Friday, June 5, 2015

On Ukraine in UN Security Council, UN Cites Aid Blockage, US Cites Deleted Tweets, Russia Slams Double Standards
By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, June 5, updated -- When the UN Security Council met about Ukraine for the first time since March 6, UN Under Secretary General for Political Affairs Jeffrey Feltman told Council members of a “complete lack of humanitarian access across the line of contact in either direction,” adding that “the Government of Ukraine must remove all bureaucratic impediments to the delivery of humanitarian assistance.”
On his way into the Security Council, Russia's Vitaly Churkin said “the Security Council needs to call for the implementation of the resolution which we adopted in support of the Minsk agreements, and what I’m going to do in my statement is to describe in detail how Kiev has not complied with protocol and the military provisions of the Minsk agreement...
"If they’re serious, the members of the Security Council about the need for a peaceful settlement of the problems in Eastern Ukraine, such a call needs to be made. I have no illusion, of course, we will not be able to come up with a joint statement as a result of this. But what I detect is that there is growing irritation among some circles, even Western countries who have acquired the habit of supporting Kiev whatever they do, there is growing irritation with the lack of compliance Minsk agreements...  If this tendency continues there is some hope that they will exercise positive influence on Kiev.”
Update: New Zealand's Permanent Representative Gerard van Bohemen began by citing the positives in the UN and OSCE briefings, of which there were some.
 Inside the Council, Feltman said that the UN is encouraged by political work in the Normandy format, with a meeting in Paris scheduled for June 10.

  This last seemed strangely upbeat. Feltman said that “the Package of Measures for the Implementation of the Minsk agreements, including the reinstatement of full control of the state border by the government of Ukraine, has a deadline. That deadline is less than six months away.”

  And what will happen in those six months? We are covering this.
Alexander Hug, the Deputy Chief Monitor of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Special Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (SMM), told Security Council members that "the violence witnessed in and around the town of Marinka close to the Line of Contact constitutes a new worrying development in the conflict in Eastern Ukraine,” Hug told the Security Council on Friday.

 “The level of violence seen at Marinka in this context does not necessarily represent a further intensification of violence. The SMM has after all witnessed hundreds of shells for in and around Donetsk airport fired by both sides for many days. Marinka instead seems to represent a possible new development, a refocusing of weaponry and personnel. Before, violence was concentrated north and north-west of Donetsk city, with the economically and strategically important town of Avdiivka to the
north the apparent focus. Marinka does not necessarily mean this objective has changed but perhaps the means has,” Hug said.
 Hug also spoke of landmines - but not who planted them, like the UN similarly declined after finding landmines in South Sudan.
  The meeting ended with fewer and shorter right of reply statements than usual. Afterward, Churkin left quickly -- he said he hopes to be in Moscow tomorrow morning -- and US Samantha Power left too. (It's said she'll be in Kiev June 10-12.)
 In the Council, Power cited the separatists Tweets, some of which are sure to have been deleted by now. One wondered if the US will encourage Twitter to reinstate Politwoops, which captured such "deleted" Tweets....
  Back on April 29 when Ukraine's foreign minister Pavlo Klimkin held a UN press conference, Inner City Press asked him about the status of the country's talks with its creditors and the International Monetary Fund, and of the investigations into the killings of Oleg Kalashnikov and Oles Buzyna.
  Klimkin said that the financial talks are going well; the killing he said were meant to destaiblize the country and would be investigated. He said that UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon should not go to Moscow on May 9 in commemoration of World War Two.
 Back on September 22, 2014 when Ukraine's  Klimkin held a press conference at the UN, Inner City Press asked him about battalions in the East like Azov and Aidar, accused by Amnesty International of abuses.
  Klimkin said that all battalions are part of the army or national guard; the government had checked the Amnesty report.
  Inner City Press also asked if Ukraine will be speaking with the International Monetary Fund to modify its program. Klimkin said the program had not taken into account developments in Donetsk and Lugansk and should, now.
  He said that President Petro Poroshenko may not be the one to speak for Ukraine in the UN General Assembly, as he may need to "be on the ground." He said the soccer or football teams in Donetsky and Lugansk should remain in the Ukrainian League. (This question, he initially laughed at).

  Back on September 12, when Ukraine'sAmbassador Yuriy Sergeyev took questions Inner City Press also asked him about Amnesty International's damning report about the pro-Kyiv Aidar Battalion, and about Point 11 of the Protocol, "Economic Reconstruction of Eastern Ukraine."
  On Aidar, Sergeyev replied that the separatists had been dressing up in the pro-government militia's uniforms. Is that something that Amnesty would have entirely missed? Their report is online here.
  On economic reconstruction, Sergeyev distinguished between regions that were never with the "terrorists," those that had been liberated, and... others, presumably Donetsk and Luhansk. 
 On a second around, Inner City Press asked Sergeyev about reports Ukraine is getting sophisticated weapons from a "non-NATO" country. He said there are negotiations that he couldn't get into the details of, since the counter-parties might pull out.
   In past Sergeyev briefings, for example on September 4, the first question has been claimed by UNCA, now the UN's Censorship Alliance. On September 12, there was no UNCA representative present -- an insider briefing elsewhere about which the scribes are not supposed to report. Sergeyev was thanked by the new Free UN Coalition for Access for showing up and answering questions on-the-record, as it should be.
 In that spirit, Inner City Press put online each of the five pages of Sergeyev's opening statement, hereherehere,here and here.
   Back on September 4, Inner City Press asked Sergeyev about challenges from the right to Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, for example from Right Sector, AVOZ, and militia commanders like Dmytro Linko and Semen Semenchenko, who has spoken of the need “to establish our own internal command.”
  Sergeyev replied that “naturally, some generals want to be stronger.”
  So are these are generals? Despite talk in Minsk of a ceasefire, Sergeyev insisted that the “law enforcement action” would continue.
  Sergeyev began on September 4 by offering thanks to USg Jeffrey Feltman and to Valerie Amos -- but not John Ging.
  Back on August 24 when Amos visited Eastern Ukraine, her and Ging's agency OCHA put out a press releasesaying that
Amos visited an internally displacement persons' center in Krasnyi Lyman and “met women who had fled the fighting with their families.” The UN OCHA statement on Sunday said that “since March this year, around 200,000 people have fled their homes in search of safety within Ukraine and tens of thousands have fled to neighboring countries.”
  What does "tens of thousands" mean -- and why is it so different from what OCHA official John Ging told the UN Security Council on August 5? In that Council session, Ging said
“since the start of the year 168,677 Ukrainians are registered as having crossed into Russia, with nearly 60,000 of these having applied for refugee status and a further 115,952 having applied for other forms of legal stay.”
  
