On
Yemen As UNSG
Guterres Fawns
Over MBS New War
Powers Move
Made By US
Senators
By Matthew
Russell Lee, CJR PFT NY
Post List
UNITED NATIONS
GATE, January 30 – UN
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres on March
27 lavished
praised on
Saudi Crown
Prince
Mohammed bin
Salman now accused
with respect to
Jamal Khashoggi,
accepting
a $930 million
check from the
Saudis and UAE,
with not a
word of the
Saudi led
bombing
campaign that
has killed
civilians and
caused cholera
in Yemen. Now on
January 29 not
Guterres'
murky UN but
the Saudi
Press Agency
announced that
“The
Secretary-General
of the United
Nations
expressed his
gratitude for
the Kingdom’s
support in
pushing for
positive
results in the
dialogue
between the
Yemeni parties."
Meanwhile,
from Washington
DC on January
30, the
day after Sen
Jeff Merkley
against raised
the Saudis'
activities in
Oregon,
this:
"Sens.
Bernie Sanders
(I-Vt.), Mike
Lee (R-Utah)
and Chris
Murphy
(D-Conn.) and
Reps. Ro
Khanna
(D-Calif.),
Mark Pocan
(D-Wis.) and
Pramila
Jayapal
(D-Wash.)
renewed their
efforts in the
Senate and
House
Wednesday to
end U.S.
support for
the Saudi-led
war in Yemen
pursuant to
the War Powers
Resolution.
As a result of
the Saudi-led
war, 14
million
Yemenis are at
risk of
starvation and
some 85,000
children have
already
starved to
death.
The Senate
passed the war
powers
resolution
last Congress
in an historic
vote, but the
bill did not
receive a vote
in the House.
Khanna and
Pocan’s new
push has the
backing of
House
leadership,
and the
resolution is
expected to
come up for a
vote in
February.
“With the
first-ever
passage of a
War Powers
Resolution
last month,
the United
States Senate
said in no
uncertain
terms that we
will not
continue to
have our
military
posture
dictated by a
despotic,
murderous
regime in
Saudi Arabia.
We look
forward to
quickly
passing this
resolution to
end U.S.
support for
the Saudi-led
war in Yemen.
We are going
to send a
strong signal
to the
president that
the U.S.
Congress is
prepared to
play the role
designed for
us by the
framers of the
Constitution,”
Sanders
said.
“The Founders
specifically
gave Congress
– the branch
closest to the
people – the
power to
declare war.
Yet we’ve been
participating
in war actions
in the Yemeni
Civil War
since 2015
without the
go-ahead from
Congress. It
was
unconstitutional
then, and it’s
unconstitutional
now. Today we
are
reintroducing
the same
resolution
this body
passed just
last month and
we look
forward to
swift action
here in the
Senate and the
House,” Lee
said.
“For years, I
have been
sounding the
alarm about
the disastrous
U.S.
involvement in
the civil war
in Yemen. Late
last year,
Democrats and
Republicans in
the Senate
woke up and
came together
to pass our
War Powers
Resolution. We
sent a strong
message to
Saudi Arabia
that they can
no longer
expect a blank
check from the
United States.
With the new
Democratic
majority in
the House, I
am optimistic
that Congress
will once
again sound
the alarm over
the atrocities
committed in
Yemen and end
U.S. support
for the
Saudi-led
coalition that
is killing
thousands of
civilians,
blocking
humanitarian
aid, and
arming radical
militias,”
Murphy
said.
“The
U.S.-Saudi
military
campaign in
Yemen has
triggered the
world’s worst
humanitarian
crisis. More
than 14
million
Yemenis—half
the
country—are on
the brink of
famine, and at
least 85,000
children have
already died
from hunger
and disease as
a result of
the war. I’m
proud to
partner with
colleagues and
work to end
U.S. military
participation
in the Saudi
regime’s war
in Yemen by
reasserting
Congress’
constitutional
role on
matters of war
and peace. I
am confident
this will pass
in the House
when brought
for a vote,”
Khanna
said.
“As the
Saudi-led
coalition
continues to
use famine as
a weapon of
war, starving
millions of
innocent
Yemenis to
near death,
the United
States is
actively
participating
in the
regime’s
military
campaign,
providing
targeting and
logistical
assistance for
Saudi
airstrikes.
