Monday, June 30, 2008

At UN, Contractor Skanska Hits Pipe and Methane Gas Clears Printing Plant, Landfill Blamed as Adlerstein Gives All-Clear

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un1methane063008.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 30 -- As the UN's contractor dug test holes on Friday, a pipe was ruptures and there emerged a smell "like rotten eggs," the head of the UN's Capital Master Plan Michael Adlerstein told Inner City Press on Monday. The UN's publishing section was vacated, and Monday morning the usual UN Journal publication was not available in hard-copy.

In response to questions Monday from Inner City Press, Adlerstein described a period of wonder and worry, in which Con Edison was called to check on a gas leak, and the New York Fire Department also responded. "There was a smell of gas," Adlerstein said. "Con Ed has a gas they add to their gas, a fingerprint" to see if a leak is attributable to them. This one wasn't. Rather it came from "muck... the old Turtle Bay landfill is slowly rotting, and produces methane gas."

Adlerstein described "a little plastic cap on top of the pipe," adding that over the weekend three venting systems were installed. He himself gave the all clear to UN Security to have work continue in the publishing section.

Inner City Press was alerted to the problem by UN workers who asked for anonymity due to fear of retaliation. They stated that only when those working complained for a strong gas-like smell were they allowed to stop working. They now wonder about the safety, going forward, of working with the gasses being released by the drilling of the UN's contractor, Skanska. A dozen or so workers in hardhats were shepherded into the UN on Friday night around 9 p.m., no explanation was given.

In recent weeks, even in the UN's checkerboard-floor lobby, holes have been drilled in the ceiling, sometime blocked off by sheet plastic that falls, flapping, at night. "Is this safe?" a worker asked Inner City Press, pointing at a hole in the ceiling. While UN management insists that safety is being considered, questions are mounting, including about the cost overruns of the Capital Master Plan to vacate and gut-rehabilitate the UN's 40 story tower. Watch this site.

Footnote: As the contract talks between UN Television workers and the UN's contractor, Venue Services Group, go down to the end-of-June wire, Inner City Press asked Capital Master Plan chief Michael Adlerstein if VSG could, as people say, get even more business from the UN under the CMP. Adlerstein said that part of the CMP is to moving the broadcast facilities, but that he did not know if VSG could get the work. On the contract, Adlerstein said, "I think they are working toward a solution, I'm hopeful." We'll see.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un1methane063008.html

Sunday, June 29, 2008

At UN, TV Staffing Contract Talks Stall, Scabs Are Rumored, Stakeout Could Go Dark, Vendor's Finances Shaky

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/untv1vsg062708.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 29 -- With the threat of a strike or lock-out looming over UN Television, new information has emerged about the shaky financial condition of the company chosen by the UN to provide the service. National Mobile Television, once described as one of the largest remote production vendors in the United States, announced layoffs in April 2008, closing offices and preparing to put itself up for sale. Its subsidiary Venue Services Group, which directly hires those who work in UN Television, the following month closed its office in East Rutherford, New Jersey and moved in with The Systems Group in Hoboken.

VSG's Dave Shaw claimed that "this is not a sale of the company in any way, but a strategic alliance." But the declining credit rating and shifting corporate structure of its UN TV vendor should have triggered an inquiry by the UN. Instead, the UN staffer in charge of overseeing the contract has been allowed by Andrew Nye to go to Beijing to work for NBC on the upcoming Olympics, well-placed sources tell Inner City Press.

VSG's contract with those who produce UN TV expires on June 30, as do the entry passes of the UN audio visual engineers, and negotiations for a new contract are going nowhere for now. The drop-dead hour is 6 p.m. on Monday.

Update of June 29 -- Well-placed sources tell Inner City Press that VSG's Dave Shaw was planning to bring 10 "scabs" into the UN to give them a tour of the facility -- and that this was approved by the UN. The UN TV-ers responded by voluntarily coming to work on Sunday morning. After so many of them entered the building, UN Security started refusing more of them entry. After hearing of such a strong showing, VSG called off their "scab" tour. When and if this so called tour will happen is not clear. There are threats the UN will deactivate the UN TV-ers' passes as of Sunday 29 June at midnight, ostensibly out of concern about sabotage of technical equipment. That would interfere with any UN TV on Monday, when VSG is slated to make an offer. Watch this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/untv1vsg062708.html

Let Zimbabwe's Cricket Players Travel, UN's Advisor Lemke Says, UK Disagrees, Croatia Zim Role Questioned

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un1zimsports062708.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 27 -- With Robert Mugabe running his version of an election today in Zimbabwe, and in light of the UK's Gordon Brown vowing to work to block the Zimbabwean cricket team from traveling to play in the UK, Inner City Press asked the UN's new Special Advisor on Sports and Development and Peace, Willi Lemke, for his view on Brown's athletic travel ban plans. "I disagree with the position of the UK government," Lemke replied. "If they train hard, then politicians say" they cannot travel, "it is very hard to understand for the people that trained." Video here, from Minute 14:20.

Inner City Press asked the UK's Ambassador to the UN John Sawers about Lemke's comments. "He doesn't understand the relation between the Zimbabwean government and the Zimbabwe Cricket Union," Ambassador Sawers said.

Lemke was pressed to answer if he is asking to visit Tibet. He replied that yes he would like to visit, to look into sports issues, such as if there are physical education classes in the schools. That there may be more pressing issues in Tibet did not come up. "I don't want to get into trouble," Lemke had answered Inner City Press. When a reporter tried to ask what the "Peace" in his title means, the question was cut off. Afterwards, Lemke confirmed to Inner City Pres that he remains on the advisor board of the Werder Bremen football club. Might this raise a conflict of interest?

Inner City Press asked Ban Ki-moon's spokesperson if Mr. Ban agrees with the position of his Special Adviser. The Spokesperson said it is not possible to comment on every statement by his Special Advisors. When Inner City Press noted that Zimbabwe was a topic in the news -- in fact, the spokesperson had actively solicited someone to ask Ban "the Zimbabwe question" at the previous day's stakeout interview -- the response was that Ban has full confidence in his advisor. The inference seems inescapable that Ban, then, also "disagrees with the position of the UK government."

News analysis: so China was mad at Ban for saying publicly he will not go the Olympics, Russia remains mad at his position on Kosovo, and now his Special Advisor disses the UK for its stance on Zimbabwe, at least as to cricket. Just another week at the UN...

Footnote: as the Security Council met to consider a draft statement on Zimbabwe, South African Ambassador Dumisani Kumalo scoffed, about the country introducing the draft, they're using Croatia to do it. Some of these guys couldn't even find Zimbabwe on the map. Just as Costa Rica shot back at Sudan's Ambassador calling it a banana republic, a geographical retort from Croatia would seem to be in the cards.

