By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
August 4 -- At
the UN,
transparency
and access are
in decline,
due to
collusion.
Rather than
follow any
semblance of a
rule of law,
the UN doles
out
information on
a selective
basis to those
who support or
don't critique
it - some of
whom then
charge money
for access to
the "UN"
information.
Inner
City Press on
July 31 asked
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric why
he had not
informed all
UN resident
correspondents
of Ban's
August 4 visit
to the White
House.
Dujarric replied, "It was sent out to UNCA.. I think that UNCA, FUNCA, as I said in the statement, I would urge both parties to take all steps and solve this issue." Video here and see below.
Dujarric replied, "It was sent out to UNCA.. I think that UNCA, FUNCA, as I said in the statement, I would urge both parties to take all steps and solve this issue." Video here and see below.
On August 4 at the UN noon briefing, Dujarric's deputy Farhan Haq said the UN would be issuing a read-out. But by 2:00 pm, an hour after the White House pool read-out, nothing from the UN. Or only to the UN Censorship Alliance?
The White House itself transcribed Ban Ki-moon before the UN did:
"SECRETARY-GENERAL BAN: Thank you, Mr. President, for your warm welcome to the Oval Office again. I had an extremely constructive meeting with President Obama this time on the eve of a truly historic General Assembly in September and in the aftermath of all these very historic diplomatic achievements that President Obama and the U.S. government have been making in many areas like the Iranian nuclear deal and normalization of diplomatic relations with Cuba, and his recent very successful visit to Africa. And all these are truly historic diplomatic achievements.
The United Nations continues to stand working with you and the U.S. government. We really appreciate your strong leadership and support, and strong, generous humanitarian assistance to many places of conflict. And I really count on your strong support.
On climate change, I highly commend President Obama’s strong commitment since day one in his office up to now, and I count on your continuing leadership until we’ll be able to address at this one -- this climate change -- and have climate change meeting in December, in Paris.
I’d like to congratulate you and highly commend your visionary and forward leadership announcement of yesterday on a Clean Power Plan. This is hugely important and visionary leadership. The U.S. can and will be able to change the world in addressing a climate phenomenon. And we are the first generation, as President Obama rightly said yesterday, to put an end to global poverty. And we are the last generation who can address climate change phenomenon.
I think this Clean Power Plan powers economies and generates jobs. And also, it can have -- generate huge dividends here at home, in U.S. economy. And I’m sure that this will impact other countries. And I really appreciate your personal engagement starting with China and Brazil and India, and many others, as I’m going to have some small-scale leaders meeting on the margins of the General Assembly. I hope you will really lead all this campaign under your strong leadership.
We are very committed. We discussed about how to mobilize $100 billion for climate financing, and working very closely with President Hollande in his capacity as President of future COP 21, and Chancellor Angela Merkel in her capacity as chair of G7, and World Bank President and IMF managing director, and we, the Secretary-General. We are really trying to present a politically credible trajectory of $100 billion to the world so that this can be supported at the COP 21 in Paris.
This is a top priority now as we have successfully agreed on a sustainable development agenda with a set of 17 sustainable development goals. This is hugely ambitious and encouraging news. And we also agreed in just about the last month a financial and technological framework to support a sustainable development agenda and climate change. On all these matters, we really count on your strong support.
On regional issues, President Obama has explained and briefed all what we discussed. We are completely on the same page. On Syrian issues, on 29th of July -- last week -- my special envoy and I presented a proposal to establish a four thematic working group to operationalize a Geneva communiqué, and I there was encouraged to find such strong support by the Security Council members. We tried to expedite -- to provide some political solution to this, operationalizing Geneva communiqué. At the same time, we are doing our best effort to provide humanitarian assistance to needy people.
On Yemen, there is no military solution, there is only solution by political way, through dialogue. I have been continuously coordinating and working together with GCC members led by, again, the Saudi Arabians. And my special envoy is always in the region working very closely with the parties.
