Showing posts with label credentials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label credentials. Show all posts

Monday, May 11, 2015

Amid Sale of Jobs in UN Peacekeeping, Ban Ki-moon Greets New Ambassadors of Cote d'Ivoire, New Zealand, Montenegro and IOM Too


By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, May 11 -- In UN Peacekeeping under Herve Ladsous, positions in missions in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Haiti were corruptly put up for sale, a 49-page “Strictly Confidential” UN Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) report obtained and exclusively published by Inner City Press on February 7shows.
  Despite the various UN answers to Inner City Press set forth below, the Cote d'Ivoire diplomat Bafetegue Ouattara depicted by OIOS soliciting and accepting the bribe is still inside UN headquarters. In fact, on May 11 he was on the UN's 38th floor shaking hands with Secretary General Ban Ki-moon after the latter accepted the credentials of Claude Stanislas Bouah-Kamon as the replacement of former Ambassador Bamba. Inner City Press was there, and tweeted a photo of Claude Stanislas Bouah-Kamon and of Bafetegue Ouattara.

  Claude Stanislas Bouah-Kamon used the name of the other Ouattara, the president, as he handed over his letter of credentials. Minutes later the new Permanent Observer of the International Organization for Migration Ashraf Elnour Mustafa Mohamed Nour used a more booming voice to offer the greeting from IOM's William Lacy Swing and say he would serve under Ban's "mandate" (if so, than IOM should do better answering Press questions.)
 Also presenting credentials on May 11 were Jim McLay's replacement as New Zealand Ambassador, Gerard Jacobus van Bohemen, and Montenegro's Zelijko Perovic
 Joining Ban in short meeting with each was new Assistant Secretary General for Political Affairs Miroslav Jenca, until recently in Ashkabat, Turkmenistan. The UN can be a weird place. We wish 
Gerard Jacobus van Bohemen and  Zelijko Perovic well, and even 
Ashraf Elnour Mustafa Mohamed Nour. But with Claude Stanislas Bouah-Kamon we'll want to see what he does about the sale of UN posts exposed in his mission.
Bafetegue Ouattara says OIOS only recently interviewed him - meanwhile, UN Deputy Spokesperson Farhan Haq on May 11 praised OIOS to Inner City Press, as a response to 21 NGOs calling Ban's response to reported rapes in Central African Republic by French troops.

   On April 22  Bafetegue Ouattara spoke for Cote d'Ivoire in the Security Council, on Cote d'Ivoire sanctions, and was praised by the chair of that Committee.
  Afterward, Outtara approached Inner City Press at the Security Council stakeout about the OIOS report. He said, they only interviewed me recently. Inner City Press said it would be happy to here more about the processes of OIOS - but the report says what it does. We will have more on this.
  In a March 13 report (in French), BBC links former Permanent Representative Bamba's ouster to the Ivorian Mission saying Western Sahara is the last colony in Africa in a meeting of the UN General Assembly's Fourth Committee back on October 13, 2014. (That was, of course, the Cote d'Ivoire government's position under Laurent Gbagbo, contrary to France's position.)
 Unlike, for example, The Independent (here, crediting Inner City Press), BBC entirely misses the scandal of DPR Ouattara being exposed for selling UN positions but having more support in President Ouattara's inner circle, Ibrahim Ouattara (known as "photocopie" due to his resemblance to his brother, President Alassane Ouattara) and two ministers, Mamadi Diane and Roland Adjo-Lessing, see below.
 On March 6, when Michaëlle Jean, Secretary-General of the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie, held a press conference, she said her organization is involved in UN Peacekeeping missions.
  Inner City Press ran from the Security Council stakeout to the UN Press Briefing Room and asked if this Francophone connection in UN Peacekeeping should be cleaned up. Video here.
 Ms. Jean said it did not have to do with language. Perhaps not language - though other diplomats at the UN have asked why the damning OIOS report was only in French. But will it be cleaned up?
 In fact, he has gotten a promotion, to "charge d'affaires" with his putative boss Permanent Representative Yousoufou Bamba said on his way out. The question arises: why is Bamba and not the bribe-taker being removed?
 Who is protecting Bafetegue Ouattara?
 Inner City Press is infromed that Bafetegue Ouattara's defenders include Ibrahim Ouattara (known as "photocopie" due to his resemblance to his brother, President Alassane Ouattara) and two ministers, Mamadi Diane and Roland Adjo-Lessing.
 But what does all this mean for Ouattara's stated commitment to accountability, even for those in his party? 
  What also is the position of France, which has run UN Peacekeeping the last four times in a row and holds the presidency of the UN Security Council this month -- though Ambassador Francois Delattre has said "I have to run" the first two times Inner City Press asked a question, on Burundi and Malivideo hereVine here. This will be a good one to answer. Watch this site.

