ICP
Showed UN
Yemen
Envoy Told DPA
Houthis to
Meet, Now Did,
UN Silent
By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
Exclusive
Series
UNITED
NATIONS, March
8 -- The UN
Secretariat's
bungling of
Yemen
mediation has
become ever
more clear,
according to
multiple
sources and
documents
exclusively
seen by Inner
City Press,
see below.
On March 5
Inner City
Press
published
another
exclusive: UN
envoy Ismail
Ould Cheikh
Ahmed's email
to UN Under
Secretary
General for
Political
Affairs
Jeffrey
Feltman, which
contradicts
what envoy
Ould Cheikh
Ahmed most
recently told
the Security
Council. The
email
exclusively
published by
Inner City
Press shows
flexibility on
the Houthi
said, with the
prospects of
meeting in
Jordan or
Morocco, while
the Saudis
insist on
sending low
level
representation.
The email is
published in
full, below.
On
March 7, two
days after
exclusively
publishing
Envoy IOCA's
email to
Feltman, Inner
City Press
asked UN
Deputy
Spokesperson
Farhan Haq
about it. He
did not deny
the email,
instead saying
that the envoy
is working
hard.
But
on March 8,
when lead UN
Spokesman Stephane
Dujarric gave
a read-out of
whom the Envoy
met in Riyahd,
there were no
Houthis
mentioned.
Inner
City Press
then asked
Dujarric of
the
multiply-sourced
Houthi - Saudi
meetings: was
Ismail Ould Cheikh
Ahmed not even
involved? If
he was, why
were the
Houthis not
included in Dujarric's
litany of the
Envoy's
meetings? Vine here. From
the UN transcript:
Inner
City Press: On
Yemen, you'd
said that the
envoy had been
in
Riyadh.
Yesterday, I'd
asked Farhan
[Haq] about
this email
that the envoy
had written to
Jeff Feltman
about his
discussions
with the
Houthis.
And now
there's a
report that
the Houthis
are, in fact,
now in Riyadh
and met at
some level
with the
Saudis.
So, since the
Houthis
weren't listed
in your
readout of
interlocutors,
does he have
anything to do
with that, or
is that a
track outside
of mediation--
Spokesman
Dujarric:
We've seen
these
reports.
This is
something that
the Special
Envoy has been
encouraging
for quite some
time.
What's your
second
question?
An
hour later in
the UN Lobby
Inner City
Press asked UN
OCHA's Stephen
O'Brien about
what Saudi
Arabia's
ambassador
said March 4,
that OCHA does
not want a
humanitarian
access UNSC
resolution for
Yemen.
I hadn't seen
that, O'Brien
politely
replied. Inner
City Press
encouraged
him, then, to
check it out -
the video's on
YouTube. Watch
this site.
And
dissembling to
the Security
Council?
Likewise,
Inner City
Press asked
Haq about the
Saudi
Permanent
Representative
to the UN
saying that
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed,
and senior
leadership of
Stephen
O'Brien's
OCHA,
privately said
no
humanitarian
access
resolution by
the Security
Council is
needed.
Haq insisted
to Inner City
Press that
what O'Brien
said in the
open session
was his
position. But
Inner City
Press pointed
out, O'Brien
said the
"humanitarian
IT equipment"
the Saudis
seized would
be delivered
to Aden by
March 6 -
whereas Haq on
March 7 said
"later this
week."
Inner City
Press asked
Haq to confirm
or deny at
least the
delivery of
the
humanitarian
IT equipment,
by email since
Haq's
"squawks" over
the press
floor public
address system
don't reach
it, with UN
DPI Banning
ICP from its
longtime
office (petition
here).
We'll see.
Here
is the email:
"Dear
Jeff, I just
completed a
2-day visit in
Riyadh and
wanted to give
you a quick
update on how
things have
developed
since my
discussions
with H/Mohamed
AbdelSalam
last week in
Muscat.
I had
a private
discussion
with both
State Minister
Mussaeed Al
Ayban and Abu
Ali where I
briefed them
on the
readiness of
the Houthis to
resume
discrete
face-to-face
meetings with
KSA
representatives.