We are very concerned about the humanitarian situation in Yemen, as President Obama said. Eighty percent of the population -- to be exact, more than 21 million people -- are in need of urgent humanitarian assistance. Our humanitarian team, despite the difficulties of security and safety, will be mobilizing all possible support. I’m urging the world members -- member states -- to provide generous humanitarian assistance. This is what I’m really asking for such generous support.
I highly appreciate and commend the leadership of President Obama on South Sudan. His recent visit to Africa and convening a leaders meeting on South Sudan really made a big impact. We are working very hard with the IGAD members and African Union so that this August 17th summit meeting of IGAD will be able to have adoption of this agreement between the parties. We are working very hard.
And I really appreciate your strong support for human rights. In all these conflict areas, it is the people whose human rights are being abused. And we are taking human rights up front as priority issues, and I really appreciate the United States continuing support and leadership.
Again, thank you very much, Mr. President, for your global leadership. And I wish you continued success. Thank you."
"SECRETARY-GENERAL BAN: Thank you, Mr. President, for your warm welcome to the Oval Office again. I had an extremely constructive meeting with President Obama this time on the eve of a truly historic General Assembly in September and in the aftermath of all these very historic diplomatic achievements that President Obama and the U.S. government have been making in many areas like the Iranian nuclear deal and normalization of diplomatic relations with Cuba, and his recent very successful visit to Africa. And all these are truly historic diplomatic achievements.
The United Nations continues to stand working with you and the U.S. government. We really appreciate your strong leadership and support, and strong, generous humanitarian assistance to many places of conflict. And I really count on your strong support.
On climate change, I highly commend President Obama’s strong commitment since day one in his office up to now, and I count on your continuing leadership until we’ll be able to address at this one -- this climate change -- and have climate change meeting in December, in Paris.
I’d like to congratulate you and highly commend your visionary and forward leadership announcement of yesterday on a Clean Power Plan. This is hugely important and visionary leadership. The U.S. can and will be able to change the world in addressing a climate phenomenon. And we are the first generation, as President Obama rightly said yesterday, to put an end to global poverty. And we are the last generation who can address climate change phenomenon.
I think this Clean Power Plan powers economies and generates jobs. And also, it can have -- generate huge dividends here at home, in U.S. economy. And I’m sure that this will impact other countries. And I really appreciate your personal engagement starting with China and Brazil and India, and many others, as I’m going to have some small-scale leaders meeting on the margins of the General Assembly. I hope you will really lead all this campaign under your strong leadership.
We are very committed. We discussed about how to mobilize $100 billion for climate financing, and working very closely with President Hollande in his capacity as President of future COP 21, and Chancellor Angela Merkel in her capacity as chair of G7, and World Bank President and IMF managing director, and we, the Secretary-General. We are really trying to present a politically credible trajectory of $100 billion to the world so that this can be supported at the COP 21 in Paris.
This is a top priority now as we have successfully agreed on a sustainable development agenda with a set of 17 sustainable development goals. This is hugely ambitious and encouraging news. And we also agreed in just about the last month a financial and technological framework to support a sustainable development agenda and climate change. On all these matters, we really count on your strong support.
On regional issues, President Obama has explained and briefed all what we discussed. We are completely on the same page. On Syrian issues, on 29th of July -- last week -- my special envoy and I presented a proposal to establish a four thematic working group to operationalize a Geneva communiqué, and I there was encouraged to find such strong support by the Security Council members. We tried to expedite -- to provide some political solution to this, operationalizing Geneva communiqué. At the same time, we are doing our best effort to provide humanitarian assistance to needy people.
On Yemen, there is no military solution, there is only solution by political way, through dialogue. I have been continuously coordinating and working together with GCC members led by, again, the Saudi Arabians. And my special envoy is always in the region working very closely with the parties.
We are very concerned about the humanitarian situation in Yemen, as President Obama said. Eighty percent of the population -- to be exact, more than 21 million people -- are in need of urgent humanitarian assistance. Our humanitarian team, despite the difficulties of security and safety, will be mobilizing all possible support. I’m urging the world members -- member states -- to provide generous humanitarian assistance. This is what I’m really asking for such generous support.
