On
Yemen, UNSC Meets But No
Word on Saudi Rights
Violations, UN Won't Answer on
UK FOIA
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
January 26 – After another
Saudi-led Coalition bombing of
a school in Yemen, Inner City
Press on January 12 asked
Ambassador Matthew Rycroft of
the UK, the penholder on Yemen
in the UN Security Council,
what the Council intends to
do. Video
here (with Sweden's
Ambassador Olof Skoog), UK
transcript below.
After the
Security Council met about
Yemen for the first time in
three months on January 26,
Inner City Press asked Council
President Skoog if in the
closed door consultation human
rights violations in the
Saudi-led Coalition's bombing
had been discussed. Not really,
it seems. How is that
possible? Tweeted
video here.
At the January
26 UN noon briefing, Inner
City Press asked former
Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon's holdover spokesman
Stephane Dujarric what Ban had
done, after he took the Saudi-led
Coalition off the UN's
Children and Armed Conflict
annex for Yemen. UN
transcript here:
Inner City Press:
on Yemen, a freedom of
information request has found
that the UK Ministry of
Defense is tracking over 250
allegations of humanitarian
law violations by the
Saudi-led coalition.
Since Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon, when he took them off
the list, said that this
process would continue in
communications with the
Saudis, number one, has this
process involved getting
information from other Member
States that are themselves,
because they sell arms to
Saudi Arabia, tracking
them? And, two, what…
what did the Secretary-General
do between when he said that
he was going to continue to
look at this and the day that
he left? Was…
Spokesman: I think when…
I said as soon as I have more
to add on this process, I will
do so.
Inner City Press: But
does the process involve
specifically asking the UK for
this…?
Spokesman: I can't
answer to the details of that.
From the
January 12 UK transcript:
Inner City Press:
On Yemen, the president just
said that they are looking for
a date, and you know this
school was bombed, what’s the
plan of the Council this month
as pen holder to actually have
a meeting or have the envoy
come. What’s happening?
Amb Rycroft:
Well, we are very keen to hear
back from Ismail Ould Ahmed.
He has our full support. As
you know, there is a draft
Security Council Resolution,
which we have drafted which is
sort of out there hovering
over the process and we are
very much in Ismail’s hands in
terms of whether and when it
would be useful to progress
that further here.
Because
essentially what that does is
to get the whole of the
Security Council behind his
roadmap and to push the
parties into a meaningful,
political process.
We haven’t got
that at the moment. There’s a
lot of diplomacy going on
behind the scenes, but what we
don’t have is a really
positive political process
leading towards a political
settlement. And I think all of
us around the Security Council
table, whatever our views on
the ins and outs of the
conflict, we are at least
united on that issue that
there must be a political
settlement.
Meanwhile it seems the UN
envoy Ismael Ould Cheikh
Ahmed, trying to stay in the
job, may brief the Security
Council on January 25.
New UN Secretary General Antonio
Guterres has taken over from Ban
Ki-moon, who left amid
indictment of his brother and
nephew for UN-related
corruption, and failures in
Yemen including selling out to
the Saudis.
Inner
City Press asked Guterres about
Yemen at his first stakeout; he
said he'd be an honest broker.
Will he be, more
than in the UN press corps
today?
Ali
Saleh has written to Guterres, see
here, citing previous
meeting and asking to stop the
war and the killing. We'll have
more on this.
On
December 20 Inner City Press
asked UK Ambassador Matthew
Rycroft about Saudi Arabia's use
of UK cluster bombs. Tweeted
video here and hindered
production note.
Inner
City Press first
published the UK
draft resolution,
as credited by
Associated
Press, via Salon, Daily
Mail (UK), Fox
News
***
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
UN Office: S-303,
UN, NY 10017 USA
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other,
earlier Inner City Press are listed here, and some are available in
the ProQuest service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright
2006-2015 Inner City Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
for
|