For far too
long, Congress
has refused to
carry out its
constitutional
responsibility
to make
decisions
regarding
military
engagement—we
can longer
stay silent on
matters of war
and peace. I’m
grateful to my
colleagues for
joining us in
introducing
this
resolution,
and for House
Leadership’s
commitment to
removing U.S.
forces from
this senseless
conflict and
bringing the
world’s worst
humanitarian
crisis to a
swift end,”
Pocan
said.
“The conflict
in Yemen has
gone on for
far too long,
leaving a
permanent
stain on the
conscience of
the world,”
said Speaker
Nancy
Pelosi.
“Congress has
the
responsibility
to provide
oversight of
America’s use
of military
force and
support to
international
conflicts.
Chairman Adam
Smith and
Congressman Ro
Khanna are to
be commended
for their
leadership in
introducing
this
resolution to
limit U.S.
engagement in
the war in
Yemen.
The United
States must
also work to
advance a
peaceful,
enduring
political
solution to
the conflict
and end the
humanitarian
crisis.”
“The Yemeni
people are
facing the
world’s worst
humanitarian
catastrophe
that has been
exacerbated by
the ongoing
civil war.
Instead of
choosing sides
in this
conflict, the
U.S. must be
squarely
focused on
urging a
peaceful
resolution and
alleviating
the
humanitarian
crisis. I am
proud to join
colleagues in
supporting
this
resolution to
send a strong
message that
oversight
regarding
Yemen is a key
priority this
Congress,”
said Rep. Adam
Smith
(D-Wash.),
chair of the
House Armed
Services
Committee." Watch
this site.
When
Guterres named
Patrick
Cammaert to
head to Hodeidah as
Coordinator, Inner
City Press
which Guterres
has banned for
204 days and
counting amid
its reporting
quickly noted
how Cammaert had
done a cover
up for the UN
in South
Sudan, omitting
its role as
journalist
John Gatluak
was murdered
in
Terrain Hotel,
and had not
been viewed as
credible for
that reason.
Now, confirmed
in a January
28 letter from
Guterres who
couldn't
even be bothered
to leave his
mention
Saturday
morning for
the "urgent"
UNSC meeting
on Venezuela,
Cammaert is on
his way out,
to be replaced
by Denmark's Michael
Lollesgaard,
who ran
MINUSMA in
2015 and 2016.
Will
he be more
credible? Among
the insiders
there is
virtue signaling
about
crediting a
Saudi
mouthpiece - sleazy
Reuters
doesn't even
do this - while the
UN services
them all to
not mention
the failure of
Guterres, his
censorship and
corruption. On
December 21 the
UN Security
Council
approved 15-0
a stripped
down Yemen
resolution.
Inner City
Press put it
online here
on
Scribd.
Guterres
proposed and
has now on
January 16
gotten rubber
stamped 15-0
in the
Security
Council
(resolution here)
sending and
spending on a
"nimble"
75-monitor
team to Yemen,
saying it
would include
"appropriate
resources and
assets will
also be
required to
ensure the
safety and
security of
U.N.
personnel,
including
armored
vehicles,
communications
infrastructure,
aircraft and
appropriate
medical
support."
Sound good -
until you
consider that,
as Inner City
Press has exclusively
reported,
Guterres' UN
relocated UN
staff out of
Somalia after
a single
attack on its
compound in
Mogadishu, see here.
Before
the January 16
vote, UK
Ambassador Karen
Pierce
stopped at the
stakeout to
service the
correspondents
NOT thrown out
by Guterres
and his UK
Global Censor
Alison Smale.
Pierce in
essence
trolled the
Houthis, citing
provocative
actions by one
parties.
Surely she
wasn't
referring to
Saudi Arabia
to which the
UK sells so
many weapons,
while the
UK mission is
withholding
most records Inner
City Press
requested
under FOIA
about Yemen,
ALL records
about Cameroon
and the
mission's role
in Smale's
ghoulish lifetime
ban on Inner
City Press. The
head of the
putative UHMHA
mission,
Patrick
Cammaert, is
already being
rejected by
one of the
parties. It's
no surprise -
Cammaert
for example
functioned as
a cover up man
in South
Sudan,
concealing the
UN's failure in the
Terrain Hotel
including
inaction on
the murder of
journalist
John Gatluak.