I highly appreciate and commend the leadership of President Obama on South Sudan. His recent visit to Africa and convening a leaders meeting on South Sudan really made a big impact. We are working very hard with the IGAD members and African Union so that this August 17th summit meeting of IGAD will be able to have adoption of this agreement between the parties. We are working very hard.
And I really appreciate your strong support for human rights. In all these conflict areas, it is the people whose human rights are being abused. And we are taking human rights up front as priority issues, and I really appreciate the United States continuing support and leadership.
Again, thank you very much, Mr. President, for your global leadership. And I wish you continued success. Thank you."
Here's from the White House pool, annotated below:
"Ban
followed the President's remarks by hailing an "extremely constructive
meeting" and spoke to the President's recent "extraordinary diplomatic
achievements", mentioning the Iran nuclear deal, the normalization of
ties with Cuba, and the "successful visit to Africa".
Climate change: "I highly commend President Obama's strong commitment" to climate change and his "visionary and bold leadership".
"The Clean Power Plan powers economies and generates jobs. It generates huge dividends here at home."
On the Paris US climate summit at the end of the year: Ban says he is "working very closely with President Hollande" and with Chancellor Merkel (as the head of the G-7).
Also: "this is a top priority. We have agreed on a set 17 sustainable development goals." To the President: "We really count on your strong support."
More quotes:
"We are completely on the same page on Syrian issues."
"On Yemen, there is no military solution. There is only a solution by political way, by dialogue. 80% of the population is in need of urgent humanitarian assistance."
Ban also said he commends "President Obama's leadership on South Sudan." His meeting on South Sudan in Africa "made a big impact."
Also in the Oval Office today, the whole 8-person strong delegation from the SG's office:
Amina Mohammed, Special Advisor on Post-2015 Development Planning Susanna Malcorra, Chief of Staff (officially Chef de Cabinet) Janos Pasztor, special advisor on climate change (officially UN Assistant Secretary-General on Climate Change) Robert Orr, UN Assistant Secretary-General for Policy Coordination and Strategic Planning Edmond Mulet, UN Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Andrew Gilmour, Political Director Chang Wook-jin, Special Assistant Stéphane Dujarric, UN spokesperson."
Climate change: "I highly commend President Obama's strong commitment" to climate change and his "visionary and bold leadership".
"The Clean Power Plan powers economies and generates jobs. It generates huge dividends here at home."
On the Paris US climate summit at the end of the year: Ban says he is "working very closely with President Hollande" and with Chancellor Merkel (as the head of the G-7).
Also: "this is a top priority. We have agreed on a set 17 sustainable development goals." To the President: "We really count on your strong support."
More quotes:
"We are completely on the same page on Syrian issues."
"On Yemen, there is no military solution. There is only a solution by political way, by dialogue. 80% of the population is in need of urgent humanitarian assistance."
Ban also said he commends "President Obama's leadership on South Sudan." His meeting on South Sudan in Africa "made a big impact."
Also in the Oval Office today, the whole 8-person strong delegation from the SG's office:
Amina Mohammed, Special Advisor on Post-2015 Development Planning Susanna Malcorra, Chief of Staff (officially Chef de Cabinet) Janos Pasztor, special advisor on climate change (officially UN Assistant Secretary-General on Climate Change) Robert Orr, UN Assistant Secretary-General for Policy Coordination and Strategic Planning Edmond Mulet, UN Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Andrew Gilmour, Political Director Chang Wook-jin, Special Assistant Stéphane Dujarric, UN spokesperson."
Of the quotes, we note Ban's "We are completely on the same page on Syrian issues." This includes, of course, the US "arm and equip" program.
The attendees did NOT including Herve Ladsous (see below), but did include Robert Orr, who does not seem to be a UN official, at least full time, anymore. Chang Wook-jin is not much seen or known around the UN. We'll have more on this.
On
August 3,
another
development-focused
correspondent asked Dujarric:
Question:
I was away
last
week.