Friday at 6 p.m. U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, as president of the Council, read notes to the press that all members reaffirmed their June 23 position, regreted that the election had gone forward, and would meet again "in the coming says." When asked if that meant the weekend, UK Ambassador Sawers said probably not. Asked if it meant after the African Union meeting, Monday in Egypt, Amb. Sawers said that would be a good guess. Watch this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un1zimsports062708.html

On Genocide, UN Cites Immunity to Srebrenica Claims, Lack of Jurisdiction Over Peacekeepers

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un1srebrenica062608.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 26 -- Complete with screenshots of Darfur from Google Earth, the UN on Thursday held a panel discussion on "our responsibility to protect those threatened by genocide and other crimes against humanity," including ethnic cleansing. Inner City Press asked about the UN's refusal to even show up in the Dutch court considering claims against the UN for its role in the thousands of ethnic cleansing deaths in Srebrenica. Daphna Shraga of the UN's Office of Legal Affairs answered that the UN "does not go to court," it is automatically immune and does not even show up to make the argument.

Inner City Press asked about the cases where the UN waives immunity, for example for some officials accused of corruption. Ms. Shraga responded that in the Srebrenica case in the Dutch courts, no individual is charged. Rather, it is the UN that is facing charges, which it apparently feels no responsibility to answer.


Inner City Press asked if OLA, which is headed by Nicolas Michel, has considered waiving immunity in this particular case, or at least showing up in court. The answer appears to be no. When Mr. Michel was asked to explain by a reporter, he said he doesn't have to, and that he should not be taped. It has been this way since
reports earlier this year that he took rent from the Swiss government, some $10,000 a month. Immunity breeds contempt, apparenlty.

The UN's advisor on the Responsibility to Protect, Ed Luck, answered that there is also the court of public opinion, which expects the UN to do the best that it can. When it falls short, its reputation suffers. It is most important, he said, that the UN system learns. Some question, as simply a recent example, UN peacekeepers' in action while Abyie in Sudan was burned down earlier this year. What, exactly, was learned? Luck said that some of the UN's harshest critics work for the Secretariat. These are introductions we are still waiting for.

Also this week, the UN has spoken against torture. But on June 24, Inner City Press asked about alleged torture by peacekeepers. UN headquarters' lead human rights rep quickly associated the question for sexual abuse and women, and said it had already been answered. But in the Democratic Republic of Congo, UN peacekeepers have been accused of straight up torture, with little follow through. Other UN-approved peacekeepers, those of France in Ituri in 2003, are credibly accused of torture, even by Nordic conspirators. The unnamed UN watchdogs up on the 38th floor, we're sure, are closely watching all this. Impunity breeds contempt - that is apparently the lesson.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un1srebrenica062608.html

UN's Drug Czar Lambastes Taliban and FARC, Calls Myanmar Problematic, Dodges North Korea Question

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un1drugs062608.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 26 -- The UN's Vienna-based narcotics and crime czar Antonio Maria Costa regaled Ambassadors and reporters on Thursday with his view of the war on drugs. He correlated drug production with the strength of rebel groups, listing the Taliban, Colombia's FARC and, in a historical footnote, Alberto Fujimori's crackdown on the Shining Path and drugs in Peru. Inner City Press asked if he was unequivocally promoting the strengthening of all governments, for example in Myanmar and North Korea.

Costa paused while his colleague cued up some slides about Myanmar. "It's problematic," Costa intoned, "to deal with a country with which we have severe problems with human rights." He went on to say that despite an "uptick" in 2007, opium production in Myanmar is generally down, and confined to the eastern part of the country. "Let's be honest," he said," there's limited control by government there." He said that Laos has been certified as opium free, but there are still "cohorts" of old people addicted to heroin, which is brought in from Myanmar. The North Korea portion of the question he did not answer as all, despite reports of governmental involvement in the drug trade.

Also from the audience came impassioned criticism of Costa's UN Office of Drugs and Crime from the Ambassador of Cape Verde, who disputed the area devoted to drug cultivation, and of Colombia, who told Costa to stop correlating narcotics production with the strength of the government. She said that the strength of the FARC has waned, even though drug production numbers are up. Stick with the numbers, she counseled, stick with the facts. That's good advice.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un1drugs062608.html

Controversial EDF Dam in Laos Is UNDP's Anti-Corruption Example, Panel at UN Claims

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at the UN: News Analysis
www.innercitypress.com/undp1laosedfdam062508.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 25 -- Fighting corruption in the water sector was the title of a laudable-sounding UN Development Program panel discussion on Wednesday. Two of the six speakers were from UNDP, another was listed on the invitation as Jean-Michel Devernay of the "International Hydropower Association." Mr. Devernay spoke mostly about the $1.6 billion Nam Theun 2 dam in Laos, of which his real employer, Electricite de France, owns 35 percent.

The connection between transparency and this for-profit investment in a big dam in Laos, the electricity from which will be sold almost entirely in Thailand was murky. Inner City Press asked Devernay to respond to criticism of the project, that impacted people are not being compensated and that decaying or burned biomass will dirty the water and causes greenhouse gasses. That is a problem, Devernay acknowledged. But, he claimed, there was a lot of public outreach by the Laotian government.

Another audience member, just back from surveying Laos for a water NGO, reported that the lack of public participation in Laos rendered dubious Devernay's claims. Inner City Press asked about people who have yet to receive any compensation. Devernay wrote this off to "timing" issues, and praised the project and EDF for having a "respected" Panel of Experts. This Panel, however, recently reported on quality of life that "a further decline is likely if the dam shuts because the settlers will be unable to cultivate draw-down areas for rice during the rainy season this year. Buffaloes are dying of disease and there are cases of starvation at many villages and a drop in employment opportunities associated with the construction of the project." This is transparency?

Even the sponsorship of the event was murky. While it was promoted with the four panel logo of UNDP, when one tried to register online from UNDP's website, one was whisked to the site of the U.S. Committee for the UNDP, an organization which UNDP disowned connections to (when it was exposed the the military contractor Lockheed Martin has a seat on the UNDP-USA board).

There was muttering as the event ended that UNDP's own standardless engagement with Laos might explain some of the above. We'll see -- we will continue to follow these issues.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/undp1laosedfdam062508.html

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

UN's Sudan Envoys Question ICC's Timing, Call for Chad Solution, Don't Know of No-Bid Lockheed Martin Contract Controversy

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/unsc5postafrica062408.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 24 -- There can be no solution in Darfur without changes in both Chad and Khartoum, negotiators Jan Eliasson and Salim Ahmed Salim told the Press on Tuesday. But while pressure is applied in Sudan, who is pressuring Chad's Idriss Deby government? Eliasson said that every member state with bilateral relations should use them. While he avoided that part of the question, it seems clear that as to Chad this means France.

On the Justice and Equality Movement's assault on Khartoum which was stopped at Omdurman, Eliasson said he and Salim Salim met with Khalil Ibrahim two weeks before the May 10 attack, urging him to desist of military action, which Khartoum had been expecting. There was "no receptiveness by Khalil Ibrahim," Eliasson said. He felt his power has "not reached its peak."