So on January 16
the Security
Council will
authorize 75
monitors, but
with the UN's
current mis-management under
Guterres, who
is also a
censor, the
outcome in not
only unsure,
but not in
good faith.
It's a shame, this
UNMHA
for an initial
period of six
months with
the following
four-point
mandate:
to lead, and
support the
functioning
of, the RCC,
assisted by a
secretariat
staffed by UN
personnel, to
oversee the
governorate-wide
ceasefire,
redeployment
of forces, and
mine action
operations; to
monitor the
compliance of
the parties to
the ceasefire
in Hodeidah
governorate
and the mutual
redeployment
of forces from
the city of
Hodeidah and
the ports of
Hodeidah,
Salif and Ras
Issa; to work
with the
parties so
that the
security of
the city of
Hodeidah and
the ports of
Hodeidah,
Salif, and Ras
Issa is
assured by
local security
forces in
accordance
with Yemeni
law; and to
facilitate and
coordinate UN
support to
assist the
parties to
fully
implement the
Hodediah
Agreement.
UNMHA will
report to the
Secretary-General
through the
Special Envoy
of the
Secretary-General
on Yemen and
the
Under-Secretary-General
for Political
and
Peacebuilding
Affairs - that
is, Lacroix
whose
peacekeepers
in CAR hauled
casualties
on which the
UN refuses to
answer.... On
January
9 before
the UN
Security
Council met, at
the UN gate,
banned Inner
City Press
asked the UK's
Stephen
Hickey where
the monitors would come
from and he
politely
answers....
"we're working on
it."
Covering
of the
meeting was
hindered by
the broken
"Audio
Now" link
(not)
maintained by
the UN
Department of
Global
Communications
under Alison
Smale; Inner
City Press uploaded
the statement
of envoy
Martin
Griffiths.
After a closed
door session UK
Permanent
Representative
Karen Pierce told
correspondents
whom Guterres and
Smale have NOT
banned
that Cammaert
said the
amount of
armor needed
depended on
the tasks the
monitors due
and that the
draft would be
circulated
"shortly" to
non P3 members
who she
expects to
quickly
approve the
technical
resolution.
We'll see -
what this site. Inner
City Press
asked, in
writing,
"January 9-4:
On Yemen,
please state
where the 75
monitors
proposed by
the SG would
come from -
other
missions? and
whether there
are any
Program Budget
Implications."
There's been
no answer,
despite the promise
of Alison Smale
to UNSR David
Kaye there
would be
answers. Is it
any wonder
today's UN
solves so few
problems,
while creating
more, when it
is so corrupt
and unresponsive,
unaccountable? There's
been a
detailed NYT report
of how
Guterres'
smiling Saudi
friends used
child soldiers
(paid through
Faisal Islamic
Bank of Sudan,
partly owned
by Saudis) from
Darfur
in Sudan,
where Guterres remains
quiet on Omar
al Bashir's
crackdown on
the protests
against
him. Inner
City Press has
previously
reported on
the UN's
fraudulent use
of the Bank of
Khartoum. The
UN cannot be
believed. On
20 December
2018, banned
Inner City
Press asked
Guterres and
his spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric and
Farhan Haq,
"December
20-2: On
Sudan, what is
the SG's
comment and
action on the
anti-government
protests that
started on
Wednesday in
northern Sudan
and have been
spreading to
other cities?"
Even now with
more
journalists
arrested in
Sudan, for
example Ahmed
Younes from
Al-Sharq
Alowsat
newspaper and
Maha Al-Tilib
from Attayar
newspaper,
both just for
reporting on
the protests
in Wad Nubawi,
Omdurman,
there has been
no answer at
all for eight
days, nor to
46 other
questions
Inner City
Press has
submitted
including on conflicts
of interest
by Guterres.
It turns out
the UN has
become so
corrupt under
Guterres that
one of lead
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric's
Associate
Spokespeople Ms Keishamaza
Rukikaire who
actually seems
to care or at
least re-tweet
about Sudan
has been
ordered not to
answer banned
Inner City
Press' written
questions
about Sudan,
etc, see here.
At
the cusp of
December 29 to
30 the UN sent
out this: "The
opening of the
Hudaydah–Sana’a
highway as a
humanitarian
corridor to
deliver
humanitarian
assistance, as
agreed during
the first
Joint meeting
of the
Redeployment
Coordination
Committee, did
not take place
today [29
December]. In
a meeting with
Houthi
representatives
to the RCC at
the Hudaydah
port, the UN
appointed
Chairman of
the RCC,
General
Cammaert,
expressed his
disappointment
at their
missed
opportunity to
build
confidence
between the
parties.