Can you
describe what
the decision
is when
information on
Secretary-General’s
visits or
events are
decided
between MALU
[Media
Accreditation
and Liaison
Unit] and UNCA
[United
Nations
Correspondents
Association]
and how it’s
decided when
to send the
invites?
Spokesman: Sure, we try to send the information out as… when we’re able to send it out. We traditionally use the vector of the UN Correspondent’s Association or MALU. If some felt that the information was not spread accordingly, we will try to do a better job.
Question: Thanks.
Spokesman: Matthew.
Inner City Press: I second that.
Spokesman: Sure, we try to send the information out as… when we’re able to send it out. We traditionally use the vector of the UN Correspondent’s Association or MALU. If some felt that the information was not spread accordingly, we will try to do a better job.
Question: Thanks.
Spokesman: Matthew.
Inner City Press: I second that.
UNCA is the UN
Correspondents
Association, now
the UN
Censorship
Alliance.
It is
problematic
for Dujarric
to ever use
the "vector"
of UNCA, not
only because
not all
resident
correspondents
aren't and
dont' have to
be members of
UNCA, which
has in fact
tried to get
media thrown
out of the UN
-- UNCA
charges money
to receive the
information
the UN gives
it. We'll have
more on this.
On
July 30, when
disgrunted
"members" of
UNCA who are
strong-armed
into paying
money in order
to get such
information
informed Inner
City Press and
the Free UN
Coalition for
Access of the
inside game,
Inner City
Press
immediately
asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric:
"Please
confirm or
deny that the
Secretary
General is
visiting the
White House
next week, and
if confirm,
say how and to
whom this has
already been
announced or
disclosed.
"Separately and not as pressing as the above, Inner City Press is multiply informed of DSS Security officer, more than twenty years in UN's employ, fired or separated from service for improperly removing a bottle of wine from a reception. Given among other things the individual's length of service, please state whether there were other charges, and any impact on pension."
"Separately and not as pressing as the above, Inner City Press is multiply informed of DSS Security officer, more than twenty years in UN's employ, fired or separated from service for improperly removing a bottle of wine from a reception. Given among other things the individual's length of service, please state whether there were other charges, and any impact on pension."
While
this was asked
on the
afternoon of
July 30, the
stated
deadline for
signing up to
cover Ban's
dutiful White
House visit,
there was no
response that
day. (The
Spokesman was
still working,
for example at
Morocco's
Throne Day at
the Waldorf
Astoria's
Starlight
Roof.)
Instead, on
July 31
Dujarric
returned with
this, modified
only to pardon
typos:
"We
asked through
UNCA if
journalists
would like to
join the press
gaggle at the
White House.
If you would
like to join,
please fill
out the
information
requested in
the form below
before the
noon briefing.
Also, include
a scanned copy
of your press
pass... The
meeting will
be around 10a.
You will need
to be at the
WH gate
about
90mns before.
More details
to come, if
you tell me
you will join.
"On the ofher issue, I have no information at this time."
"On the ofher issue, I have no information at this time."
Inner City
Press for
FUNCA
immediately
replied:
"UNCA
does not
represent all
UN resident
correspondents,
as you know,
so it was and
is
inappropriate
to limit such
information --
the Secretary
General's
meeting at the
White House --
to UNCA. This
is
particularly
but not only
true in light
of UNCA actions
of which you
are aware.
"This information should have been sent at least to all resident correspondents, as is is done even with information about the UN parking garage, on an e-mail list in the possession of MALU (and I assume your Office). Please confirm that this should have been and will be the practice."
"This information should have been sent at least to all resident correspondents, as is is done even with information about the UN parking garage, on an e-mail list in the possession of MALU (and I assume your Office). Please confirm that this should have been and will be the practice."
Dujarric's
response was
merely this:
"We
can have a
longer
discussion on
this later.
Let me know if
you would like
to join the
group at the
White House."
This was and
is
UNacceptable.
Inner City
Press went to
the July 31
noon briefing
and asked why
all resident
correspondents
had not been
informed so
all would have
equal access.
