Wednesday, March 12, 2014

From Somalia, Nick Kay Answers on Sanctions Verification Proposal, But UN In NY Won't Say Where Mahiga's Lessons Are


By Matthew Russell Lee

UNITED NATIONS, March 12 -- Nicholas Kay in Somalia replaced Augustine Mahiga as UN envoy was he left on June 3, 2013. 

  On March 12, Inner City Press asked Kay to state any benefit he has gotten for Mahiga getting paid for nine months now as a US Under Secretary General, for his "lessons learned."

  New UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric on March 10 called these nine months a "short while;" he was asked to describe what another stealth USG Iqbal Riza does and returned only with a four word title, inserted in brackets into the transcript, no follow-up: "[The Spokesman later said that Mr. Riza was a Special Adviser to the Secretary-General.]"

  Kay on March 12, even on Twitter, responded: "In my personal view Mahiga did a great job as SRSG. Not able to comment on his subsequent appointment."

  While appreciated, there's a follow-up: what Dujarric calls Mahiga's "lessons learned," paid at a USG rate for nine months now, are presumably to benefit the UN in Somalia. That is, Kay. What are the lessons learned?  Where are the lessons learned?

  Inner City Press also asked Kay for his view on the Somalia and Eritrea Monitoring Group proposal to include a verification team in the UNSOM. 

 This question, UNSOM responded to: "Res[olution] 2142 asked for recommendations within 30 days. Team is coming to look at all options."

  Neither AMISOM nor Kay answered this follow up, quoting the most recent SEMG report: "what of getting banned from Villa Somalia & Villa Baidoa on January 23?"

  Still, there was a response to both questions, even from Somalia, even by Twitter. Ban Ki-moon's new spokesperson Dujarric, by contrast, at this first in-person briefing on March 10 promised answers, then inserted Riza's four word title into the transcript.

  On Twitter, the French Mission to the UN congratulated "le Francais" Dujarric; on Ukraine, Dujurric tellingly praised a French spokesperson's "analysis" of Crimea - but no answers on France still selling Russia Mistral warships. This is the new UN, at least the new UN Headquarters. Where is Mahiga?

When Mahiga was replaced last June by Kay as the UN's envoy in Somalia, little was said of where Mahiga would go next. 
   Inner City Press on March 8 reported that Mahiga was given a little known Under Secretary General position, called "Under-Secretary-General, Mediator-in-Residence, DPA’s Mediator Debriefing and Lessons Learned Program."
   Inner City Press asked several well-placed UN officials who had, until asked, no idea that Mahiga had stayed with the UN, much less at the USG level. "Incredible," said one source who requested anonymity to keep his own UN position.
  On March 10 Inner City Press asked Ban Ki-moon's new spokesperson Stephane Dujarric (who previously spoke for Kofi Annan) about this quiet job-giving, to Mahiga and also Margaret Vogt formerly the UN envoy to Central African Republic. Inner City Press also asked what former Annan official Iqbal Riza is doing, still on the payroll under Ban Ki-moon.
   Later in the briefing Dujarric was handed a piece of paper ("Oil for Food," one long-time correspondent joked) and he read out on Mahiga and Vogt that the Department of Political Affairs sometimes keeps outgoing envoys on, for lessons learned.
  Are they paid, as Mahiga is listed, at the Under Secretary General rate? And in the case of Mahiga, for nine months and counting? And what about Iqbal Riza? 

Mahiga shakes with Ban: (well) before "secret" USG post, by UN Photo

   The affable Mahiga was panned by Somalis inside the country and in the diaspora, for example during this Inner City Press reporting trip to Minneapolis in 2010.  More recently, Mahiga was the (only) source for US Voice of America story about Somalia, here.
   But do departing UN envoys have a right to stay on in little known USG positions? As another source asked, Is Alan Doss still getting paid somewhere by the UN?
  This comes in a UN under Secretary General Ban Ki-moon which, even as it evades responsibility for cholera in Haiti, talks a lot of accountability and even transparency. How many other "secret" USGs are there? We'll have more on this.
   When UN Secretary General performed the annual ritual signing of the Compacts with his Under Secretaries General on February 13 amid the snow, three USGs were not present either in person or on video: Angela Kane, Joan Clos of HABITAT, and Jeffrey Feltman. 
  Given the recently leaked audio of US official Victoria Nuland recounting how Feltman "got" Ban to sent Robert Serry to Ukraine, it seems worth asking with all due respect: where is he?
  Those present posed for a group photograph, tweeted hereby Inner City Press, and then came up one by one to sign their Compacts and shake hands with Ban and his deputy, Jan Eliasson. For the first signer, former Egyptian Permanent Representative and now Special Adviser on Africa Maged Abdelaziz, Ban didn't stand up, so the handshake was repeated at the end.
  Ban, introduced by his chief of staff Susana Malcorra, made much of transparency, of making all this available through the press to the public. But a quick review of Ban's "financial disclosure" web site finds, for example, that Under Secretary General for Peacekeeping Operations Herve Ladsous has refused to make any public financial disclosure, stating that "in accordance with General Assembly Resolution A/RES/60/238, I have chosen to maintain the confidentiality of the information disclosed in my financial disclosure statement."
  Ladsous also refuses to answer Press questions, most recently on what the UN position is on Ugandan troops remaining in South Sudan, and before that about the mass rapes in Minova by the UN's partners in the Congolese Army. Video compilation hereUK coverage here.
  Ban's Children and Armed Conflict envoy Leila Zerrougui was there; by contrast, her Office made the inconvenient report that the Free Syrian Army recruits and uses child soldiers, and she has offered the Press an interview about it. Also there, on screen from Geneva, was Navi "Half Term"Pillay who had the honesty to report on January 20 that the French decision to first disarm the ex Seleka in Central African Republic put Muslim communities at risk.
  The UN should be open, and questions as with Feltman about a former diplomat's connection with his or her country cannot be off limits or considered "insinuation."
  Amazingly, though, when Ban did a question and answer session with 15 mostly Gulf and Western correspondents,afterward no tape or transcript was provided, despite aformal request from the new Free UN Coalition for Access, which is focused on opening up the UN to the press and public. And it was confirmed that none of the 15 even asked about Feltman, Ukraine and the Nuland leak. How not?
  Carman Lapointe of the Office of Oversight Services was there, even though the Secretariat says it can't speak for her of OIOIS, even refusing yet to say if OIOS is appealing the UN Dispute Tribunal decision which recounts that Michael Dudley of OIOS investigations acknowledged altering evidence after Inner City Press uncovered the distribution of Valium by UN Medical Service personnel with no New York State licensed. Is there immunity for that? 
 Has the UN received and accepted process of the legal papers for bringing cholera to Haiti? This was asked at the February 13 noon briefing. It will be a litmus test for accountability, and for transparency. Watch this site.