By Matthew Russell Lee, Exclusive, New platform here
UNITED NATIONS, April 26 – When a UN system official was expelled from Tanzania and Inner City Press asked about it on April 25, the UN's main concern seemed to be to emphasize that it was NOT the "Resident Coordinator" but only the UN Development Program's Country Director, and to add a "sic" to its transcript to show Inner City Press couldn't discern the gender from the name. But what is being done? From the UN transcript: Inner City Press: the UN's top official in Tanzania has been expelled, Mr. [sic] Awa Dabo, has been PNG'd [persona non grata] by the Government. And I wanted to know if you have any comment, if the person who's the head UNDP official is also the Resident Coordinator and what you…?
Spokesman: I don't believe she is actually the Resident Coordinator. I can confirm that she has left [the United Republic of] Tanzania. We're in contact with the Government of Tanzania on the matter, and our colleagues at UNDP continue to work closely with the Government on all issues.
Inner City Press: Relatedly, I guess, because my question… the reason I was assuming she was the Resident Coordinator is I thought that, currently, anyone that's a Resident Coordinator in a country even shifts over to work for UNDP — that that's the structure of how… I know that it happened in Kenya, for example. The Kenyan Resident Coordinator worked for another agency, UNFPA [United Nations Population Fund], and became a UNDP official in order to become Resident Coordinator. Isn't that the current structure?
Spokesman: I'm not sure that her title was Resident Coordinator… I don't know what exactly her function was in the country office. So, I don't know if she was the Country Director or the Resident Coordinator. [UNDP later confirmed that she was the Country Director.]
Spokesman: I don't believe she is actually the Resident Coordinator. I can confirm that she has left [the United Republic of] Tanzania. We're in contact with the Government of Tanzania on the matter, and our colleagues at UNDP continue to work closely with the Government on all issues.
Inner City Press: Relatedly, I guess, because my question… the reason I was assuming she was the Resident Coordinator is I thought that, currently, anyone that's a Resident Coordinator in a country even shifts over to work for UNDP — that that's the structure of how… I know that it happened in Kenya, for example. The Kenyan Resident Coordinator worked for another agency, UNFPA [United Nations Population Fund], and became a UNDP official in order to become Resident Coordinator. Isn't that the current structure?
Spokesman: I'm not sure that her title was Resident Coordinator… I don't know what exactly her function was in the country office. So, I don't know if she was the Country Director or the Resident Coordinator. [UNDP later confirmed that she was the Country Director.]
But what is behind it, from a country the UN says it is relying on, for example amid hate speech in Burundi? And what is up with UNDP - and with the Secretariat of Antonio Guterres for whom Dujarric for now speaks, as he has for each of the last two Secretaries General, as well, as is significant here, between Annan and Ban for UNDP? Guterres has handed UNDOP to a German official, Achim Steiner, while also proposing a German as his Personal Envoy on Western Sahara, Horst Kohler. As Inner City Press reported, and holdover Spokesman Stephane Dujarric called "despicable," one of Guterres' closest aides is Katrin Hett, of Germany. She got the position through Jeffrey Feltman, appointed to the UN by the previous US administration. Sources tell Inner City Press that Germany was in the running to head the UN Department of Management too, for which Guterres pushed a vacancy notice. But even for more, another Germany USG would be too much. So Inner City Press is told that Guterres may offer the Department of Management to the United States, once his other "reform" merges Feltman's Department of Political Affairs out of existence. So, they tell Inner City Press, the affable Yukio Takasu has been extended atop Management for a year. How long can this lack of reform, and continued restrictions on the Press that covers it, continue? When UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres did a photo op at 9:25 am with the African Union's Moussa Faki Mahamat, the conference room was full of name tags. Inner City Press took the (first) photo and was told to wait on the 37th floor until 10 am for a "photo spray." At that time, the room was full with AU officials including Early Warning and Conflict Prevention specialist Frederic Ngaga Gateretse, who to his credit took note of the UN's bad treatment of the Press. Video here and embedded below. And in fact, when Guterres did a rare Q&A at 1 pm, he did not answer the Cameroon Internet cut-off question Inner City Press three times audibly asked, after Guterres' holdover spokesman Stephane Dujarric picked on pre-arranged questioners, at least two not about Africa.
At the 10 am meeting, Deputy Secretary General Amina Mohammed, made aware, came to the end of the table and spoke with ASGs Taye Brook Zerihoun and Gettu, who joked that "The Horn" (or part of it) was represented. New UN Peacekeeping chief Jean-Pierre Lacroix came in; Jeffrey Feltman was in the meeting, but not apparently Stephen O'Brien.