Dujarric
replied, "UNCA,
FUNCA, I would
urge both
parties to
take all steps
and solve this
issue." From
the UN
transcript:
Spokesman
Dujarric:
UNCA, FUNCA, I
would… as I
said in the
statement, I
would urge
both parties
to take bold
steps and
solve this
issue once and
for all.
Inner City Press: I would just say send it to all resident correspondents like you do things about the garage and everything else. It seems pretty straightforward.
Dujarric: I hear you.
Inner City Press: I would just say send it to all resident correspondents like you do things about the garage and everything else. It seems pretty straightforward.
Dujarric: I hear you.
First, whether
or not FUNCA
had come into
existence
after UNCA
tried to
silence
reporting
ranging from
the Sri Lanka
landlord
conflicts of
interest of
its president
to UN
Peacekeeping's
Herve Ladsous,
UN
correspondents
are not
required to
pay allegiance
to UNCA. So
the notice
should not be
through them.
Second, it is
UNseemly for
the UN to try
to steer
business to
UNCA, whose
"leadership"
not only
hasn't
criticized
Ban's lack of
transparency
but has
actively tried
to get the
investigative
Press that
does report on
this thrown
out. This is
the UN's
Alliance.
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon has
not held a
sit-down press
conference in
months. From
an open
meeting in
which he gave
a speech to UN
Peacekeeping,
embroiled in
rape cover up
scandals, Ban's
security
ejected
Inner City
Press, at the
demand of UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous.
But the UN
tries to
conceal this
by partnering
with an also
in decay UN
Correspondents
Association,
which does not
complain about
Ban or the
ejection of
the Press by
Ladsous -- in
fact, UNCA
itself tried
to eject the
Press for
reporting on
its current
president's
conflict of
interest,
unilaterally
granting a UN
screening for
a Sri Lanka
government
film denying
war crimes
after renting
an apartment
to Sri Lanka's
ambassador,
here.
(Inner
City Press on
July 30 asked
Ban's
spokesman
about more
UN assistance
with covering
up of war
crimes in Sri
Lanka, so
far without
answer.)
UNCA
told only
those which
pay it money:
"Dear
Colleagues,
The
Secretary-General
will be going
to Washington
for a meeting
with President
Obama on
Wednesday 4
August. The
meeting will
take place
around 10am.
There will be a photo-op/brief remarks by POTUS and the SG in the Oval Office after the meeting. If any UNCA members are interested in attending, as the White House said they could accommodate a few journalists, please contact Stephane Dujarric by tomorrow afternoon, Thursday. July 30th:
Stephane Dujarric (Mr.)
Spokesman for the Secretary-General
United Nations Headquarters | Room: S-233
New York, NY, 10017
Transportation to Washington is the correspondent's own responsibility.
Giampaolo Pioli, UNCA President"
There will be a photo-op/brief remarks by POTUS and the SG in the Oval Office after the meeting. If any UNCA members are interested in attending, as the White House said they could accommodate a few journalists, please contact Stephane Dujarric by tomorrow afternoon, Thursday. July 30th:
Stephane Dujarric (Mr.)
Spokesman for the Secretary-General
United Nations Headquarters | Room: S-233
New York, NY, 10017
Transportation to Washington is the correspondent's own responsibility.
Giampaolo Pioli, UNCA President"
This
notice was
given to Inner
City Press by
dissatisfied
UNCA "members"
who are
strong-armed
into paying
money in order
to get such
information.
(We note that
August 4 is
Tuesday, while
Wednesday is
August 5.)
Inner City
Press sought
confirmation
more than an
hour before
this
publication --
"Please
confirm or
deny that the
Secretary
General is
visiting the
White House
next week, and
if confirm,
say how and to
whom this has
already been
announced or
disclosed" --
but none was
received.
Relatedly at
the UN,
unthinking
support is
sought from
outsiders
without full
disclosure -
for example
Leonardo
DiCaprio, see
below.
