By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, January 28 -- The UN abruptly announced the cancellation in Addis Ababa of the Eastern Congo "peace enforcement" deal it promoted anonymously to select media in New York on January 25.
South Africa's Defense Minister criticized the UN for being "top down" and not coordinating in the region. The "anonymous" UN official responsible for this failure and mis-direction is surely happy not to be named. But why did some media agree?
On January 25 Reuters from the UN in New York ran a quote that "'It is not simply peacekeeping, this is peace enforcement. It's a much more robust stance,' said the official, who declined to be named."
Inner City Press asked on January 26: why did Reuters accept this request for anonymity from a UN official on a concept -- "peace enforcement" -- that not all UN member states, particularly troop contributing countries, have agreed to?
And where's the accountability now? Reuters story on the promoted deal's failure doesn't use or mention the January 25 blind quote, or even use the term peace "enforcement."
Agence France Presse went further, or lower, allowing a "second UN official" to also go unnamed.
But AFP now names the associate spokesperson who announced the failure of the deal half an hour before it was to be signed.
But AFP now names the associate spokesperson who announced the failure of the deal half an hour before it was to be signed.
What are AFP's policies for allowing anonymous declarations of war by the UN, which is ostensibly controlled by the member states who now say they were not consulted?
What are Reuters' policies on granting anonymity in cases like this for Reuters editors like Stephen J. Adler, Walden Siew, and Paul Ingrassia, for Agence France Presse, for BBC?
After the UN failed in the Democratic Republic of Congo to protect civilians first in Goma then in Minova, where the DRC Army raped at least 126 women in late November 2012, a reserve spin war began.
UN Peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous refused to answer Press questions about the Minova rapes, instead taking favored and compliant media out into the hall for a private briefing. Video here. These media included Reuters, Agence France-Presse and Voice of America.
Now it's gotten worse. On January 25, 2013 AFP, Reuters and the BBCat the UN allowed an "unnamed UN official" to essentially declare war in the Congo.
Why grant anonymity? Is this a whistleblower? Or a failing UN official?
On the media, what are the policies on granting anonymity in cases like this for Reuters editors like Stephen J. Adler, Walden Siew, and Paul Ingrassia, for Agence France Presse, for BBC?
BBC had the same blind quotes, without explaining or even mentioning that the UN official declined to be named.
In terms of the UN, isn't this "inter-governmental organization" owned and supposedly by its member states? Many of them, particularly troop contributing countries, have not agreed to Ladsous' "peace enforcement" push, nor in the C-34 committee on peacekeeping have they signed off on his proposal to use drones.
But Ladsous, Inner City Press reported on January 25, ran a procurement for drones from November 28, 2012 to January 11, 2013, before he had any approval at all.
Here's the inital video #LADSOUS2013, soft launched January 27.
What right do high UN official have to declare war anonymously? And why do AFP, Reuters and the BBC serve as pass throughs in this way?
Of note in this is the role of the decaying UN Correspondents Association. When Ladsous became the last minute replacement for Jerome Bonnafont as France's official to succeed their own Alain Le Roy atop UN Peacekeeping and Inner City Press reported it, AFP's Tim Witcher launched a process in UNCA to "take action" against Inner City Press.
He, the BBC reporter and Reuters are all on the Executive Committee on UNCA, two elected without any competition after their terms expired.
Ultimately he and Louis Charbonneau of Reuters supported Voice of America's June 20, 2012 request to the UN that Inner City Pressaccreditation be "reviewed."
This led the New York Civil Liberties Union to ask public questionsabout due process for independent journalists at the UN, questions that the UN has yet to answer.
Then in December 2012 when Ladsous went so far as to have his spokesman seize the UNTV microphone so Inner City Press could not ask Ladsous a question about the now 126 rapes in Minova by the UN's partners in the Congolese Army, UNCA did nothing. Video here.
UN official Stephane Dujarric claims he told Ladsous' spokesman not to do it again -- but never told anyone until a January 17 meeting when he and another UN official, Peter Launsky-Tieffenthal (we name officials) were Pressed by the new Free UN Coalition for Access, FUNCA, on the UN's further decline in transparency.
But now this UN machinery and its servile press allow a UN official to declare war anonymously. A new low has been reached. Could they go lower? Watch this site.
Footnote: Another UN official in the mix is Susana Malcorra, sent to the region as the Personal Envoy of Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. But Malcorra promised to be more transparent, after defending the UN's blacking out of material about war crimes. We'll see.