  As to Bafetegue Ouattara, despite its own evidence showing the bribes and sale of UN posts, the UN's OIOS didn't make any recommendation about him, nor recommend any changes so it or the UN could.
  Now Inner City Press has learned that a replacement for the head of OIOS Carman Lapoint is being sought. The process to select the next holder of this lone UN oversight position should be transparent, so that real oversight can begin. We'll have more on this.
 On February 16 The Independent followed up, crediting Inner City Press and quoting an unnamed UN spokesman that "we cannot and should not pre-judge the results of the national investigation" and that "there are 36 UN police officers from the Ivory Coast deployed to the mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and 60 to the operation in Haiti."
 On February 17, Inner City Press asked UN deputy spokespersonFarhan Haq:
Question:  I wanted to ask about the OIOS [Office for Internal Oversight Services] report about acceptance of bribes for UN police posts that I asked about last week, yesterday The Independent published a story on it.  They quoted a UN spokesman.  I don't know if it was you or Stéphane [Dujarric].  But, what I wanted to ask you about was the substance of it.  It said, “We cannot and should not prejudge the international investigation.”  Since the OIOS report has bank records and you've already taken action, apparently, and repatriated 10 police officers, doesn't the UN think its own report is true?  So, what does it mean to say that… is Côte d’Ivoire supposed to reinvestigate the case before taking action on the Deputy Permanent Representative?  And, finally, they also mention there are 36 Ivoirian police officers in MONUSCO and 60 in MINUSTAH [United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti].  How many have actually been repatriated?  Thanks.

Deputy Spokesman Haq:  Well, regarding that, basically, once the OIOS report was received, we took decisive measures, including ordering the repatriation of all the UN police officers who were involved.  All those officers involved are either gone or in the process of leaving the peacekeeping operations on which they served, which is to say MONUSCO and MINUSTAH.  Beyond that, no police from Côte d’Ivoire will be extended beyond their current assignments and deployment of any subsequent Ivoirian police to UN operations has been suspended until confirmation from Côte d’Ivoire that action has been taken on the OIOS investigation.  And regarding… and regarding the quotes that you had referred to, yes, we're not going to prejudge the results of the national investigation, which the UN has asked the Member State to conduct.  We've insisted that the investigation be very thorough and comprehensive.  We've stressed that the UN should be kept fully informed of the results of the Member State’s investigation and that necessary action should be taken as a result.  But, saying that, now, of course, it's up to them to do it and we won't prejudge the results of their actions.

Inner City Press:  I guess it's actions versus investigation.  You stand behind your own report since you've already sent police officers home based on it, right?

Deputy Spokesman Haq:  Yes, of course.  The people who were found in the internal investigation to have received improper assistance in getting their jobs, those are… like I said, I've either all left or in the process of leaving.
   On the last line, we're left assuming that "I've either all left" means "they've either all left." But how many have left? 
   And why has the Cote d'Ivoire Deputy Permanent Representative who sold UN Peacekeeping posts not been declared Persona Non Grata by the US, which says it cares about peacekeeping and UN reform?
  The UN strip searched and PNG-ed Indian diplomat Khobragade for an employment dispute. Here an Ivorian diplomat has sold posts in UN Peacekeeping. Where's the PNG?
  Tellingly, after the Press' exclusive February 7 exposure of corruption in Herve Ladsous' UN Peacekeeping, its asking about it at the February 9 UN noon briefing and even the UN's long statement in spin and response at the February 10 noon briefing, UN insiders and Ladsous corruption enablers like Reuters and Agence France Presse reported not a word about the corruption.
  Reuters has been spoonfed lines about Ladsous MONUSCO refusing to act against the FDLR in the DRC, which is passes through with no analysis of Ladsous and MONUSCO's history, much less corruption. We'll have more on this.
  On February 12, despite the UN investigative report depicting in detail Cote d'Ivoire's Deputy Permanent Representative Bafetegue Ouattara soliciting and taking bribes to sell posts in Ladsous' MONUSCO and MINUSTAH missions, Inner City Press ran into Bafetegue Ouattara in the basement of the UN, by the garage. After an exchange of words, including a demand to know who leaked the report to Inner City Press (demand rejected), at noon Inner City Press askedvideo here:
Inner City Press: the corruption one is as follows:  It has to do with that OIOS [Office of Internal Oversight Services] report that was leaked showing the payment of bribes for peacekeeping posts.  I’d asked Farhan, but I wanted to ask you more because, this morning, I actually ran into the named deputy representative of Côte d’Ivoire, Bafetegue Ouattara, in the building, and since this report, which began in 2013 and was finalized in 2014, has banking records proof of the payment of bribes for peacekeeping posts, I just wondered what does the UN do?  I understand that the peacekeepers have been asked to return home, but the person who solicited and took bribes… does the UN have no recourse at all?