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon holds
no press
conferences in
the UN, even
as the Yemen
humanitarian
pause he
announced didn't materialize; on July 21 while his
Deputy
Spokesperson said of Ban,
"this week, he
is away from
the office,"
his UN
scheduled said
"all
appointments
are internal."
In
late June Ban's
security
detail ejected
the Press from
an open
meeting in
which Ban
spoke to UN
Peacekeeping
force
commanders. That
ejection was
at the demand
of UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous - this
is confirmed,
by Security
which says it
will not again
act act as
bouncer for
Ladsous, who
now rather
than speaking
at the UNTV
stakeout like
his
predecessors summons
a few friendly
journalists to
whom to
deliver or
deposit "news."
The new Free
UN Coalition
for Access
challenged
this; the
old UN
Correspondents
Association
says nothing,
as its past
and current
leadership
takes
advantage of,
or doesn't
care about,
the lack of
access.
Given these
trends,
discontent
within UNCA
rank and file
led to the
release of
these [annotated]
minutes of a
July 13
meeting of UNCA,
now the UN's
Censorship
Alliance,
below. These
minutes state
that
"Giampaolo
Pioli
announced
dinner on
Monday,
December 14,
at Cipriani
Wall Street.
Site was
selected
because of
SG’s schedule
and space
availability.
Honorees
include Prince
Albert of
Monaco and
most likely
Leonardo
DiCaprio whose
final
confirmation
is expected in
August."
DiCaprio may
conflate the
UN with this
UN Censorship
Alliance; it
is unclear if
he knows his
inviter for
example rented
one of his
apartments to
an alleged war
criminal, that
used the
organization
to demand that
an article
reporting this
be removed
(censored)
from the
Internet or
the
investigative
Press ejected
from the UN.
An award at
Cipriani
sounds nice -
but from whom?
This is the
sloppiness,
much of it
intentional,
at the UN.
We'll have
more on this.
"Giampaolo
Pioli (Chair),
more proxies
than present
"Giampaolo announced dinner at Cipriani Wall Street, "special discount price of $100." Site was selected because of SG’s schedule and space availability. Honorees include Prince Albert of Monaco and most likely Leonardo DiCaprio whose final confirmation is expected in August. UNCA members were encouraged to apply for the media awards [No conflict there, of course].
"Giampaolo announced dinner at Cipriani Wall Street, "special discount price of $100." Site was selected because of SG’s schedule and space availability. Honorees include Prince Albert of Monaco and most likely Leonardo DiCaprio whose final confirmation is expected in August. UNCA members were encouraged to apply for the media awards [No conflict there, of course].
Security
arrangements
for the
upcoming
UNGA:
Green Ps will
not have to
wait in the
same line as
those seeking
accreditation...
High speed
internet
issues: a
possible
solution is
having a
separate
access code
for media
center
reporters in
the NLB. [UNCA
seems most
concerned with
obtained more
privileges
than other
journalists.]
UNSC
stakeout: No
access to the
council when
meetings are
not being
held, but
reporters can
move there
before
meetings once
UN TV sets up.
[UNCA
"leaders" have
tried to
limit other
journalists
like this
before: FUNCA
resists it.]
Reporters will be able to pay for high speed internet and access to other Time Warner channels for a fee. Anyone who wants to subscribe to TW needs to inform Melanie by email in order to provide a list to the installers. [So UNCA is a middleman, purportedly for all journalists, for corporate Time Warner?]
Review of procedures for holding UNCA press conferences: It was decided that UNCA will be more selective in hosting press conferences and will focus on subjects and speakers that are a big draw. Meeting adjourned at 5:00 pm. It was followed by a wine and cheese reception."
Reporters will be able to pay for high speed internet and access to other Time Warner channels for a fee. Anyone who wants to subscribe to TW needs to inform Melanie by email in order to provide a list to the installers. [So UNCA is a middleman, purportedly for all journalists, for corporate Time Warner?]
Review of procedures for holding UNCA press conferences: It was decided that UNCA will be more selective in hosting press conferences and will focus on subjects and speakers that are a big draw. Meeting adjourned at 5:00 pm. It was followed by a wine and cheese reception."