While they
welcomed the
progress made
and expressed
their
commitment to
go ahead with
this track,
they also
emphasized
that:
i) in
light of the
progress the
Coalition has
been making on
the ground and
their advance
toward Sanaa,
the Houthis
should seize
this
opportunity
and discuss in
good faith as
they are in a
weaker
position on
the ground and
their options
are narrowing;
ii)
KSA will not
consider
elevating the
level of their
representation
in the KSA-H
talks, as
Mohamed
AbdelSalam had
requested. KSA
considers that
the 2
representatives
they are
sending are at
the level of
Mohammed
AbdelSalam and
the Houthis
should not
expect a
higher
representation
at this point;
iii)
KSA accepted
the proposal
of Mohamed
AbdelSalam to
meet in a
third country
(Jordan).
Mohamed Abe
Assalem has
suggested to
me either
Morocco or
Jordan as the
venue.
I
immediately
called Mohemad
AbdelSalam
from Riyadh to
share the
outcomes of
the meeting.
He was going
to talk to his
leadership and
revert to me
with a
confirmation.
If the Houthis
accept, the
Houthi - KSA
meeting could
go ahead as
early as next
week, in
Jordan. We of
course would
not
participate
nor be
present. I
have however
already
started
coordination
with the
Jordan
Ambassador to
Yemen, as
needed.
Although
we still do
not have an
agreement for
a new
cessation of
hostilities,
we have
continued to
press for
commitment to
the
De-Escalation
and
Coordination
Committee
(DCC), and a
range of
economic
initiatives
(especially in
relation to
the Central
Bank's
independence
and the
reactivation
of the Social
Welfare Fund).
In my
meeting with
the GoY
delegation, I
continued to
impress upon
them the
importance of
participation
of the GoY in
the DCC, and
to training
which we are
planning to
organize in
Amman during
the coming
weeks. The UK
Ambassador
informed me
that Foreign
Minister and
Head of GoY
delegation
AbdelMalik El
Mikhalfi today
had responded
positively to
his
suggestion.
There
are been
positive
developments
on economic
initiatives
which I have
supported as
well. Foreign
Minister
Mikhalfi
participated
in the Central
Bank board
meeting last
week in Amman
together with
the Minister
for Finance
and the CB
Governor.
DPM/MoFA
Mikhalfi
acknowledged
that
significance
of the
Governor's
attendance
from Sanaa and
was very
grateful for
my personal
efforts to
secure his
participation
with the
Houthis, which
was seen by
the GoY as an
important
confidence
building
measure.
Mikhalfi
agreed on the
necessity of
developing
further
economic
initiatives
including the
support for
the SWF and
SFD. My office
is working
with the UNCT,
World Bank and
IMF in order
to ensure a
sufficient
level of
technical
support for
these
proposals.
I
am now in
Nouakchott for
4 days where I
need to renew
my G4 visa and
will proceed
to New York on
16 February
ahead of the
SC briefing. I
intend to
remain in NYC
until 22
February in
order to meet
with key
Member States
and HQ
officials. I
plan to also
travel to
Washington DC
19 February
and hold
meetings
there. I look
forward to
seeing you in
New York in a
few days.
Best regards,
Ismail."
The above
email was sent
on February 11
and
contradicts
what Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
told the
Security
Council;
meanwhile
Saudi Arabia's
Ambassador to
the UN told
the press on
March 4 that
envoy IOCA
does NOT want
a humanitarian
access
resolution.
In
the UN
Security
Council on the
Yemen
sanctions
resolution
adopted on
February 24,
language was
added to try
to discourage
the Panel of
Experts from
looking into
the act of the
Saudi-led
Coalition.
Concessions
were made, of
a kind not
made for or
about other
countries
under
sanctions.
(Inner City
Press had to
follow the
process from
outside the
UN, literally,
the park on
43rd Street
across First
Avenue,
because only
days after
Inner City
Press asked
why the UN was
so quiet about
false
claims of
Iranian
military
equipment
in a UN WFP
aid ship,
Inner City
Press was
summarily
thrown out of
the UN for
seeking three
weeks earlier
to cover an
event in the
UN Press
Briefing Room,
and Banned,
without due
process. Petition
here.)