On the question of the International Criminal Court, Salim Ahmed Salim said that while "impunity must never be allowed to prevail," the "timing of any decision becomes important." Inner City Press asked if he meant ICC prosecutor Luiz Moreno Ocampo's past or future indictments. Future, he answered, why speak about the past. Video here, from Minute 1:05:20. Ocampo has said that the government apparatus in Sudan, above the level of current indictee Ahmad Harun, is guilty of war crimes. He has implied he might also bring indictments of rebel groups and even their supporters. We'll see.

Eliasson said that on the UN's no-bid contract with U.S.-based military contractor Lockheed Martin for Darfur peacekeeping camps, "I have no information, we have to come back on that... no information on that in any detail." Video here, from Minute 54:37. The head of the hybrid UNAMID force, Rodolphe Adada, said that the UN and also the U.S. were trying to convince Sudan to allow another extension of the contract. The latter would seem to be at the level of envoy Richard Williamson, who in his last appearance at the UN, alongside Mia Farrow, criticized UN peacekeepers for failure to the respond during the attack on Abyei.

Tuesday the Security Council unanimously voted to request that Ban Ki-moon "examine the root causes of, and the role played by, UNMIS in connection with the violence ... in Abyei in May 2008, and consider what follow-up steps may be appropriate for UNMIS." Why not a similar inquiry into the JEM attack on Omdurman?

And see, www.innercitypress.com/unsc5postafrica062408.html

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

At UN, Chissano Says Council Ready to Defer to Uganda on Kony, ICC as Well

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un5lra062008.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 20 -- As the Lord's Resistance Army rampages through the Congo, Southern Sudan and the Central African Republic, the UN's envoy to the LRA-affected areas Joaquim Chissano briefed the Security Council on Friday. Afterwards he told Inner City Press that "the Council was ready to consider any decision taken by the government of Uganda" to suspend the indictment of the LRA's Joseph Kony by the International Criminal Court, and put Kony on trial in Uganda instead. Video here, from Minute 7:55.

Inner City Press asked, why then has Kony not signed the peace agreement? Chissano said that perhaps "Kony needs clarification." Chissano said that recent attacks in Southern Sudan and the Congo are "clearly LRA," and that those in the Central African Republic are "probably" LRA, the "evidence" points that way. Video here, from Minute 3:53. Then Chissano left the stakeout, surrounded by an entourage which did not permit any follow-up questions. Why is there so little talk about the acts of the government of Uganda?

The person who Chissano named as representing Kony, David Matsanga, has said

"We can use the United Nations Security Council resolution and chapter seven to go to the UN Security Council, which the government of Uganda should do as a referral state, to say the UN Security Council, please, the warrants are a threat. Can you remove them from us so that general Joseph Kony and others can come and sign and walk free and assemble and do things? But he has said he is not going to sign an agreement in Juba because he does not feel safe over there."

Unlike other prosecutorial offices, the ICC appears to make a major distinction based on where its cases come from. If referred by a government, that government retains control to turn the process off and "take it home." That this can imply impunity was not, according to Chissano, much of a concern. Some call it double standard.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un5lra062008.html

On Kosovo, UN's Ban Torn Between Sponsors and Majority and Law, Handover Under Fire

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un3kosovo062008.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 20 -- Heading into Friday's Kosovo meeting in the Security Council, Ban Ki-moon was flanked by his senior advisors, to show how seriously considered his renunciation of the UN's role has been. He entered with Vijay Nambiar and Nicholas Haysom. Kim Won-soo and Jean-Marie Guehenno followed just after. The goal was to look serious, if not contrite. After Ban called Kosovo the most complex problem he's faced in 40 years of diplomacy, Serbian President Boris Tadic said, "I want to be very clear, Serbia will never recognize the independence of Kosovo."

Tadic went on to criticize Ban's June 12 report on Kosovo, which treated hand-over of responsibility to the European Union as a fait accompli. Tadic called Ban's Report "an acknowledgement that an influential and determined minority can set aside considerations of international law."

After Kosovo's Fatmir Sejdiu spoke of his outreach to Kosovar Serbs, the first Council member to speak was Ambassador Spatafora of Italy, apparently because Joachim Ruecker's replacement as head of UNMIK will be an Italian, Lamberto Zannier. It's said that Larry Rossin, too, is leaving. But what about Gerrard Gallucci? What about the UN's promise to investigate its March 17 re-taking of the courthouse in north Mitrovica?

Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin critiqued Ban's report paragraph by paragraph. Graf Five, he complained, referred to only one side's challenge to UNMIK's role. Paragraph Nine concedes that UNMIK has abandoned its so-called economic reconstruction pillar, because the European Commission has stopped funding it. But doesn't the UN have its own budget? Churkin concluded that Russia expects Ban to be "ruled by the Charter" and to refrain from any reconfiguring of UNMIK without Council approval. Outside the Chamber, they speak even more harshly.

Update of 12:44 p.m. -- Ban Ki-moon and entourage left the meeting without taking any press questions. Inner City Press asked Ban's spokesperson when his promised report on the events of March 17 will be available; she said she will check. Back at the stakeout, Inner City Press asked Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin if it is his understanding that the report is finished. Video via here. He indicated it was, and that Ban has promised to provide this report along with briefings on UNMIK operational matters.

On a related Russian issue, Inner City Press askd if Georgia's detention of Russian peacekeepers in Abkhazia will be raised in the Council. "I have no instructions to that effect," Amb. Churkin said. Then he added that it certainly was "unfortunate."

Earlier in the week, Inner City Press asked Ban's advisor Nicholas Haysom if his diplomacy is constrained or distorted by the need to please the Permanent Five members to get a second term. Haysom said you always need the powerful. But the second term issue has been raised in connection with Kosovo. Whose threat about three years from now is more credible? Watch this space.

Footnote: on his way in to the Council just before 10 a.m., U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad was asked if Kosovo would be solved. It's still early, he said, we can knock it out today. Most journalists laughed. Some will be eating chicken wings with Zalmay on July 2 at the Waldorf Towers. Call it independence day -- for Kosovo. Perhaps there will be burek.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un3kosovo062008.html

In UN Basement, Zimbabwe and Myanmar and a Fig Leaf NGO, Consensus Belied by Empty Chairs

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un2rice061908.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 19 -- The staged Zimbabwe meeting convened by Condi Rice occupied less than an hour in the UN basement Thursday. Around a horseshoe table were nameplates for the 15 Council members. South Africa's and Libya's seats stayed empty until 11:55. Then again, Costa Rica's seat was not filled,* and doubtless Mugabe's name is mud in San Jose. The rape debate upstairs created conflict. In Conference Room 7, African nations were given the extra seats, along with World Vision in the center.