UNCA "press
conferences"
have
degenerated
into Italian
book club
events;
previously,
Pioli hosted
his former
tenant Palitha
Kohona to
screen a video
denying war
crimes in Sri
Lanka,
then used the
organization
to demand a
Press article
about it be
removed from
the Internet.
This is the UN
Censorship
Alliance.
The
invitation,
which even
most UNCA
members
ignored, said
"At the
end of the
meeting, we
will have a
glass of wine
to wish
everyone a
good summer
vacation."
Whether the
Hamptons or
the Amalfi
coast, when UN
press access
is in decline,
it time to
share a glass
of wine.
2015
opened with
Ladsous openly
refused to
answer Press
questions, video here.
"Leadership"
of the UN
Correspondents
Association,
far from
questioning
this, took
advantage by
grabbing two
qeustions,
just as UNCA
demands and
most often
wastes
side-aside
first
questions at
UN press
conferences.
The following
day, January
23, there was
a UN Security
Council
meeting about
human rights
and UN
Peacekeeping
missions,
including
MONUSCO. But
the meeting
was closed to
the public and
press. Inner
City Press for
the Free
UN Coalition
for Access
asked and asks,
Why? The
old United
Nations
Correspondents
Association,
on the other
hand, not only
doesn't
protest such
closures - it
scheduled its
only "faux
fighters"
meeting for
exactly the
same time.
This decayed
UN
Correspondents
Association,
run by
president Giampaolo
Pioli who has
himself
demanded
censorship,
held its
annual meeting
on January 23,
and even by
its own
account, not a
work about
access
problems or
lack of
information.
Here was the agenda, annotated, now with "minutes" as provided by disgruntled members who say the UN "makes" them pay UNCA, added in italics:
Space,
"including
journalists on
the waiting
list for
office space"
-- on January
23, UNCA's
"leadership"
said that "that
after meeting
with DPI
working space
on the 4th
floor will
become
available to
6-8
journalists
beginning in
February."
Even or
especially if
this
representation
is true, there
is a problem:
UNCA is
essentially
selling or
trying to sell
these UN
spaces. UNCA
tells
correspondents
that if they
pay money to
join it, they
will be helped
in getting
office space
from the UN.
Is this
proper?
Less
than a quarter
of those UNCA
took $66,485
from attended
this meeting;
numerous
Executive
Committee
members did
not attend.
Pioli bragged
of "a larger
number of
sponsors," but
the minutes
did not list
them. There'll
be more on
this.
Meanwhile,
UNCA
leadership is
proposal to
downgrade some
with "white"
UN passed to
"green,"
requiring them
to go through
a separate
entrance and
metal
detectors.
UNCA is
responsible
for Banning
many from
entry into the
UN.
"UNCA
room
activities,
press
conferences
and events for
2015" -- Pioli
in his last
tenure granted
the Ambassador
of Sri Lanka
Palitha
Kohona, a former
tenant of
Pioli in one
of his
Manhattan
apartments,
the use of
UNCA to screen
inside the UN
a film denying
Rajapaksa
government war
crimes. It
was reporting
about this
that Pioli
ordered Inner
City Press to
remove from
the Internet.
There have
been no
reforms since.
Now UNCA brags
that HRW will
use or be used
by its space.
This is
shameful - and
we'll have
more on it.
Pioli sat in
on the January
26 noon
briefing,
apparently to
see if any of
these outrages
would be
aired,
typically
asking no
questions at
all.
"Social
media" -
despite Ban's
UN purporting
to use UNCA to
reach all
journalists at
the UN, the
Press is
blocked from
UNCA's
moribund
social media
presence. Is
this
attributable
to all 15
Executive
Committee
members? Just
Pioli?
On
January 23,
Pioli said
that the
Reuters
correspondent
who grabbed
two questions
after Ladsous
said "I don't
respond to
your questions
Mister" is in
charge of UNCA
tweets.