On March 4 in
the same UN
Press Briefing
Room, Saudi
Ambassador to
the UN
Abdallah Y.
Al-Mouallimi
held an
unscheduled
press
conference to
announce that
OCHA, whose
Yemen pick up
the pieces
campaign Saudi
Arabia largely
funds, does
not think
there's a need
for a
humanitarian
access
resolution. If
true, some
will say that
OCHA has been
bought.
Inner
City Press
asked
al-Mouallimi
why his Yemeni
counterpart
had claimed to
Inner City
Press, on the
record, that
the WFP ship
the Saudis
seized
contained
"Iranian
military
equipment"?
Al-Mouallimi
said, among
other things,
the ship DID
come from
Iran... and
the equipment
wasn't on the
manifest and
was "hidden."
Inner
City Press
asked him
about cluster
bomb use; he
denied it and
many media
printed that
quote, without
more. Inner
City Press
asked him, if
opposed to the
UN Panel of
Experts
looking into
the impacts of
the Saudi
Coalition, who
should do it?
This was not
answered,
except to
again
emphasize how
tied the PoE
is to the
underlying,
one-sided
resolution.
At
the end, Inner
City Press
asked
Mouallimi to
encourage the
Yemen / Hadi
delegation to
hold its press
session in
this same UN
Press Briefing
Room, and not
for Gulf and
Western UNCA
scribes only,
a spoonfed
breakfast,
see below.
Al-Mouallimi
said he would
convey the
request. We'll
see.
On
March 1, back
in on a
reduced access
pass, Inner
City Press
asked UN OCHA
official John
Ging about
taking "aid"
money from
Saudi Arabia
while it
blasts away at
Yemen. Video
here.
Ging
said these two
are "ring
fenced," and
that the UN
doesn't allow
Saudi Arabia
to put
conditions on
aid or where
it is
delivered.
Inner
City Press
asked, what
about the
Saudi threat
that aid
workers should
leave
Houthi-controlled
areas? Ging
said the UN
had pushed
back.
But
quietly, as
was the case
with the Saudi
diversion of
the WFP ship.
Does money
talk?
Apparently
yes.
On
March 3, Inner
City Press
asked UN
Deputy
Spokesperson
Farhan Haq
about
something
Ging's boss
Stephen
O'Brien had
just said (video link here)
The Yemen
"government,"
which under UN
rules could
hold a press
conference for
all
journalists in
the UN Press
Briefing Room,
has instead
chosen to
invited only
members of the
Gulf and
Western media
dominated UN
Correspondents
Association to
a spin
session. We've
put the leaked
invitation
online here;
here's some of
the text:
Dear
Colleagues,
UNCA is
extending an
invitation
sent from the
Permanent
Mission of the
Republic of
Yemen, to a
light
breakfast
briefing with
a public
diplomacy
delegation on
their visit to
New York to
discuss the
current
political
situation in
Yemen, on
Tuesday, March
8th at 9:00am
at the mission
(413 East 51st
street).
Please see the
attached
invitation to
RSVP.
Giampaolo
Pioli, UNCA
President
The
focus of the
annexed
invitation is
on "IHL and
HRL violations
of the Houthi
- Saleh
rebels." This
is UNCA: this
is how the UN
works, or
doesn't. (The
spoonfed Hadi
breakfast was
later
canceled, or
"postponed.")
On
March 3, Inner
City Press
asked UN
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq why
UN OCHA
official
Stephen
O'Brien said
he was
"pleased" when
Saudi Arabia,
which funds
O'Brien's
Yemen appeal,
continues to
hold the UN's
"humanitarian
IT equipment"
at least under
March 6, after
Yemen's
Ambassador -
sure to be
present at the
spoon-fed
breakfast for
UNCA - said
was Iranian
military
equipment.
On
February 28,
Ban Ki-moon
but not his
invisible
envoy issued a
canned
statement
about the
previous day's
airstrike:
"The
Secretary-General...
calls for a
prompt and
impartial
investigation
of this
incident."
Ban's call for
an impartial
investigation
rings hollow,
when he has
allowed his
Under
Secretary
General for
Public
Information
Cristina
Gallach to
oust Inner
City Press,
which reports
on Yemen,
based on an
"investigation"
which never
even SPOKE to
Inner City
Press. This
incongruity,
and its
consequences,
has been
raised
directly to
Ban and his
most senior
advisers.