UNFPA's Babatunde Osotimehin came up late on the elevator. Minutes afterward, the UN announced that Guterres' 5 pm meeting with Egypt's Minister Badr would no longer be open to the media, as his UN is giving Inner City Press' longtime space work space to Egyptian state media Akhbar al Yom, whose long absent correspondent rarely comes in, never asks questions. This is today's UN: and it must improve. So too must Guterres' and Mohammed's UN's performance on Cameroon and other AU topics. Watch this site.
On April 18 when Guterres did a photo op and meeting with Ukraine's deputy Foreign Minister Sergiy Kyslytsya, his close adviser Katrin Hett came to tell the assembled staffers they would not be needed, the meeting would be held with only four on each side in Guterres' office overlooking the East River and Queens. Things are getting more and more private: Guterres' spokesman Stephane Duajrric for example has twice refused to answer Inner City Press if as reported Guterres tried to reach Cameroon's president of decades Paul Biya, about the cut off of the Internet there. Others have noticed the rash of German officials getting jobs: Achim Steiner at UNDP and prospectively Horst Kohler on Western Sahara. But some office on 38 now have blank signs. Kyslytsya had just given a right of reply in the Security Council, about Crimea. The mystery and payback for Guterres getting all of the Permanent Five members of the Council on his side to get elected has still not be revealed. But earlier on April 18, Inner City Press which remains evicted from its UN office and confined the UN minders was told, by the minders, that it cannot even work at a table in the UN lobby. This has been raised, yes, to the 38th floor. So they know. There are no rules - a topic, in another context, that Kyslytsya raised in the Security Council.
Back on April 10 when Guterres did a photo op with the Club de Madrid - World Leadership Alliance including another candidate for Secretary General, Danilo Turk, it was impossible not to wonder what might have been. How might other of the candidates fared? What reforms, and reversal of Ban Ki-moon mistakes from Yemen and children and armed conflict to censorship might they have accomplished or at least begun? The ex heads of state barely fit into the photo, Periscope video here, and very little banter was heard before the press was ushered out. On the way in, Guterres came amiably through the hall, turning into the office of Miguel Graca. But where is the requested list of who works on the 38th floor, and who pays them? Is it true, as Inner City Press has heard, that Guterres has interviewed Achim Steiner for UNDP? At the lower profile Department of Public Information, why hasn't the Officer in Charge given any substantive response to simple requests before him, and would any successor at least have to commit to free press due process rules? Why is the holdover spokesman allowed to refuse to answer the Press' questions on Burundi, while engaging others about Sex and the City? We'll have more on this. After 100 days of Antonio Guterres as UN Secretary General, what has been accomplished? Guterres focused early on South Sudan, but as Inner City Press reports today on his 100th day, the Salva Kiir forces are using tanks near Wau while UN Peacekeeping, still under French control, says nothing publicly. The Cyprus talks are set to continue, but we've heard that before. Yemen is as bloody as ever, and Guterres extended Ban Ki-moon's (or Saudi Arabia's) envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed without even getting him to make any public financial disclosure. Discrepancies in Guterres own disclosure filings between 2013 and 2016 have yet to be explainedby Guterres' holdover spokesman Stephane Dujarric. What has changed? Not the Department of Public Information's targeted restrictions on Inner City Press, able to cover meeting on the UN's second floor only with a minder, and sometimes (as on the Rwanda genocide on April 7) not at all. Inner City Press has filed a request for reversal with DPI's Officer in Charge, nine days ago, with no substantive response. New Inner City Press song here. We remain constructive, eager to see reforms occur and succeed. But what has changed?
When Guterres held a brief photo opportunity and meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, it was Guterres' first in a while, after several rounds of travel. And it was over quickly: the media was told to leave before a single word was said. There were complaints about that, and more substantive complaints about a lack of transparency. There are no read-outs of meetings. On April 5 Inner City Press reported on inconsistencies even in Guterres' own public financial disclosures from 2016 and 2013 (his Yemen envoy makes NO public disclosures). On April 6 Guterres' holdover spokesman Stephane Dujarric declined to offer any explanation of the differences. As noted, under Ban Ki-moon he had Inner City Press thrown out of the UN Press Briefing Room and UN, where it is still restricted even as the Ng Lap Seng / John Ashe UN bribery case it was covering is coming to trial. Is the UN reforming? Watch this site.