On
W. Sahara, ICP
Asks Morocco's
Zarrouk Who
Says "The
South"
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
April 23 --
The UN Mission
for the
Referendum in
Western
Sahara,
MINURSO, which
has yet to
hold any
referendum, is
being reviewed
behind closed
doors in the
UN Security
Council, with
the UN's
ambiguous
position on
(not)
including
human rights
monitoring in
the mission's
mandate and on
exploitation
of natural
resources once
again coming
to the fore.
But
no one speaks
on the record
at the UNTV
stakeout.
Envoy Ross did
not do
Q&A;
Polisario was
said to be
blocked as in
the recent
past.
So
on April 23
when long time
Moroccan
minister Najat
Zarrouk took
questions in
the UN Press
Briefing Room,
Inner City
Press asked
her about
Western
Sahara. Video
here.
Najat
Zarrouk's
reply praised
the King and
called Western
Sahara "the
South;" she
said check out
what Ban
Ki-moon has
said. We have.
On
April 22
before the
consultations
began, a group
of Moroccan
diplomats
greeted
Council
Ambassadors as
they went in.
They are, it
is
acknowledged,
doing their
job. Polisario
was nowhere to
be seen. At
the stakeout
already there
was talk that
while
Polisario
should be able
to speak at
the UNTV
microphone --
Hilary Clinton
did -- there
would be a
block.
Inner
City Press:
there are
reports and I
wanted to know
whether you or
MINURSO
[United
Nations
Mission for
the Referendum
in Western
Sahara] know
if they are
true of a,
quote,
Moroccan
crackdown on
demonstrations
in [inaudible]
directed at
the idea of
there being a
human rights
monitoring
mechanism so
it
Spokesman
Dujarric:
We will ask
our colleagues
in MINURSO.
But
nine hours
later, no
answer, no
information.
No monitoring.
Meanwhile,
Inner City
Press has
become aware
that Morocco
wrote to the
Security
Council; Inner
City Press has
uploaded
the letter
here.
On April 10
Inner City
Press obtained
from multiple
sources the
advance copy
of Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
report on the
MINURSO
mission. We
published it
in full here
and embedded
below (unlike
others who try to
remove things
from the
Internet, like
here).
On
April 13,
Ban's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric said
the report
"speaks for
itself;" Inner
City Press
asked how that
applies to
Paragraph 62
merely
reciting
Morocco's and
the Frente
Polisario's
positions for
and against
oil drilling
at this time.
Video
here.
Dujraric
said he had
"nothing to
add;" he also
said that
enovy
Christopher
Ross will help
provide more
details. On
the record?
While there
has been no
formal
response to
the African
Union's
request that
the UN
Security
Council at
least hear
from its envoy
Chissano,
Inner City
Press asks why
at a minimum
an Arria
formula
meeting could
not be set up?
These do not
require
unanimity,
even of some
members
boycott, as
might happen
here, the
meeting goes
forward. We'll
have more on
this.