Impartial?
On February
16, Inner City
Press asked
the President
of the UN
Security
Council for
February,
Rafael Ramirez
of Venezuela,
about what
OCHA said in
the Council,
that the
Saudi-led
coalition
diverted a UN
World Food
Program ship,
the MV
Mainport
Cedar, from
Hodeidah to
the Saudi port
of Jizan.
Ramirez said
this had been
discussed and
that the UN's
Stephen
O'Brien is
trying to
clarify it.
On February
17, before the
Security
Council heard
from UN enovy
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed,
Inner City
Press asked
Yemen's stated
Permanent
Representative
to the UN
Khaled
Alyemany about
the WFP ship.
Alyemany said
that that ship
had been found
to have
Iranian
military
equipment. Video here.
And
so on February
18, Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, UN transcript
here.
And
now this -
Inner City
Press is
informed that
the Saudi-led
Coalition hit
with a missile
the UN's own
UNFPA
compound. The
UN should have
complained and
gone public,
but didn't.
Why not?
Because the UN
envoy IOCA has
been told to
stay away
while Saudi
Arabia bombs.
How's that
working out?
In the
talks in
Switzerland,
despite the
happy-talk Note to
Correspondents
issued on
December 20,
UN envoy
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
was repeatedly
accused of
merely
operating “for
the Saudis,”
while the
Saudi-led
coalition took
more military
action.
Inner City
Press on
December 20
reported that
the
UN-facilitated
talks have
been such a
failure that
there is
already a
clamor to
replace Ismail
Ould Cheikh
Ahmed. Sources
exclusively
tell Inner
City Press
that among the
names being
mulled is
Germany's
Bettina
Muscheidt, the
European
Union's
Ambassador to
Yemen.
UN
insiders point
to Germany
having lost a
UN post when
Kim Won-soo
replaced
Angela Kane as
Under
Secretary
General for
Disarmament
Affairs. Achim
Steiner was
passed over
for the UN
High
Commissioner
for Refugees
post, in favor
of Italy's
Grandi.
Germany
already "got"
Libya with
Martin Kobler
- why not
Yemen too?
Previously:
Inner City
Press obtained
UN envoy
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed's
documents for
the delayed
talks in
Switzerland,
and
exclusively put
them online
here.
Inner
City Press previously
reported
on and
published the
Houthis'
letter denouncing
UN envoy Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
as little more
than a Saudi
tool. Now it's
gotten worse:
even Kenny
Gluck who
works for the
envoy and went
to Muscat
trying to meet
the Houthis
was unable. He
waited then
returned to
Riyadh.
The envoy,
meanwhile, is
said by those
who know him
to not only be
“laughably”
cheap --
putting in for
reimbursement
for an eight
dollar taxi
ride from the
UN to a
Mission on
67th Street,
for example --
but also still
involved in
the same
business for
which Inner
City Press
previously
dubbed him
“the
Fisherman” or
the “Fishy
Envoy.”
He has
traveled on
the UN's funds
to Dubai,
claiming he
would meet the
Houthis there.
Not only will
the Houthis
not meet with
him -- even if
they would,
they would not
be found in
Dubai, given
that the UAE
is part of the
coalition. In
any event, Abu
Dhabi is the
capital, not
Dubai. There
is
something...
fishy.
Now we can
report what UN
sources say
are dates of
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed's
travel to
Dubai: May 11;
June 3 and
June 5; August
1 and August
4; September
12-15; October
9-11; October
26; November
4; and
prospectively
November 10
and November
12.
What
are Ismail
Ould Cheikh
Ahmed's trips
to Dubai for?
Given the
UAE's offer to
UN Envoy
Bernarndino
Leon, while he
was UN Envoy
to Libya, this
question must
be answered.
On October
26 Inner
City Press reported
that its
sources
exclusively
told it of
a new low,
that the UN
brought into
Sana'a what
the Houthis
call two
members of US
intelligence,
with the cover
identification
that they work
for the
company
running the
former hotel
now occupied
by the UN.
