For WFP, ICP
Asks UN & OCHA of
Nikki Haley Nominating David
Beasley, Of
UNICEF
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
March 1 – For weeks Inner City
Press has asked the UN about
the process to replace
Ertharin Cousin atop the World
Food Program, and Tony Lake at
UNICEF. The UN's holdover
spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
typically, has refused to
answer.
On
February 28 Inner City Press
reported that US Ambassador
Nikki Haley has nominated to
head WFP David Beasley, citing
his "reputation for honesty
and integrity." Despite recent
attempts to re-raise her
profile, Cousin's term expires
on April 6.
On March 1
at the UN noon briefing,
before a segment on Yemen,
Inner City Press asked the
UN's Dujarric for more about
the process, including at
UNICEF (on which he again
refused to answer.) Then Inner
City Press asked UN Emergency
Relief Coordinator Stephen
O'Brien, who'd been on the
line, to comment on Beasley
and his nomination.
O'Brien
replied that he'd only learned
of it on the call - that is,
from Inner City Press'
questions - but that he looks
forward to working with any
new colleague. Periscope
video here. Inner
City Press also asked,
including on behalf of the
Free UN Coalition for Access,
about the UN accepting the
exclusion of journalist by the
Saudis from UNHAS flights into
Yemen. We'll have more on all
this - and on UNICEF and other
UN system agencies.
The race to replace Irina
Bokova atop UNESCO, the UN
Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization, has
candidates from Qatar and
Egypt facing off, with the
former procuring it seems more
support.
It
is at least somewhat out in
the open, unlike for now the
process to replace Helen Clark
at UNDP, or Americans Ertharin
Cousin and Anthony Lake at WFP
and UNICEF, respectively.
The UNESCO
circus has had another Clinton
connection: the announced
candidacy of Lebanese
expatriate Vera El Khoury
Lacoeuilhe, affiliated with
St. Lucia and, it's reported,
Gilbert Chagoury, the
Lebanese-Nigerian businessman
whose Clinton ties emerged in
emails released by the US
State Department.
How is St.
Lucia's representative to
UNESCO chosen?
How does
Dominica choose to whom to
give passports, including for
example Macau-based
businessman Ng Lap Seng,
facing trial for UN bribery,
accorded no due diligence by
the UN communications chief
Cristina Gallach? A phrase
that in telling Inner City
Press about these processes
diplomats keep using is "For
Sale." We'll have more on this
- and on the future of UNESCO
and other UN system agencies.
With the
UN system facing 40% budget
cuts from the US, on January
25 UN Development Program
chief Helen Clark confirmed
she will leave on April 19. On
January 26, UN spokesman
Stephane Dujarric refused to
disclose when Inner City Press
asked the process to pick a
replacement.
The
unwritten process for UNICEF,
the UN children's agency, and
the World Food Program is
better known. The current
Democrat Party appointees,
Anthony Lake and Ertharin
Cousin respectively, are
expected to resign and
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres will ask the US,
presumably through Nikki
Haley, for three American
names.
Will it go that
way this time? Will Trump
accept the decision being made
between three names? If France
was able to impose the
incompetent Herve Ladsous on
the UN, and Spain the
censor Cristina Gallach,
will even the three-name game
now stand?
Beginning
on the day Nikki Haley arrived
at the UN, and Inner City
Press exposed the extension of
the contract of
Clinton-aligned Jeffrey
Feltman so that his UN pension
could vest, this will be an
Inner City Press series.
Even
further back than the US has
controlled the UN Department
of Political Affairs (through
Lynn Pascoe and Jeffrey
Feltman, to whom we have
questions pending), it has
held WFP: Catherine Bertini,
James Morris, Josette Sheeran,
Etharin Cousin.
And UNICEF, under
both political parties (see,
Veneman): Bellamy, Veneman,
Anthony Lake.
So on
January 27, Inner City Press
asked the UN's holdover
spokesman Stephane Dujarric,
after he called Inner City
Press' questioning on the use
of taxpayers' funds
"despicable," this, from
the UN Transcript:
Inner City
Press: this is on the
theme of transition, because I
wanted to know, as you may
know, Nikki Haley, in written
responses to the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee,
talked about working early… in
early days on WFP (World Food
Programme) and UNICEF (United
Nations Children’s
Fund). And, although
yesterday you’d said that
there’s a well-established
procedure as to UNFP… UNDP, I
wanted to know, what is the
procedure for this
administration of the UN, in
terms of replacing the heads
of WFP and UNICEF? It…
are you saying that it’s… it’s
open to all countries as… as I
guess it’s stated, but it
seems… my understanding…
[inaudible]
Spokesman Dujarric:
There are stated rules.
And those will be followed.
Inner City Press: Then
why is it that some countries
have controlled these posts
five and… four and five times
in a row? And, if
so… [inaudible]
Spokesman: That’s not a
question… that’s not a
question I’m able to answer.
Inner City Press: It is
a question…
Spokesman: It’s not a
question… I’m not saying it’s
not a question. I’m
saying it’s a question I’m not
able to answer.
Inner City Press: Have
you seen letters of
resignation from Ertharin
Cousins or Anthony Lake?
Spokesman: Not that I’m
aware of. Good
day. Thank you.
As to
UNDP, while Inner City Press
first reported the interest of
France's Segolene Royal in
replacing Clark, and the UK's
David Miliband has also been
mentioned (but see below).
On January
26, Inner City Press asked UN
spokesman Stephane Dujarric
what the process will be, and
about (UN) transparency. Video
here, from the UN
transcript:
Inner City Press:
now that Helen Clark has said
that she'll be leaving by 19
April, can you describe what
the process will be that
António Guterres will use to
choose a new administrator of
UNDP (United Nations
Development Program)?
Has he received nominations,
for example… [Inner City Press
said Miliband and Segelone
Royal, the UN did not
transcribe.]
Spokesman: No, we was…
he was… He was informed
by Helen Clark of her desire
to step down at the end of
her… of her term. There
is a well-determined process
of consultations between the
Secretary-General and the
Executive Board of UNDP on
finding a successor, and that
process will be followed.
Inner City Press:
Yesterday, he met with the
French Minister of Development
and Francophonie. I was
kind of expecting some kind of
a readout. Did I miss
one? Was one put out?
Spokesman: No, there was
no readout that I know of.
Inner City Press: And I
wanted to ask, I guess,
related to that, there are
some in the South Korean media
asking to know where it's
available to find the daily
schedules that are put up
every day. Are they just
thrown out, or is there some
repository of who met with the
Secretary-General…?
Spokesman: Well, I'm
glad you're… you've asserted a
role as the Spokesman for the
South Korean media but they
can look on the website, and
everything should be archived.
Where?
On January
26 Inner City Press asked UK
Ambassador to the UN Matthew
Rycroft, video
here, UK transcript:
Inner City Press:
Does the UK support David
Miliband to head UNDP?
Amb Rycroft: We look forward
to working with Helen Clark in
her final months in office and
with her successor, and no
further comment. [end]
Some UN
sources have told Inner City
Press this post, "like UNICEF
and WFP, may go to an
American." We'll see.
Of the
candidates to replace the
increasingly discredited Ban
Ki-moon as UN Secretary
General, Clark was the most
active on social media.
She also, as
Inner City Press exposed,
had UNDP go after a UNDP
staff who dared tweet
criticism of her.
She was once
getting a tobacco award but
when exposed
by Inner City Press,
turned it down. There's more
to be said but the news of the
day is the impending budget
cuts.
And why WAS
France minister for
development meeting
with and lobbying
Antonio Guterres on January
25? We'll have more on this.
***
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