Wednesday, July 3, 2013

On Sri Lanka, Deputy SG Eliasson Cites UN's "Systemic Failures," But Report Not Yet to Ban, Nor Public



By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, July 3 -- Now more than four years after the UN's “systemic failure” during the killing of 40,000 civilians in Sri Lanka in May 2009, Deputy Secretary General Jan Eliasson has before him a report about the UN's failures and what can be done.
  Once mid-June came and went, Inner City Press asked Ban's spokesperson about the report, but got nowhere. So on July 3 when Eliasson re-appeared to brief about his trip to Afghanistan, Inner City Press asked again.
  Eliasson said the report was given to him on June 17, but not yet to Ban Ki-moon. He said it is up to him and his colleagues in the Executive Office of the Secretary General to go through the report and draw conclusions, about “human rights early warning signals” and how to be ready to act quickly, as did not happen in 2009.
  Then, as Inner City Press reported daily in detail, the UN pulled out of Kilinochchi in northern Sri Lanka, did little when the government locked up local UN staff, and did not even call for a ceasefire in the run up to the bloodbath on the beach. There was murdering -- and apparently misleading -- of surrenderees.
  Since then there has been little to no accountability, and the Secretariat did nothing when Sri Lanka maneuvered to make military figure Shavendra Silva, depicted in the UN's own report as engaged in war crimes, a member of the UN Senior Advisory Group on Peacekeeping Operations.
  It is still a troubling tale, and one wonders if Eliasson can move to at least turn it around somewhat. Inner City Press asked -- over the spokesperson's objection -- whether the report will be public. Eliasson said that will be up to Ban Ki-moon, but pledged “maximum transparency.” Watch this site.
Footnote: while Ban's deputy spokesman tried to disallow a single follow up on Sri Lanka and if the report will be public, he allowed two UNCA executive committee members follow ups, and gave one of them a second round of questions.
  Following that, Inner City Press co-founded the new Free UN Coalition for Access to defend journalists from these type of insider attacks. The result has been... more attacks, including most recently threats from the UN to suspend or withdraw Inner City Press' accreditation for merely hanging a sign of the Free UN Coalition for Access on the door of its office, while UNCA is allowed two big signs and more.
This is being fought back, taking the battle beyond the space and other issues on which the UN openly favors UNCA to the online world, through @FUNCA_info. Watch that feed, and this site.