But, the
sources say,
security in
Sana'a
recognized the
two and they
are now
detained.
On October 30,
Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
it, video
here, transcript here
and below.
Dujarric
acknowledged
he knew about
two
"contractors."
Meanwhile
on November 2
the US
Statement
Department was
referring
questions to
this
UNresponsive
UN: "We’re
aware of those
reports. Due
to privacy
considerations,
I’m not going
to comment on
them...
I would direct
your questions
to the UN."
After Inner
City Press'
October 26
report and
October 30
noon briefing
questions, on
October 31
Reuters "reported"
a piece citing
an unnamed UN
spokesperson
about two
"contractors,"
with no
mention of the
Houthis claim
they work with
US
intelligence,
which by now
had also been
reported,
along with
Inner City
Press' October
30 Q&A
with Dujarric,
by Al-Akhbar.
But it's
worse. Reuters
initially
(mis) reported
that "'Two
contractors
have been
detained and
the Deputy
Secretary-General
(Jan Eliasson)
is looking
into it,' a
U.N. spokesman
said without
elaborating or
confirming if
the two were
American
citizens."
Then a day
after that,
Reuters blamed
the UN for its
correction to
"'Two
contractors
have been
detained and
DSS
(Department of
Safety and
Security) is
looking into
it,' said a
U.N.
spokesman."
Meanwhile the
Houthis are
denouncing UN
envoy Ismail
Ould Cheikh
Ahmad and his
(mis)
representation
to the
Security
Council
regarding what
they agreed
to. This has
happened
before and the
goal seems to
be delay to
allow for more
air strikes.
There's work
of
mercenaries,
in essence,
including from
Colombia in
Aden, joining
the troops
from
ICC-indicted
Sudan.
A
new level of
dysfunction
was hit with
the deployment
in Aden of
hundreds of
troops from
Sudan, putting
ICC-indicted
Omar al-Bashir
on the same
side as the US
and UK. (Inner
City Press is
exclusively
informed that
"UN" envoy
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
is working on
a similar
Saudi deal
with his
native
Mauritania,
see below.)
On September
10, Inner City
Press asked UK
Ambassador
Matthew
Rycroft if the
UK had met
with the
Houthis and
GPC in Muscat,
without the UN
Envoy present.
Video
here.
Meanwhile
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
says the same
parties will
now meet with
him. Replay?
On September
9, Inner City
Press asked UN
Deputy
Spokesperson
Farhan Haq, video here, transcript
here.
On
August 12,
Inner City
Press asked
Yemen
Permanent
Representative,
outside the
Council
meeting,
questions
ranging from
the
destruction of
schools and
health care
facilities in
Sa'ada by
Saudi
airstrikes to
when,
according to
him, the
Houthis might
be "driven"
out of Sa'ana.
Video
here. He
said in a few
weeks - and
added that the
Oman talks
were "not UN."
So
how then might
the parties
negotiate? UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric said
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
was headed
back to
Riyadh. That
seems to be
his base,
where he works
from - and
for? Watch
this site.
After
publishing its
multi-sourced
story, Inner
City Press on
July 22 asked
the UN's
Associate
Spokesperson
about new APC
and weapons in
Aden, and if
Ismail Ould
Cheikh Ahmed
is on
vacation. Video here. She replied that she
would check -
but did not
revert with
any response
either way.
So on July 23,
amid reports
that without
Cheikh Ahmed
or any UN
presence talks
were occurring
about Yemen in
Cairo, Inner
City Press
asked,
here.
On
June 25, Inner
City Press
asked new UN
aid chief
Stephen
O'Brien three
questions
about Yemen:
cholera, the
destruction of
ambulances in
Sa'ada and
about
international
staff. Video
here.
O'Brien
replied that
cholera is a
risk; he had
no information
on WHO it was
that destroyed
the ambulances
in Sa'ada (we
can guess.) On
international
staff, which
the UN
evacuated
earlier, he
spoke of a
rise from 17
to 70, with
the goal of
getting to
200. He would
not say if
they are
anywhere in
the country
outside of
Sana'a, citing
security. But
at least he
spoke - the Free UN Coalition for Access thanked
him.