While at the
port, the
Houthi
representatives
of the RCC
informed the
Chair of
redeployment
measures at
the port. He
welcomed the
effort to
start
implementation
of the
Stockholm
Agreement.
However, he
noted that
implementation
of
confidence-building
measures and
the Agreement
should be
concurrent and
emphasized
that any
redeployment
would only be
credible if
all parties
and the United
Nations are
able to
observe and
verify that it
is in line
with the
Stockholm
Agreement.
The Chairman
intends to
convene on 1
January 2019,
the next
meeting of the
RCC to discuss
the
redeployment
plans of the
parties and
the liaison,
monitoring and
coordination
mechanism that
will be
required to
monitor the
ceasefire and
ensure that
credible
redeployment
is achieved.
Stephane
Dujarric
Spokesman for
the
Secretary-General
New York, 29
December 2018"
On 20 December
2018, banned
Inner City
Press asked
Guterres and
his spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric and
Farhan Haq,
"December
20-2: On
Sudan, what is
the SG's
comment and
action on the
anti-government
protests that
started on
Wednesday in
northern Sudan
and have been
spreading to
other cities?"
Even now with
more
journalists
arrested in
Sudan, for
example Ahmed
Younes from
Al-Sharq
Alowsat
newspaper and
Maha Al-Tilib
from Attayar
newspaper,
both just for
reporting on
the protests
in Wad Nubawi,
Omdurman,
there has been
no answer at
all for eight
days, nor to
46 other
questions
Inner City
Press has
submitted
including on conflicts
of interest
by Guterres.
It turns out
the UN has
become so
corrupt under
Guterres that
one of lead
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric's
Associate
Spokespeople Ms
Keishamaza Rukikaire who
actually seems
to care or at
least re-tweet
about Sudan
has been
ordered not to
answer banned
Inner City
Press' written
questions
about Sudan,
etc, see here.
On
December
26, after
asking Guterres
seemingly also
absentee
Spokesman
Stephane Dujarric
why even
the day's UN "highlights"
were not online as
of 12:07 pm,
Inner City
Press in
writing asked:
"December
26-4: On
Yemen, what is
the SG's
knowledge of,
comment and
action on
report that
clashes
erupted
Wednesday (Dec
26) in Yemen's
Hodeida. The
sound of heavy
artillery
could be heard
to the east of
the Red Sea
city, with
clashes
stopping after
a few hours.
An official
for the
Saudi-led
alliance said
on Tuesday
that 10
pro-government
troops have
been killed
since the
ceasefire went
into force,
accusing the
Huthis of 183
violations.
The rebels, in
turn, said on
the same day
that they have
recorded at
least 31
violations in
the past 24
hours by
pro-government
troops. What
is the UN
doing?" While
still
declining to
answer any
specific Inner
City Press questions,
including about
Guterres' conflicts
of interest,
the Office of
the
Spokesperson
now past
noon on December
28 has put
online this: "The
first Joint
meeting of the
Redeployment
Coordination
Committee
convened in
Hudaydah City,
from 26 to 28
December 2018.
The committee
discussed the
first phase of
the
implementation
of the
Stockholm
Agreement
which is based
on three
priority
areas:
Ceasefire;
confidence
building
measures to
deliver
Humanitarian
Assistance;
and
redeployment.
The three-day
meeting was
carried out in
a constructive
and cordial
manner and the
Chair
commended the
parties for
the goodwill
demonstrated
to implement
the Stockholm
agreement.
The parties
are now
preparing to
provide the
Chair with
detailed plans
for full
redeployment
which will be
discussed at
the next
meeting of the
RCC, scheduled
for 1 January
2019, in
Hudaydah. In
the meantime,
the
implementation
of the terms
of the
Stockholm
Agreement are
ongoing.
In the
interim, as a
confidence
building
measure, the
parties have
agreed to
begin opening
blocked
humanitarian
corridors,
starting with
the
Hudaydah-Sana’a
Road, followed
by other
routes, in a
phased manner.