Ms. Rice's co-sponsor, the foreign minister of Burkina Faso, said afterwards that now is not the time for sanctions. The UK's Attorney General, Baroness Scotland of Asthal, congratulated African nations for standing unanimous up to Mugabe. Mbeki, not so much. But in the wings waits Jacob Zuma. The world is closing in upon Harare, but the location of the meeting, in the basement not the chamber, was telling. Perhaps World Vision was there only as a fig leaf, the rationale for exile from the Chamber. When NGOs brief the Council, it happens in the basement. But if one or more nations opposed addressing Zimbabwe in the chamber, other than as a strictly humanitarian issue, a room in the basement and a sample NGO were matched to move things forward.

Condi Rice took just a few questions, the first two on the Middle East. The settlements should not be addressed in the Council, she said -- some muttered this is like some other P-5's position in Myanmar and Zimbabwe -- and yes, for the record, Iraq is a sovereign country. BBC Afrique, ever intrepid, got to the front and asked if pressure on Mugabe really helps the Zimbabwean people. Mugabe is not helping them, Condi Rice shot back. Then she turned to leave, but a quick-thinking journalist called after the Burkina Faso minister. They returned, complete with translator, to say it's not the time for sanctions.

As the entourage moved off, two men from World Vision came out. They've called for an end to Mugabe's restrictions on NGOs. Inner City Press asked, what's the status of restrictions in Myanmar. It's gotten much better, was the answer, although the government of Than Shwe is still "overly sensitive about security." Might that be Mugabe's excuse?

* - Costa Rican Ambassador Jorge Urbina later confirmed to Inner City Press that it was only scheduling, he was speaking in the Council and sent his political director, who arrived a bit late. Duly noted.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un2rice061908.html

At UN, Zimbabwe and Pro-Rape Arguments Fade, from Condi to Susan Rice

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un1rice061908.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 19 -- As the UN Security Council's debate on a resolution to condemn rape as a tool of war began, after Condi Rice swept into the chamber with her entourage, the U.S. mission let it be known that abstentions were no longer expected. What, one wondered, had been the pro-rape argument? As always at the UN, it was styled as a matter of principle. The first argument, according to Inner City Press' sources involved in the negotiations, was that rape no matter how systematic is not a threat to international peace and security but is rather an internal matter. The second was a cultural argument, that the drive behind the resolution is "Western in nature." To be seen as pro-rape, however, would not do. And so a unanimous vote is expected in connection with Condi Rice's visit. There will be 60 speakers, with Myanmar near the rear in 57th place.

Before the meeting began, France's Rama Yade came to the stakeout microphone and gave a speech in French. Like the Security Council delegation, she had just returned from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, specifically the Kivus. She said militias must be disarmed and then distanced from the Kivus and kept occupied. But which region of Congo would want the FDLR? One imagines a "not in my backyard" battle, in which inducements might be proffered.

On Zimbabwe, Condi Rice will head to the basement for an 11:30 meeting. The Press will be allowed in, after security screening, for the first ten minutes, including a speech by Burkina Faso Foreign Minister Djibril Bassole, then out. On her way to meet Ban Ki-moon, Condi Rice will stop to speak and maybe take some questions. Afghanistan? North Korea? John McCain?

Footnotes: Following his meeting on Darfur in the same basement conference room where Condi Rice will be, U.S. envoy for Sudan Rich Williamson headed to Chicago for a McCain fundraising event. He is said to be positioning himself for a position if McCain wins. On the Obama side, the UN word is Susan Rice. From Condi Rice to Susan Rice, November will tell the story.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un1rice061908.html

In Myanmar, Only Ex-Poppy Farmers Get UN Human Security Trust Funds, Concept Still Ill-Defined

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/ocha1humsec061808.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 18 -- Four weeks after a strangely contentious UN General Assembly debate on the concept of "human security," on Wednesday a new guidelines for the UN Trust Fund for Human Security were unveiled. Ban Ki-moon's chief of staff Vijay Nambiar, who serves on the Trust Fund's advisory board, led the discussion, explaining that while initially Japan was the only funder, now Slovenia and Thailand have joined, and non-state donors are being sought. But what does the UN mean by human security? The introduction to the 36-page guidelines leads in another direction, "for a more detailed definition of of human security, please refer to page 4 of the Human Security Now report." There, the concept is to "complement state security" in that its concern is with "the individual... rather than the state."

Picking up on seeming code-word, and remembering the Cuban delegation's May 22 denunciation of human security as an "ambiguous concept.. to justify any action and attempt against the sacred principles of sovereignty," Inner City Press asked Mr. Nambiar if the Trust Fund has any projects in, to use a timely example, Myanmar. Nambiar flipped through some papers and said yes, there is a project with ex-poppy farmers in border areas, that began in 2007 and runs through next year. The first part of the answer was later confirmed on the Trust Fund's web site, which does not however provide the years nor amount of funding of the projects, click here to view.

The other questions asked during the session were from prospective recipients of funds, that is, UN offices, agencies and affiliates. UNESCO spoke, as did Disarmament Affairs and the International Organization on Migration, which has been added to the list of possible fundees. It was said that since 1999, $364 million have been given out. It would definitely seem, then, that a list of projects and funding amounts should be more readily available. Also on the advisory board, which meets once a year, are Sadako Ogata, Sonia Picardo, Japan's Ambassador and Lakhdar Brahimi, whose report on the December bombing of the UN in Algiers it still under wraps, being vetted by Nicolas Michel's Office of Legal Affairs according to the spokesperson. Human security was clearly needed in Algiers. The purpose or thrust of the concept, or how it is distinguished from development, or humanitarian aid, remains amorphous. As Wednesday 's session ended, Inner City Press asked a staffer about Cuba's denunciation. "They are confusing it with Responsibility to Protect," the staffer said. Perhaps.

While one is tempted, then, to conclude that Cuba was right, that "human security" as a goal is ambiguous and even dangerous, Mr. Nambiar in his response said that the funding should not be politicized. This is the approach to Myanmar of the UN and of its Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, which oversees the Trust Fund. OCHA's John Holmes, who has veered from calling Than Shwe's government a "regime" to praising it, has been even more diplomatic (due to his British nationality, it's said) when it comes to Zimbabwe, another country in which the Trust Fund has made donations, amount and even year unknown. Uzbekistan, too, through the UN Development Program, which for the Karimov government helps with software and tax collection, for a regime, in Holmes' word, which blocks the Internet and tortures political opponents.