    Ging on August 5 acknowledged that “this is not the full picture as many Ukrainians that have fled their homes do not register with Ukrainian authorities or officially apply for assistance. The Russian authorities and UNHCR are reporting that 740,000 people have crossed the border since the start of the year.”
  While technically both 740,000 and 168,677 are made up of "tens of thousands," there is a striking disparity between what Ging told the Security Council on August 5, and the OCHA's August 24 press release on Amos' visit to Krasnyi Lyman.  What explains it?
   Back on August 24 just as an emergency but closed-door meeting of the Security Council about Ukraine began, and after the US, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon issued this statement:
The Secretary-General follows with deep concern reports that a Russian aid convoy has crossed the border into Ukraine without the permission of the Ukrainian authorities. While recognising the deteriorating humanitarian situation, any unilateral action has the potential of exacerbating an already dangerous situation in eastern Ukraine.
Once again, the Secretary-General urges all sides, in particular Ukraine and the Russian Federation, to continue to work together, in coordination with the international community, to ensure that humanitarian assistance reaches the most affected areas. He reiterates that all sides should continue to exercise maximum restraint and avoid escalation.
In this regard, he is encouraged by the announcement from President Petro Poroshenko that Ukraine will do everything possible to prevent more serious consequences as a result of the convoy moving into Ukrainian territory.
 How was this statement formulated? By whom? Inner City Press asked: What is the position of the UN's humanitarian chief Valerie Amos, who has elsewhere called for cross-border aid?
   At the Churkin presser, Inner City Press asked about the draft press statement Russia proposed on August 21.
 Churkin said that the “indefatigable” Lithuanian delegation “sent in amendments” that dropped references to Russia and included references to the European Union and dropped the reference to a ceasefire. Then, Churkin said, the US delegations send in amendments dropping the ceasefire and blaming the separatists.
  Inner City Press also asked about a report by CNN from Eastern Ukraine in which correspondent Diana Magney asked why Russia was sending salt if there are salt mines in Eastern Ukraine.
  Churkin said, "You can mine salt if you are not shelled.  If you are hiding in your cellars, mining salt is problematic."
   Later the Voice of America's correspondent asked about accusations that the convoy was only to support the rebels.
  "With baby food?" Churkin asked.
   "Rebels have babies too," the Voice of America correspondent said. The implication seemed to be that starving children based on the positions taken by their parents would be okay. We'll have more on this - for now, click here.
   Back on July 30 when Ukraine's Permanent Representative to the UN Yuriy Sergeyev held a UN press conference on July 30, Inner City Press asked him about the Human Right Watch report his government is using Grad rockets, killing at least 16 civilians between July 12 and 21 near Donetsk.
  Sergeyev responded first about the UN's (or Ivan Simonovic's) report, then emphasized that Russian media is saying Ukraine is using ballistic missiles.
  Inner City Press repeated the question, emphasizing it concerns Human Rights Watch's report, not the UN's, and not Russian media.  Sergeyev provided essentially the same answer.
  Here is the HRW report, online.
  Inner City Press also asked about the status of the International Monetary Fund program, after the downing of MH17. Sergeyev said Ukraine has met with the IMF's Christine Lagarde and "will" get the next tranche of the program in late August.  But won't there be an Executive Board meeting?
After Russian foreign minister and US Secretary of State John Kerry spoke by phone on July 27, the US State Department issued two read-outs, or a readout in two stages.
  The second, an "additional point" by a Senior State Department Official, was that Kerry "underlined our support for a mutual cease fire verified by the OSCE and reaffirmed our strong support for the international investigation to show the facts of MH17."
  Inner City Press on July 30 asked Sergeyev for Ukraine's position on this. Sergeyev cited as "pre-conditions" the closing of the border with Russia, and the release of all hostages.
  Procedurally, Ukraine set aside the first question at its press conference saying, "Pamela, traditionally you open our session." Using this UN Correspondents Association set-aside, Pam Falk of CBS asked about rebels mining the MH17 site. Her UNCA sidekick asked about "Russian propaganda." 
   And so it went until, fifth, the new Free UN Coalition for Access asked about HRW's report. This is how it's working, with the UN's Censorship Alliance. In this context, the Free UN Coalition for Access is against the automatic setting-aside of questions.