Spokesman Dujarric:  You know, as you well know… As you well know, diplomats are sent here by their Governments.  We have no authority over them.  It is up to national Governments to take action against these, against individuals.

Inner City Press: Is there nothing that a diplomat could do even inside this building that the UN would take action on?  This was soliciting bribes for UN posts.

Spokesman:  As I said, this person works for the Government of the Côte d’Ivoire, it would be up to them to take appropriate action. 
  So again - there is NOTHING that a diplomat couldn't do at the UN? It cannot be said that this UN has zero tolerance for corruption - far from it. Later on February 12, UN Peacekeeping chief Ladsous, who refuses to answer any Press questions, was hobnobbing with diplomats in the Delegates' Entrance to the UN General Assembly. We'll have more on this.
 On February 10 there was a partial answer, video heretranscript here, including

Inner City Press:  Do you think that this… the panel on peacekeeping operations under [José] Ramos-Horta, is this the type of obviously kind of hole in the system that was exploited for personal gain that should be reviewed?

Deputy Spokesman Haq:  This is a clear-cut case of corruption which was found by our Office for Internal Oversight Services, and we're following up on that.  Clearly, quite a good measure of the follow-up also needs to be handled by the Member State involved.
   But there are many unresolved questions; watch this site.
 Two days after that exclusive, on February 9 Inner City Press asked UN Deputy Spokesperson Farhan Haq for the response of UN Peacekeeping, whose chief Herve Ladsous since Inner City Press raised corruption has refused all Press questions, specifically what Ladsous has done in the ten months he has been on notice of this corruption, as shown by the leaked documents. February 9 video here.
 On February 10, UN deputy spokesperson Haq came to the noon briefing with a prepared answer, which he read out. February 10 video here. He said that further recruitment of UN Police for Cote d'Ivoire has been suspended pending that country taking action.
 Inner City Press asked if all ten police described as paying bribes have been repatriated, for the status of the Deputy Permanent Representative Ouattara shown taking bribes, and if inquiries have been made with other countries which send soldiers or police to the UN.

  Haq said that the ten have left or are in the process of leaving. Six months after the final report? "In the process of leaving"?
 Worse, Haq said it is up to Cote d'Ivoire if the Deputy Permanent Representative remains in his post at and in the UN. Isn't collective bribes for UN posts a crime? And not only in Cote d'Ivoire? 
 Inner City Press asked Haq if this obvious loophole allowing corruption will be reviewed by Ban Ki-moon's panel of Peace Operations, to which Inner City Press has already forwarded the OIOS report. Video here.
 Another question that has been raised to Inner City Press by diplomats after reading the exclusive is whether Ladsous had a duty, at least before the UN Security Council's trip to Haiti last month led by Chile and the US to tell Council members that bribes had been collected for positions in the MINUSTAH mission there.
 Haq told Inner City Press that "this was corruption found by our own internal oversight." But the report says the UN's OIOS "received" information about these possibly corrupt practices on July 24, 2013. We'll have more on this.