The staffer of the Trust Fund, Kazuo Tase, said in answer to the Myanmar question that the Fund does not distinguish between development and humanitarian aid or human rights, but looks for an "inter-linked" approach. We will continue to seek out information about this concept, and the Trust Fund. Watch this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/ocha1humsec061808.html

UN Inaction in Abyei Is Under "Review," Despite Belated Fight-Back from Qazi, Drone Stories

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un1abyei061808.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 18, updated June 19 -- Inaction by UN Mission in Sudan peacekeepers while the town of Abyei was being burned down has resulted in belated fight-back from UNMIS chief Ashraf Qazi. On Tuesday, U.S. envoy for Sudan Richard Williamson said that despite having a mandate under Chapter Seven of the UN Charter, which allows the use of force, UN peacekeepers in Abyei stayed inside their compound while houses were being burned down and looted a mere 25 feet away. Qazi, in a statement issued Wednesday from Khartoum, wrote "I am sure the statements attributed to Mr. Williamson's views do not reflect the position of the U.S. Government. In the aftermath of the Abyei crisis, I have had the privilege of meeting U.S. Deputy Permanent Representative Wolf during the recent visit of the Security Council to the Sudan."

Leaving aside that Alejandro Wolff's name has two F's, and the the statements were attributed to Williamson, not to his view -- they were his views -- on the central issue of UNMIS' mandate, Qazi is adopting a troublingly Rwanda-like reading. The UNMIS resolution states that

"Acting under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, UNMIS is authorized to take the necessary action, in the areas of deployment of its forces, and as it deems within its capabilities, to protect United Nations personnel and to ensure their security and freedom of movement, as well as, without prejudice to the responsibility of the Sudanese Government, to protect civilians under imminent threat of physical violence."

In Abyei, by all accounts, civilians were under imminent threat of violence.


Qazi adds a qualification that is not in the resolution, that

" whenever, despite our peace keeping efforts, large scale hostilities break out between the two parties, UNMIS has neither the capacity nor the mandate to militarily intervene or to provide law enforcement functions, which are the responsibility of the Government."

But what about protecting civilians? Inner City Press asked UN spokesperson Michele Montas for the view of Ban Ki-moon's outgoing chief of peacekeeping, Jean-Marie Guehenno. Video here, from Minute 17:32. Ms. Montas said, you are free to ask Mr. Guehenno's department. In response to an email, Guehenno's spokesman Nick Birnback told Inner City Press:

"As we always do after such incidents, we are reviewing the Abyei incident. Together with UNMIS we will draw lessons and ensure the mission continues to implement all aspects of its mandate productively, so as to assist the parties in advancing the CPA. Currently UNMIS is actively supporting the implementation of the agreement reached by the parties on 8 June, in particular concerning the deployment of the Joint Integrated Units (SAF/SPLA) which began this morning (18 June)."

This differs from the combative defense of inaction issued by Ashraf Qazi. The upbeat conclusion of the response, reflected here, needs to be followed and will be. Watch this site.

Footnote: there is talk of Zambian peacekeepers in Abyei actively ejecting civilians and locking themselves in, "hear no evil, see no evil." There are echoes of Rwanda. And in the hall outside the Security Council on Wednesday morning, there was Rwanda's affable UN Ambassador, who told Inner City Press that the UN has to get harder and more serious on the Hutu FDLR rebels who are still in the Congo. The head of the UN mission in the Congo, Alan Doss, recently said the drones would help his work. Inner City Press has asked UN Peacekeeping if they are formally requesting such drones, and if also on drones they are monitoring and can confirm or deny Abkhazia's charge that Georgia is still flying them over the Kodori Gorge. Answers have been promised to both questions, watch this site.

Update: we now have responses on both of our questions to Peacekeeping about drones:

DR Congo envoy "Doss has indicated that if MONUC was tasked to carry out additional tasks the Mission would need additional enablers and capability and possibly additional specialized forces. These additional assets could, conceivably, include unmanned aerial vehicles."

In Abkhazia, "UNOMIG has limited capacity to monitor airspace over the zone of conflict. There have been reports of some UAV overflights over the Kodori valley which UNOMIG could not confirm. It however followed up on those reports with the Georgians who have denied any are flying there."

One hopes that the UN would monitor its own drones in the Congo if they get them...

and see, www.innercitypress.com/un1abyei061808.html

Preventive Diplomacy Is Half-Embraced at UN, Nicholas Haysom Admits Push Back, Asks for More War Stories

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un1prevdip061708.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 17 -- Are the UN's attempts at preventive diplomacy limited by the undue influence of the veto-wielding Permanent Five members of the Security Council, or by the Secretary-General's concern about winning a second term, which any of the P-5 could block? Inner City Press put the question Tuesday to Ban Ki-moon's seldom-seen Political Affairs Director, Nicholas Haysom. "You need powerful nations behind you in an initiative," Haysom replied, "whether in the P-5 or not. You have to take the powerful on board." He went on to say that there's a "danger in viewing everything through the prism of the P-5. There are Secretary-Generals who've done so and lost support among a broader range" of countries.

The academic tone of Haysom's answer was in keeping with the setting, a discussion of Bertrand Ramcharan's book "Preventive Diplomacy at the UN." Ramcharan also answered the P-5 question oblique, with a story about Richard Holbrooke at Dayton. "I was the only UN person at Dayton," Ramcharan said. "We had better deals" than Holbrooke's, but the UN "lacked power... to twist arms." Ramcharan described the Secretary-General as "in the midst of power, trying to play a role to the extent that power permits him."

Haysom tried to apply these abstract concepts to the actual docket on the UN's 38th floor this year. He rattled off the year's preventive diplomacy missions, to Myanmar and now Zimbabwe, Kofi Annan's work in Kenya, even Ban's no-comment approach to Kosovo. Haysom called this an attempt to "minimize conflict" from the declaration of independence. He said he had returned just two days about from Iraq, where he'd previously worked on the Constitution, this time considering the administration of Kirkuk issue.

To his credit, Haysom detailed some of the year's failures, characterizing of failures of, or push-back against, preventive diplomacy. He said there is a resistance to preventive diplomacy among member states, leading to the blocking of reform and regional offices of the Department of Political Affairs -- he ascribed the most strenuous opposition to Latin America -- and to resistance to the Responsibility to Protect doctrine and Ed Luck's appointment as special advisor on the topic. He said that the Security Council at times does not given clear guidance, for example this year on Ethiopia and Eritrea. He even offered constructive criticism of Ramcharan's book, saying he would have liked "more war stories." Those will be in the next book, Ramcharan said. We'll be on the lookout.

Footnote: in light of Ramcharan's Balkan story, it's worth noting Reuters' report on a case in the Hague against the UN about Srebrenica. Because it has previously been said that UN invoked, and even prevailed on, its immunity, Inner City Press on Tuesday asked UN spokesperson Michele Montas if the UN is still in the case. She said she'll ask the Office of Legal Affairs. The lack of responses by Nicolas Michel may soon be coming to an end. But who'll be his replacement? Watch this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un1prevdip061708.html

On Darfur, Need for "More Activity from UN," US Envoy Says, France's Chad Support Acknowledged as a Problem

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/usun2darfur061708.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 17 -- The U.S. envoy to Sudan Richard Williamson on Tuesday announced that Khartoum has been asked for permission to open up six additional routes for humanitarian convoys to Darfur. Inner City Press had asked if the UN peacekeepers stationed in El Fasher should rather be deployed to protect at least some of the World Food Program trucks which have been subject to hijacking. Williamson agreed there should be "more activity from the UN." Video here. The non-governmental organizations which stood beside him at the microphone, however, did not speak of what the UN could be doing on the ground, but rather only about obstruction from Khartoum and paralysis by the Security Council, which Mia Farrow and John Prendergast said is due to China, and China alone.