A humanitarian
convoy is
expected to
move from the
Hudaydah port
along the
Hudaydah-Sana’a
Road on 29
December.
The UN Special
Envoy for
Yemen Martin
Griffiths
today welcomed
President Abed
Rabbu Mansour
Hadi's
decision to
instruct the
payment of
salaries for
all civil
servants in
the Hodeidah
governorate,
starting this
month. The
Special Envoy
said President
Hadi's
decision is an
important step
towards
improving the
economic
situation, and
alleviating
the
humanitarian
suffering of
the Yemeni
people, adding
that he hopes
there will be
more steps in
this
direction." Inner City
Press has
also twice now
asked:
"December
24-1: Beyond
the 35
questions from
Inner City
Press you
refused to
answer last
week, still
set forth
below for
promised
answer, this
is a
reiterated
request past
deadline that
you (1) state
when SG
Guterres left
his position
on the
Gulbenkian
Foundation,
(2) state why
Gulbenkian was
not listed on
SG Guterres'
public
financial
disclosure
which covered
2016; (3)
explain how it
is not a
conflict of
interest for
SG Guterres to
have refused
to start an
audit of CEFC
in the UN, as
requested by
Inner City
Press in
January 2018,
given CEFC's
bid for the
oil business
of Gulbenkian.
Also, again,
state why
under SG
Guterres there
have been no
updates to the
UN public
financial
disclosures
since those
filed for
2016. Also,
again, explain
your refusal
to answer any
of Inner City
Press'
questions this
week despite
USG Smale's
statements to
GAP, me and
UNSR David
Kaye."
From December
23 email
without location:
"General
Patrick
Cammaert and
his advance
team arrived
in Hudaydah
this evening
(23 December).
Prior to his
arrival in the
city, he met
with the
Houthi
appointees to
the
Redeployment
Coordination
Committee in
Sana’a, where
he was
reassured of
their
commitment to
the
implementation
of the
Stockholm
agreement.
General
Cammaert is
encouraged by
the general
enthusiasm of
both sides to
get to work,
immediately.
One of the
priorities in
the coming
days will be
the
organization
of the first
joint RCC
meeting, which
is projected
for 26
December. Stéphane
Dujarric,
Spokesman for
the
Secretary-General
23 December
2018." On
December 22
from the same
spokes- / hatchetman,
still
with a dateline -
note that neither
he nor Guterres has
made
even
canned comment
on the
Saturday night
budget marathon
that Guterres
skipped but
banned Inner
City Press covered, here:
"Retired
General
Patrick
Cammaert,
Chair of the
Redeployment
Coordination
Committee
(RCC), landed
in Aden,
Yemen, this
afternoon (22
December),
where he held
a face-to-face
meeting with
the Government
of Yemen
appointees to
the RCC
mechanism.
During the
discussion,
General
Cammaert
stressed that
the success or
failure of the
Stockholm
Agreement
rested solely
with the
parties. He
urged the
Government of
Yemen and
Coalition
forces to
uphold the
ceasefire,
which came
into effect on
00:00 18
December, and
sought their
commitment and
cooperation to
secure the
unhindered
flow of
humanitarian
aid into and
across the
country as a
matter of
urgency. He
also discussed
modalities for
the convening
of the first
joint RCC
meeting in
Hudaydah or
environs as
early as 26
December.
General
Cammaert will
travel to
Sana'a
tomorrow to
meet with the
Houthi
appointees to
the RCC to
convey similar
messages,
after which he
and his team
will depart
for Hudaydah.
New
York, 22
December 2018.
New York, 22
December 2018.
Stéphane
Dujarric,
Spokesman for
the
Secretary-General."
This is the
spokesman who
did not answer
a single one
of Inner City
Press' 35 written questions
this week,
including this
one on
Guterres'
conflict(s)
of interest.
We'll have
more on
this.
after many
more deaths it
seems it will
happen
again -
Guterres' UN
is preparing to
smiling
take another
$500 million
and keeps partnering
with MBS' MiSK
Foundation. Now
with the UK
draft UN Security
Council
resolution on
Yemen stalled
like
the African
Union's,
exclusive here,
now on
whether or not
to include
Iran in
Operative
Paragraph 9 as
a violator of
the
arms embargo
- US says yes,
Russia says no
-- US
Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo met
his counterpart
from Oman on
December
19, triggering
this read out
from his
deputy
spokesperson
Robert
Palladino:
"Secretary
Michael R.
