solution to the crisis
which responds to the legitimate aspirations of the Libyan people and
tackles the underlying causes of the current crisis.
The
Security
Council
stresses
the need for a political solution to the
conflict in Libya. In this respect, and recalling the provisions of
paragraph 2 of UN Security Council resolution 1973(2011), they
welcome the efforts of the Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for
Libya, Mr. Abdel-Elah Mohamed Al-Khatib, and those of the AU
High-Level ad hoc Committee on Libya in the context of the AU
Roadmap. The Security Council agreed on the need for close
coordination of all efforts in support of the UN and in accordance
with paragraph 2 of Security Council resolution 1973(2011) to find a
solution to the crisis. The Security Council welcomes the joint
effort being undertaken by the UN, AU, LAS, OIC and EU and looks
forward to the outcome of their next meeting to be held in Cairo,
Egypt on 18 June 2011.
The
Security
Council
expresses
its serious concern over the deteriorating
humanitarian situation in the country, and calls for full compliance
with human rights and International Humanitarian Law and the creation
of the required conditions for the delivery of assistance to all
needy populations across Libya, including by guaranteeing appropriate
access to humanitarian organisations. The Security Council stresses
the need to provide necessary support to the African migrant workers
living in Libya, including those seeking to leave the country.
The
Security
Council
reaffirms
its strong commitment to the sovereignty,
independence, territorial integrity and national unity of the Libyan
Arab Jamahiriya.
The
Security
Council
will
remain seized of this matter and will continue
to meet to review the implementation of its resolutions on the
situation in Libya.
Click for Mar 1, '11
BloggingHeads.tv re Libya, Sri Lanka, UN Corruption
Click
here
for an Inner City Press YouTube channel video, mostly UN Headquarters
footage, about civilian
deaths
in Sri Lanka.
Click here for Inner City
Press' March 27 UN debate
Click here for Inner City
Press March 12 UN (and AIG
bailout) debate
Click here for Inner City
Press' Feb 26 UN debate
Click
here
for Feb.
12
debate
on
Sri
Lanka http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/17772?in=11:33&out=32:56
Click here for Inner City Press' Jan.
16, 2009 debate about Gaza
Click here for Inner City Press'
review-of-2008 UN Top Ten debate
Click here for Inner
City Press' December 24 debate on UN budget, Niger
Click here from Inner City Press'
December 12 debate on UN double standards
Click here for Inner
City Press' November 25 debate on Somalia, politics
and this October 17 debate, on
Security Council and Obama and the UN.
* * *
These
reports are
usually also available through Google
News and on Lexis-Nexis.
Click here
for a Reuters
AlertNet piece by this correspondent
about Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army. Click
here
for an earlier Reuters AlertNet piece about the Somali
National
Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's $200,000 contribution from an
undefined trust fund. Video
Analysis
here
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