Inner City Press asked if France's unqualified support for the Idriss Deby government of Chad, even as it is accused of supporting attacks on Sudan and recruiting child soldiers, is not at least part of the problem. Prendergast, who has earlier accused Sudan of waging a proxy war against Chad, did not answer this question.

Williamson approached it diplomatically, speaking of "the bleed between Chad and Sudan." He said that the U.S. is "taking an active role" in trying to defuse the "mutual destruction on the border." Apparently referring to France, he said that "some of our friends are taking a more active role as well." But active how? When he led the Security Council delegation in Chad last week, French Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert neither delivered nor allowed any criticism of Chad.

Footnote: some of Amb. Ripert's sudden standoffishness with the press during the Council mission became more comprehensible on Tuesday. Sources tell Inner City Press that it was only on the trip that Ripert learned that he would not be getting the job of head of UN Peacekeeping. At the last moment, these sources say, the Ban Ki-moon administration because concerned that Ripert's constant references to Bernard Kouchner might create a problem of split loyalty. And so France was asked for another name, and forwarded that of Alain Le Roy. Who ever takes the job should move quickly to deploy existing UN peacekeepers in Darfur to protect the humanitarian trucks.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/usun2darfur061708.html

French Mercenaries To Patrol Somalia, Blackwater in Mia Farrow's Dream for Darfur

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un1mercenaries061608.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 16 -- That the UN might pay mercenaries to do peacekeeping missions appears closer all the time. French private military firm Secopex has announced a contract with Somalia's Transitional Federal Government, worth 50 to 100 million Euros over three years, to patrol the coastline and to protect president Yusuf, whose plane is fired at every time it leaves or enters Mogadishu airport.

Secopex founder Pierre Marziali has been quoted that the company will "be seeking backing from the International Maritime Organization and other UN bodies, as well as from the European Union." He added that he expected the EU countries to respond all the more readily following the decision of the UN Security Council to authorize international navies to go into Somali waters to combat piracy. So here is an early beneficiary of the Council's piracy resolution.

Monday at the UN, Inner City Press asked Ban Ki-moon's spokesperson Michele Montas about Pierre Marziali's statement that backing will be sought from "UN bodies... Is it in the UN mandate to pay money to a private security firm to protect a transitional federal Government?" Ms. Montas replied, "I can inquire into this, but I don't think so." Video here.

Friday, the idea of the UN paying U.S.-based Blackwater to go into Darfur was given the blessing of actress Mia Farrow, at a Press breakfast high over UN Plaza. The only problem, Ms. Farrow told Inner City Press and others, was that Sudan might not given Blackwater visas. Last week in Sudan, officials said they intend to pull the visas of the employees of U.S.-based military contractor Lockheed Martin in July, when the extension to its $250 million no-bid contract runs out. Secopex apparently will not have that problem in Somalia. One wonders what the UN's security chief for Somalia, who has a satellite phone with a "Mission Impossible" ring-tone, thinks of all this. He has confirmed that resource extraction firms in Somalia's breakaway Puntland region have hired up second-tier militias to protect and extend their claims. Would Secopex work for commercial fishing trawlers arguably violating Somalia's exclusive economic zone? Watch this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un1mercenaries061608.html



On Darfur, Mia Farrow Pans Ban, Calls for UN Action, Says JEM and Chad's Acts Less Important

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at UN
www.innercitypress.com/un1miadarfur061308.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 13 -- Last week in Darfur, next to the cafeteria in the UN's El Fasher camp, Emilia Casella of the World Food Program told Inner City Press that WFP is delivering "forty two percent less calories per day" to those displaced by violence, because its trucks are being hijacked. Seventy-six trucks have been hijacked, of which 50 are still missing. Thirty-six drivers have not been heard from since their hijacking, Ms. Casella said. She said that the Sudanese government should be protecting the trucks from "bandits."

Just around the corner but out of the media spotlight, Inner City Press was approached by a group of UN peacekeepers from the Gambia. One, giving only his first name Toure for fear of retaliation, said that they were frustrated at not being allow to go outside the camp and provide protection. His colleagues loudly agreed, one clutching a rocket-propelled grenade launcher.

On June 12 in front of the Security Council chamber in New York, Inner City Press asked UN humanitarian chief John Holmes if consideration is being given to using what peacekeepers are there to protect the trucks and food, and if the Sudanese government has thrown up any obstacles to this. Holmes said it is being considered, and that Sudan is not blocking it, to his knowledge. Video here. On June 13 Inner City Press ask the UN spokesperson where this "consideration" stands, but did not get an answer. Video here.

Mia Farrow that day held a small breakfast meeting with the Press, in a hotel restaurant high across from the UN. While at times going off the record, she spoke at length around Darfur, which she compared to Rwanda, site of genocide in 1994. Inner City Press asked her, should the UN peacekeepers that are already in Darfur be protecting the WFP's trucks? Of course, she said. "They should protect every humanitarian convoy."

Inner City Press asked, "how would you assess Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's performance on the Darfur issue?"

"What performance?" Mia Farrow shot back. While she asked for off the record treatment of her assessment of, for example, U.S. envoy Richard Williamson and South Sudan president Salva Kiir, when compared to John Garang, she made no such request regarding Ban Ki-moon. "We have to demand more from the UN," she said.

One UN system official for whom Ms. Farrow had praised was International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo. She disagreed with analyses, such as by Alex de Waal, that Ocampo's indictments and statements may make peace in Darfur harder to come by. "He knows too much," Ms. Farrow said. "He's bogged down."

Similarly, when Inner City Press asked for her view of the assault on Khartoum by the Justice and Equality Movement, Ms. Farrow said that to focus on that was to miss the point. You have to step back, she said. This is a government that is killing its own people. She repeatedly opposed any "moral equivalence" between the Sudanese government and the rebels. "You want to root for the best rebels," she said, after calling JEM's attack, stopped at Omdurman, an "error" not reflective of most rebel groups.

Ms. Farrow, who is a UNICEF ambassador, confirmed that UNICEF has visited child soldiers the Sudanese captures from the JEM forces in Omdurman. She was asked, shouldn't JEM and perhaps Chad or other backers be prosecuted for recruiting child soldiers?

"I think they're all doing it," she said. She said she's "seen children in the Chadian Army not more than twelve years old."