"UNCA
soccer" -
this involved
providing a
craven photo
op for, yes,
Ban Ki-moon
"UNCA
Awards 2015" -
in December
2014, UNCA
gave out an award
about Haiti
with no
mention of the
UN bringing
cholera there,
or UN
peacekeepers
shooting at
democracy
demonstrators.
Ban Ki-moon
was in
attendance and
they had him
take pictures
with another
of their
awardees,
which was
mischaracterized
as UN
award. As
with office
space, it
seems that
UNCA sells the
UN.
Similar to the
claim that UN
labor issues
are handed in
happy one-way
meeting with
staff during
country
visits, it is
with this that
it seems the
UN will
partner to say
it has
listened on
media access
issues.
After the
September 2014
General
Assembly week
UNCA "minutes"
and partial
list of
grievances
were provided
to FUNCA by
one of UNCA's
many
disgruntled
members. They
are laughable.
The ejection
of non-French
journalists
from the UN
Briefing Room
was not
mentioned, nor
the physical
blocking of
filming.
Instead, UNCA complains that there is too much news during the General Assembly -- they want fewer side events -- and apparently too many journalists at the UN: they want a private wi-fi password leaving the current open wi-fi only for "guests and others."
Tellingly, one of the UNCA proposals is for a booklet co-signed by Ban Ki-moon and UNCA.
With this bogus list and presumably seeking that booklet, they say that the UN's Media Accreditation and Liaison Unit proposes to meet only with their Executive Committee. This is akin to a fake wrestling match, in which the two sides pretend to fight, for an audience.
Instead, UNCA complains that there is too much news during the General Assembly -- they want fewer side events -- and apparently too many journalists at the UN: they want a private wi-fi password leaving the current open wi-fi only for "guests and others."
Tellingly, one of the UNCA proposals is for a booklet co-signed by Ban Ki-moon and UNCA.
With this bogus list and presumably seeking that booklet, they say that the UN's Media Accreditation and Liaison Unit proposes to meet only with their Executive Committee. This is akin to a fake wrestling match, in which the two sides pretend to fight, for an audience.
The Free UN
Coalition for
Access has
told MALU, but
repeats: if
they even
aspire to
legitimacy,
the UN must
reach out to
all
journalists,
at the UN and
ideally
beyond, and
not that
subset which
pay UNCA
money. That is
a decidedly
partial
subset: a fake
wrestling
match.
The
UN while
throwing out
media from
workspace
gives its UN
Censorship
Alliance a
large room,
which it then
limits to
those that pay
it money in
dues. Here's
how it works:
a new media at
the UN is
told, from the
pinnacle of
the UN's
Censorship
Alliance, to
pay UNCA $90
and UNCA will
get the UN to
give the media
UN office
space.
Today's UN
Censorship
Alliance is
unlikely to
get any
meaningful
media access
problem
addressed --
members its
Executive
Committee
have, in fact,
caused or
colluded in
many of the
decreases in
access. They drafted a
rule with MALU
to eliminate
journalist
workspace at
the Security
Council
stakeout;
they withheld
audio tapes
and transcripts
of a Ban
"interview"
with them,
even from
their own
members.
The Free
UN Coalition
for Access
targeted these
censorship
practices in a
September
29 flier,
online, in the
UN including
on the "open"
bulletin board
it got the UN
to install
(the flier was
torn down, one
can only
imagine by
whom, but has
gone back up.)
The
French-only
briefing was
described on HuffPost
Live, here.)
Footnote:
as
noted the old
UN
Correspondents
Association,
which is given
privileged
status and
set-aside
first
questions
nearly always
used for
softballs, has
done nothing
in recent
years to
improve or
even defend
press access.
In fact, members
of UNCA's
Executive
Committee
have tried to
get the
investigative
Press thrown
out of the UN,
and there have
been no
reforms since.
It's become
the UN's
Censorship
Alliance.
They provide
Ban Ki-moon
with photo ops
playing soccer
with them.
This is
today's UN -
and FUNCA
is fighting to
hold the UN to
its stated
principles.
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