Wednesday, April 11, 2018

On Yemen, UN Guterres Praises and Takes $930M Check From Saudi Prince MBS Who Comes 30 Minutes Late


By Matthew Russell Lee, PhotosPeriscope
UNITED NATIONS, March 27 -- UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres lavished praised on Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on March 27, with not a word of the Saudi led bombing campaign that has killed civilians and caused cholera in Yemen. The occasion was Guterres accepting a $930 million check for the 2018 Yemen Humanitarian Response Plan. Call it blood money. 
The Crown Prince -- MBS as he is known -- arrived a full hald hour late, with Guterres and his outgoing head of Political Affairs Jeffrey Feltman pacing around but not complaining. (Feltman whose last day at the UN is March 29 when asked if Trump might hire him laughed and said he didn't think so. This was after the 5 pm listed start time for the MBS photo op, but Inner City Press in an abundance of caution after repeated UN censorship threats was not yet Periscoping.) Alamy photos here.
When MBS did arrive, there was a fast photo op then the media was ushered in to wait in the conference room of Guterres' absent Deputy Amina J. Mohammed, delivering equally craven statements in her native Nigeria. Although the UN Department of Public Information run by British Alison Smale had said no shoulder-held video cameras in the conference room, exception was made for "Saudi official" media - just as Smale's DPI has purported to award Inner City Press' long time work space S-303 to "Egypt official" media Sanaa Youssef of Akhbar al Yom, who has not asked the UN a question in a decade. Exceptions are made. 
  Guterres' speech is here, along with MBS' claim he never violates international law notwithstanding bombing funerals and wedding parties. Guterres made a special category for the Saudi-led Coaltion: the so-called "good child killers" list. This invention was paid back on March 27 -- only half of the money comes from Saudi, the rest from the UAE -- and the killing is such to continue. The Security Council is being asked, however, to speak solely on missiles the Houthis have launched. One might ask, which came first. But exceptions are made. Back on March 15 as in the US Senate a bill attempting to end support to the Saudi-led Coalition's bombing of Yemen was proceeding toward its 55-44 failure, Inner City Press asked Saudi Ambassador to the UN Abdallah Y. Al-Mouallimi if he is concerned at loss of support in the US for the bombing, which is killing children and spreading cholera. Video here
Al-Mouallimi called the bill an internal matter of the US, at an early stage; he said the US fully supports what his country is doing. He blamed all death of civilians on the Houthis. Earlier Inner City Press asked Sweden's deputy ambassador Carl Skau if the day's Security Council Presidential Statement had been agreed to be the Coalition and the Houthis. He said non Council members find their way to have input. But how do the Houthis? 
The UN, under Antonio Guterres, his Deputy Amina J. Mohammed and it turns out his Global Communicator Alison Smale, have made their position clear. Mohammed and Smale sent a long time the night before at a Saudi event on women's rights. 
Smale, who is responsible for restrictions on Inner City Press which she refuses to explain or reconsider, was at the event; on March 15 her restrictions resulted in Inner City Press unlike no-show state media from Egypt and others being initially unable to reach the Council stakeout. The glass door was inexplicably locked despite Guterres' spokesperson's office announcing that the Saudi ambassador would speak. Once he began, a UN Security officer nevertheless at the turnstile Inner City Press' pass no longer opens demanded that it have a minder or “sponsor.” This is UNacceptable, as it the continued death in Yemen. Watch this site.

The United Kingdom's murky role in the killings in Yemen persist even in the face of a Freedom of Information Act request from Inner City Press. 
More than five months ago on 15 August 2017 Inner City Press asked the UK government for records concerning Yemen. The UK sells weapons to Saudi Arabia, and has now implanted a UK citizen as UN envoy on Yemen in the person of Martin Griffiths (Inner City Press story and questions here.) After repeatedly extending the time to response, now the UK has denied access to all responsive records, letter here, saying that "the release of information relating to the UK’s discussion on UN business could harm our relations and other member states of the United Nations (UN)." 
Here on Patreon is the full denial letter, from which Inner City Press is preparing an appeal, on Cameroon as well - it has 40 working days. 
This is shameful - the UK is also exiting transparency. 
As Inner City Press pursues these questions at the UN, it remains restricted to minders by the head of the UN Department of Public Information Alison Smale, who it is noted is British - and functionally a censor. A retaliator, too? Smale has not explained why Inner City Press' long time work space is assigned to no-show, no-question Egyptian state media Akhbar al Youm.