Again she was asked whether she would support sanctions or other measures against child soldier recruiters in the Chadian or JEM side, if nothing else that to show balance, something demanded, the questioner said, by the Russians in order to support actions on Sudan.

No, Ms. Farrow said. You have to look at the reasons the rebels form. But what if Chad is funding them? To this Ms. Farrow did not answer. They will have an announcement next week, at the meeting on Darfur arranged by the U.S. Mission to the UN. Watch this site.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/un1miadarfur061308.html

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Swiss Brag of Help to North Korea But Do Not Fund in Sudan, Explanation Sought

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at the UN
www.innercitypress.com/dprk1swiss061108.html

UNITED NATIONS, June 11 -- In North Korea, the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation supports the Pyongyang Business School, which offers "senior raking officials" classes in "logistics strategy, organizational behavior and strategic management." Given that the Kim Jong-il government for which these senior officials work is engaged among other things in torture of those who try to leave the country, one wonders what safeguards are in place to ensure that this Swiss-funded knowledge does not, in fact, improve the management and logistics of oppression.

The description of the Pyongyang Business School is taken from a four-page paper, dated May 2008, by the SDC's Kathi Zellweger. Ms. Zellweger's paper emphasizes Switzerland's role in North Korea since 1953, and says that "for over 30 years the two countries have enjoyed good relations. Political dialogue was initiated between North Korea and Switzerland in 2003 and continues to be conducted on an annual basis, alternatively in Switzerland and in" North Korea. " It is said, but not on the record, that in these yearly meetings, the Swiss bring up human rights.

It was not possible to get any on the record response from Ms. Zellweger about whether any safeguards are in place. But back in 2005, Ms. Zellweger told CNN's "Talk Asia" program that "North Koreans are very proud people so it's very hard for them to admit the difficulties and the poverty is not so obvious, it's hidden behind closed doors in apartment blocks. So it's very different to let's say, an Africa country." It is unclear if Ms. Zellweger's distinction between North Korea and Africa is based on apartment blocks, or on some implied lack of pride on the Continent.

It appears, after asking, that the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation does not fund any similar programs in, for example, The Sudan. In much of Europe it is popular to characterize Sudan has engaged in genocide. This might explain if the Swiss do not fund Sudan. But why then North Korea?

And see, www.innercitypress.com/dprk1swiss061108.html

UN in Africa Needs Further Oversight, Should Protect Trucks to Darfur, of Double-Standards

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press in Africa
www.innercitypress.com/unsc1postafrica061108.html

IVORY COAST TO NEW YORK, June 10-11 -- During the UN Security Council's seven-nation African tour, what was learned? The UN's interlocutors on Somalia do not include the insurgents who are actually fighting the occupation by Ethiopian troops. While the UN has begged Sudan to allow a second extension of Lockheed Martin's no-bid contract for peacekeeping bases in Darfur, Sudan has said it will stop giving visas to Lockheed Martin in July. (At the June 11 noon briefing, at deadline for this round-up, Inner City Press formally asked the UN to confirm that Sudan granted a final three month extension for the no-bid Lockheed Martin contract that expires in July, video here.)

While the UN's World Food Program attributes its halving of food rations in Darfur to the hijacking of trucks from El Obeid to Darfur, the UN is not using the troops it has in El Fasher to go out and protect at least some trucks. Inner City Press interviewed numerous peacekeepers in the UNAMID base in El Fasher, Lockheed Martin's cash crop, who express frustration at the lack of action, at not being able to help more. The UN should arrange protection for at least some trucks, some routes. You have to start somewhere.

Despite France's blind and desperate support of the Chadian regime of Idriss Deby Itno, he feels no need to meet with the Council delegation led by France's Jean-Maurice Ripert, and Ripert is willing to dissemble to the press to cover up this snub. Even South Africa's Dumisani Kumalo, at trip's end, said Chad is "a lost cause."

The Council as a whole likes to hear praise of the International Criminal Court from Congo's Joseph Kabila, even though an even-handed Court could indict Kabila and not only his opponents. But when challenged on this point, the Council claims to have no relation to the ICC, despite its insistence in Sudan on compliance with the Court. The troubling evidence that UN peacekeepers in Eastern Congo traded guns for gold with murderous militias does not appear to be subject to any substantive re-investigation, despite the UN's own lead investigator now stating that his findings were hidden and whitewashed.

UN Security carries loaded guns on planes, as evidence by the gunplay in Goma incident, and unlike UN propped-up governments like Congo's, Rwanda does not give favors, on visa, security checks or even air fuel. In the face of ransom demands, at least those involving their own convenience, most Council members dig into their pockets to pay. (One P-5 member, not at the Ambassadorial level, said it was outrageous and refused to pony up.) Ban Ki-moon's man in Abdijan, Choi Young -Jin, has not gotten the memo about taking a proactive position against sexual abuse and exploitation, but rather dodges questions on the topic. He is praised by Ivorian leader Laurent Gbagbo because unlike his predecessors he takes a hands-off approach, which Gbagbo believes will allow him to consolidate his power later this year.

Overall, the UN Security Council allows itself to be dominated by former colonial powers. The Council's public performance, particularly out in the field, is further distorted by the ambitions and self-interests of the Ambassador, exemplified by but not limited to France's Ripert running around Mugunga I camp in Goma looking for the France 24 television crew, and trying to micro-manage coverage of the trip by the Press. The ten non-permanent members do not provide an effective counter-balance; even P-5 member Russia lets the U.S. and Europe do and say what they want in Africa, while China saw no need to be part of the trip in Congo, Rwanda or Ivory Coast, no even sending its Ambassador in Kinshasa -- where it has a $9 billion deal for natural resources -- or Abidjan to attend the Council's functions. China prefers to deal with African and economic issues bilaterally, not through the Council. Therefore despite the claims of many human rights groups, China hardly controls the Council's approach for example to Sudan. There, former colonial power the UK publicly takes a hard-line, while in private being pushed around by Al-Bashir. One example was, in their closed door meeting, the UK's John Sawers raising NGOs' complaints which al-Bashir cut off, saying the NGOs should be using the previous established complaint process rather than waiting to tattle to Council members. According to Inner City Press' sources in the meeting, Sawers did not contest his. But a day later, in the Chadian IDP camp near Goz Beida, he told an audience of people admitted from Chad that he and the Council are pressing hard on President al-Bashir." The following day France's Ripert waded into the crowd in Mugunga IDP camp outside Goma in the Congo and said he and the Council are doing everything possible "so you can go home." Does unqualified support for Joseph Kabila, and nodding dismissal of the country's legislature -- which questioned the politics and timing of the arrest of Kabila's main opponent Jean-Pierre Bemba -- qualify in this regard? Time will tell.

