Showing posts with label daniela bas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label daniela bas. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2013

UN Talks Disabilities, But Still No Ban Ki-moon Bulletin on Accessibility, Media Banned from GA Hall, FUNCA Protests


By Matthew Russell Lee

UNITED NATIONS, September 20 -- For this UN General Assembly week, one of the "High Level Events" is on Disabilities and Development. Inner City Press on Friday asked what if anything UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has done on the "Bulletin on Accessibility" which his spokesperson told Inner City Press two months ago was being worked on.

  UN official Daniela Bas said she could not answer for Ban, but that her department, DESA, has given all of its views and recommendation and now it's up to the senior level people to formulate. It all seems a bit slow, and contrary to the UN's claims for its high level event.

  For example, the UN has had a billion dollar peacekeeping mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo for a decade or more, but DRC has not even signed, much less ratified, the Disabilities Convention. The same is true, though more understandable, in Somalia and South Sudan.
  This comes while it is still UNclear if the US would grant a visa to Sudan's president, because he is indicted by the International Criminal Court, of which the US is not a member.
  The US has not ratified the Disabilities Convention (it received only 61 of the needed 66 votes in the US Senate in December), but Bas told Inner City Press that the US government has conducted "walk-throughs" to make sure that Monday's event is accessible.
  What will NOT be accessible to the press this coming week is the General Assembly Hall, where Monday's event will be held. In previous years there have been seats for the media in the back of the GA Hall. But this year, while delegations have had their number of seats reduced, the media has been eliminated. 
  The Free UN Coalition for Access @FUNCA_info has fought this and will continue to. FUNCA thanked Friday's speakers for coming; Bas said she used to be a journalist and appreciates "hard questions." There will be more. Watch this site.

 
  

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

UN Slammed for “No Inkling” on Disabilities, Italian Official & EU Case, FUNCA for Access


By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, July 17, updated 8:30 pm -- The Convention of the Rights of People with Disabilities press conference on Wednesday started late, and when it went Kenya's Ambassador Macharia Kamau criticized the UN for not being accessible to the disabled, having “no inkling” how to serve their needs.
  Since the UN has spent $2 billion on a Capital Master Plan rehabilitation, Inner City Press asked Macharia Kamau if he thought member states had been consulted enough on this issue, and if anything can be done to make better accessibility plans for the General Assembly, recently closed for renovations.
  He replied that things can and must be done better. Minutes later, Inner City Press put the same question to UN spokesperson Martin Nesirky, who responded with a lengthy Note to Correspondents mass e-mailed to the UN press corps, which should be online here.
  Inner City Press still awaits an answer to its question about a pending disabilities Bulletin or instruction that would come from Secretary General Ban Ki-moon -- who recently rescinded such a Bulletin on workers rights and staff relations.
  Also on the panel was UN official Daniela Bas. Inner City Press asked her about a recent EU Court of Justice decision criticizing her native Italy for not living up to its responsibilities under the disabilities convention. 
  She said she couldn't answer that, since she has been working at the UN and not in the Italian foreign service for two years. So who will answer? The court decision is described here.
  The Free UN Coalition for Access has asked the UN in Geneva, via @FUNCA_Questions, to describe steps it has taken for accessibility, beyond the US Americans with Disabilities Act which the UN in New York now says it complies with (while also claiming immunity). We'll see.
Footnote: The Free UN Coalition for Access thanked all the panelists, including Maria Soledad Cisternas Reyes, chair of the Commission on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and Javed Abidi of Disabled Persons International, for the briefing. The word “Access” in FUNCA can and does mean many things. Watch this site.
Update of 8:30 pm -- after 8 pm, the following came in:
From: UN Spokesperson - Do Not Reply [at] un.org
Date: Wed, Jul 17, 2013 at 8:17 PM
Subject: Your question on accessibility
To: Matthew.Lee [at] innercitypress.com
Further to your questions on accessibility today, we can confirm a Secretary-General's bulletin on accessibility for persons with disabilities in the UN is being developed. 
  We'll have more on this.