 
  

Friday, February 28, 2014

As DPRK's Ja Song Nam Gives UN Credentials to Ban Ki-moon, Kim Won-soo Says Congratulations


By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, February 28 -- When the new Permanent Representative of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea Ja Song Nam came to the UN to hand his credentials to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, there were more than ten camera-people who arrived 30 minutes early to attend.
In the Media Accreditation and Liaison Unit it was said this was the most interest in the UN's 38th floor since the last General Assembly debate in September 2013.
Inner City Press had asked if outgoing Permanent Representative Sin Son Ho had made any farewell courtesy call on Ban Ki-moon, formerly South Korea's foreign minister. No, was the answer.
Along with ten other camera-people, Inner City Press was screened by electronic wand and a sniffing dog; there was a forty five minute waiting period first on the 37th floor then on 38 in the "Brian Urquhart Room," complete with a miniature Security Council donated by Mozambique and a small model tank given by Pakistan.
Finally the photo gaggle was called into Ban's conference room. The Under Secretary General of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs, from China, was there, as was Ban's senior advisor Kim Won-soo.
Ja Song Nam was ushered in and counseled by Ban's chief of protocol. Then Ban entered from his office, shook hands and exchanged some few words in Korean with Ja Song Nam.
Kim Won-soo said, in English, congratulations. Then they went back into Ban's office, and the camera-people were asked to leave. Is it a new era? Watch this site.

 
  

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

UN Credentials for Cote d'Ivoire Diplomat Stalled by Russia, “No Instructions”


By Matthew Russell Lee, Exclusive

UNITED NATIONS, December 22 -- While UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday asked the General Assembly's committee on credentials to quickly vote to replace Laurent Gbagbo's Permanent Representative to the UN Djedje with a former Gbagbo diplomat now recommended by Ouattara, the committee was deadlocked Wednesday morning.

African sources on the Credentials Committee tell Inner City Press that Russia opposed the diplomatic switch pushed by Ban Ki-moon, just as Russia questioned for days a proposed Security Council Press Statement on the Ouattara - Gbagbo electoral contest.

In the Council, Russia argued that Ban Ki-moon's envoy Choi Young-jin had overstepped his authority by certifying Ouattara as the winner, rather than certifying the electoral process.

Inner City Press asked Ban Ki-moon's acting Deputy Spokesman Farhaq Haq, after the failed Wednesday morning meeting, to comment on it. Haq acknowledged the morning meeting, but said that the Credentials Committee will meet again in the afternoon.

While the Russian Mission to the UN has not spoken on the matter, Inner City Press is told that in Committee they repeatedly said they had “no instructions.”

A source on the Committee tells Inner City Press that while things are “always” by consensus, it is possible that a vote will be called, or “forced” in the afternoon meeting. Watch this site.

Update of 1:58 pm -- Russia raised in the Security Council that the question of Cote d'Ivoire's Perm Rep is a political question that belongs in the Council, Inner City Press is told. Also that there may be a December 23 Security Council meeting on Cote d'Ivoire.

Monday, November 16, 2009

UN Claims "No Removal of Credential" of NGO Barred Since Stakeout Speech

By Matthew Russell Lee
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www.innercitypress.com/unngo1credentials111609.html

UNITED NATIONS, November 16 -- Eleven days after a non-governmental organization's representative had her UN identification pass taken away for speaking at the General Assembly stakeout microphone, UN Associate Spokesperson Farhan Haq was asked if her credentials had been restored.

"There's been no removal of the credentials of Ms. Bayefsky or her organization," Haq claimed, on camera. Video here, from Minute 17. But a simply phone call to Ms. Bayefsky reveals that her I.D. card, required to gain access to the UN complex, has not been returned. [Click here for Inner City Press' first exclusive report of Ms. Bayefsky's ejection from the UN.]

Ms. Bayefsky told Inner City Press of that after her pass was confiscated by UN Security, she was asked to draft and sign a written statement, after which her pass would be returned to her. She spent more than two hours writing the statement, and included in it a comment by a UN Security official that "the Palestinian Observer was very upset" at what she had said at the microphone, after the Assembly's vote on the Goldstone report about Gaza.

Then, Ms. Bayefsky say, the UN through Security official Anne Hammenrudh no longer wanted her to sign or turn in the statement. Rather, she was told that the matter would be referred to the Assembly's Committee on Non Governmental Organizations, which doesn't meet until the end of January. [Click here for previous Inner City Press coverage of the Committee on NGOs.]

So while Ms. Bayefsky is, for now, barred from the UN for the rest of the year, UN Spokesperson Farhan Haq says "her credentials are not changed" and "there's been no removal of credentials."

In the very same briefing, Haq explained of the UN's removal of a poster about Chinese Web censorship from its Internet Governance Forum in Egypt that the poster was "already on the floor, face up" and that the UN "folded it, undamaged." Still, the poster and its message were removed, just like Ms. Bayefsky. Click here for that story.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/unngo1credentials111609.html