Pompeo met
today with
Omani Minister
Responsible
for Foreign
Affairs Yusuf
bin Alawi bin
Abdullah.
The Secretary
thanked the
Minister for
Oman’s
positive
engagement on
many regional
issues,
including its
role in
helping
facilitate UN
consultations
on Yemen in
Sweden.
The Secretary
and the
Minister
agreed on the
importance of
parties
building upon
momentum from
the
consultations
by
implementing
agreements,
continuing
engagement,
de-escalating
tensions, and
ceasing
ongoing
hostilities.
The Secretary
and the
Minister
underscored
their support
for UN Special
Envoy Martin
Griffiths and
the next round
of Yemen
consultations.
The Secretary
and the
Minister
discussed the
January 1
elimination of
B-1 visa
reciprocity
fees and
increased visa
validities in
A, B, and G
classifications,
which will
benefit U.S.
and Omani
travelers, and
promote trade
and
investment." UK
Foreign
Secretary
Jeremy Hunt on
December
19 bragged
to the Parliament "I
have
instructed our
mission in New
York to resume
working on our
draft
Resolution
with Security
Council
partners, with
a view to
adopting it
later this
week. We will
ask the
Security
Council to
vote on the
draft within
the next 48
hours... Britain
has been able
to play this
role because
of our network
of
friendships,
including our
partnership
with Saudi
Arabia and the
UAE, and
because we are
a country that
steps up to
its
responsibilities."
Not on FOIA -
the UK mission
has withheld from
Inner City Press
nearly all
requested
documents on
Yemen, all on
Cameroon and
on the UK
Mission's role
in UK USG
Alison Smale's
now 168 day ban
on Inner City
Press. Asking about the UK
Yemen draft at
the UN
Delegates Entrance
gate, UK
deputy
Ambassador
Jonathan Allen
refused any
answer to
Inner City
Press, as he
hand slapped
with UN
official
Mladenov. On
December 19 at
the UNSC
stakeout Smale
- and the UK?
- ban Inner
City Press
from, Allen
stopped and
serviced Gulf
media and
waved away
UNTV, a
boom-mic man
from a
previous
UN(CA) bribery
vehicle, so
that no one
else would
hear. This is
today's UK,
and UN. v. On
De
Watch this
site.scl
Mhnaer
Despite Guterres'
British envoy
Martin
Griffiths
posting that the
parties in
Sweden agreed on
"An immediate
cease-fire
shall enter
into force in
the city of
Hodeidah" and
publications
like the Los Angeles
Times reporting
it as such, the air
strikes
continue. And
not a peep out of
Guterres, on
a murky
junket
trip to
Qatar.
On December
17, Inner City
Press at the
UN Delegater Cates
Gate asked
diplomats fs
from Swedeen,
Russia and Kaaazakstan
about it.
Periscope
video here.
Later after a
noon briefing
from which
Inner City
Press wwas
banned, the UN
sent this out:
"Statement on
the
Implementation
Of The
Agreement On
The City Of
Hudayda And
Ports Of
Hudayda,
Salif, And Ras
Isa
- -
Amman 17
December 2018
- The
ceasefire in
Hudayda shall
enter into
force at 00:00
on 18 December
2018, local
time. The
Redeployment
Coordination
Committee
(RCC), the
joint
committee in
charge of
implementing
the Hudayda
Agreement, is
expected to
start its work
swiftly to
translate the
momentum built
up in Sweden
into
achievements
on the
ground." by
GuterresWe'll
see - watch
this site." say
On
December 14
Griffiths told
the UN
Security
Council that
Guterres had
success with
MBS at the G20
in Argentina; UK
Ambassador
Karen Pierce
thanked MBS by
name. Griffiths
said that long
time UN
insider
Patrick
Cammaert will
go as head of
verification.
But as Inner
City Press
reported
before
Guterres had
it roughed up
and banned,
Cammaert when
sent to investigate
the UN's
failure at the
Terrain
Hotel in South
Sudan
ignored or
covered up the
murder of
journalist
John Gatluak,
amid UN negligence.
Will it be
different
here? Guterres has
banned Inner
City Press
from entering
the UN to ask,
and his
spokesmen have not
answered any
of Inner City
Press' written
questions in
days. Today's
UN is corrupt.
***
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