On the other hand, the UN operationally is feeding and sheltering, sometimes in brutal conditions, destitute refugees and displaced people. In Mugunga, people live in huts of plastic sheeting, with floors of lava rock. Somehow 10,000 people are fed three meals a day. NGOs in Goz Beida run almost village-like camps of thatch-roofed huts. In Darfur's Zamzam camp outside El Fasher, there is a climate of fear, armed men everywhere, UN helicopters overhead.

In two, maybe three, of countries visits, the UN operates nearly as a state within a state. In Sudan the UN has two separate missions. UNMIS in the South dominates and distorts the local economy, seeming akin to UNMIK in Kosovo. In El Fasher in Darfur, the UN's and NGOs' presence has led to house rents of $5000, the emergence of a pizzeria and sale of balsamic vinegar. In the Congo, MONUC has an air force and peacekeepers everywhere, except when called on to engage rebel groups like the CNDC -- then they stand down and return to their bases, with good food and even surfing, and allegedly guns for gold sales. In Abidjan, Ban Ki-moon's man Choi is installed in an old hotel on a hill, with his own radio station and no need, apparently, to answer questions about the Mission's alleged wrongdoing, even when some at Headquarters say ONUCI senior leadership have a lot to answer for.

There is a need for more oversight, more checks and balances, less cover-up. We will continue to follow these issue.

Footnotes: In the Kigali airport, clutching a print-out an Inner City Press article which noted that France's Jean-Maurice Ripert had abruptly pulled back from the media after being accused of lying about Deby by, among others, the BBC's world correspondent, Ripert approached Inner City Press and demanded, "Why did you write this?" How about, because it's true?

In fact, Ambassador Ripert's problematic relationship with the truth began earlier on the trip, when he told the Wali of North Darfur that France had no role in the pardoning and release of the French staff of L'Arch de Zoe after they were found guilty of kidnapping Chadian and Sudanese children. It also continued right to the end of the trip, when in the final press conference before the Ambassador's were whisked to the Abidjan airport, Ripert grabbed the microphone to announced that "Licorne is not a French force," when the question hadn't even been asked. If put in charge of UN Peacekeeping Operations, thing would only get worse. And, we're compelled to report, one of the organizers of this Security Council trip tried to bar Inner City Press from going -- unsuccessfully as it turned out. But in Kigali, Ripert may have missed the point of that article and series, which looked more at the UN's own operations in these countries than at the quality and veracity of each Ambassador's performance.

In Djibouti, Inner City Press asked the staff of Ould-Adballah how much the UN is paying its largely London-based Somali opposition interlocutors, but the answer was not provided in Djibouti, nor in the following nine days of the trip. (At the June 11 noon briefing, at deadline for this round-up, Inner City Press formally re-posed the question at the UN's noon briefing in New York, video here.) In Sudan, it remains unclear if the legal advisor to UNMIS' Ashraf Qazi did, as Sudan claims, try to block the press' visit to the Omdurman museum of the attack, including on civilians, of the Justice and Equality Movement rebels. Likewise, whether UNAMID's Rodolphe Adada is using what credit he has with Khartoum to plead for extended no-bid contracts for Lockheed Martin.

In Chad, MINURCAT's Victor Angelo demanded off-the-record treatment for his answers to questions about JEM, about alleged French domination of the peacekeeping in Chad and the Central African Republic, including through EUFOR. On the ongoing question of the UN's closeness with Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, where Angelo served, he pointed at the retraction of one of the allegations, while saying even it it was true, it was "the Cameroonian," not him. At the end of the Chad leg, he asked Inner City Press for a review. Decidedly mixed.

In Congo Alan Doss, while viewed as more of a post-conflict specialist than might be needed, at least had an answer, however canned, to questions of peacekeeper abuse, the trading of guns for gold. This stood in contrast the ONUCI's Choi Young-Jin, who went asked by Inner City Press about a less than two week old report of sexual abuse by UN peacekeepers in Ivory Coast, of which senior ONUCI leadership was informed but did not nothing, merely referred to his earlier statement, which ONUCI sources say involved a largely dismissive buying of time to respond. Still, Chad was the low point of the trip -- a "lost cause," as Ambassador Kumalo put it -- and its high point, at least for this reporter, was the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where people who have suffered too much war are still scrappling in the street, selling fruit and avocados and photocopies from machines run by generators, rolling enormous propane canisters of self-made wooden bikes, striving for better lives. When the UN can help that, it does well. But it does much that works against it, which should and will be covered.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/unsc1postafrica061108.html

Monday, June 16, 2008

Gbagbo Asks UN Help to Consolidate Power, Basket Funds from UNDP

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press in Africa
www.innercitypress.com/unsc1gbagbo060908.html

ABIDJAN, June 9 -- This last leg of the UN Security Council trip in Cote d'Ivoire is supposed to be a good news, feel good stop. At least for now, the elections are on track for November 30, and President Gbagbo is talking nice about Ban Ki-moon's envoy, K.Y. Choi. In the Sofitel lobby, Inner City Press asked the Chairman of the Independent Electoral Commission Beugre Mambe about the role of the UN, particularly of the UN Development Program. Mambe said that UNDP -- he used the French acronym, the PNUD -- is raising "basket funds" for the elections from Cote d'Ivoire's friends. But is fundraising, and fee-taking, all that UNDP does? No, Mambe said. UNDP also works on the "best systems" for elections.

But after UNDP had said it was playing a similar role in Kenya, and violence broke out, UNDP quickly backed away from any claims about "best practices," emphasizing that it neither guarantees nor even monitors elections. So if Ivorians are counting on UNDP on in either respect, they may be disappointed.

Earlier on Monday, Inner City Press asked the president of the Rassemblement des republicains, Alassane Ouattara, if in his meeting with those Security Council members remaining the issue of drawdown of peacekeepers, from the UN or the French Force Licorne, had been discussed. Ouattara said his position is that the UN peacekeepers should be maintained or reinforced. He did not separately mention the French Licorne soldiers, who have recently been profiled as lazing around, a la dolce vida. France's Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert, in the Council's last press conference of the trip, stated that the "Licorne is not a French force," which left many in the audience shaking their heads. The underlying question had not even mentioned Licorne or France, but rather the role of the UN peacekeeping force. While Burkina-Faso's Ambassador Michel Kafando said, and South Africa's Dumisani Kumalo seconded, that there is not for now a fear of violence in connection with the elections, sources in the Gbagbo - Council meeting indicate that Gbagbo quipped that in developing countries, election time is "not a dinner party" (n'est pas un diner de gala).

While some have been saying he will never hold the election, Gbagbo on Monday said he is in a hurry to hold elections, since divided government has led to "paralysis."

France's role in Cote d'Ivoire is a subtext to this UN Council visit, which will be followed on June 14 by an appearance by French foreign affairs minister Bernard Kouchner. Cote d'Ivoire is increasingly turning to other partners, now specifically requiring that French companies make sufficient local hires. Rwanda, which the Council passed through late on Sunday night, is further down this road, having rooted out the French language based on the country's role in the 1994 genocide. Chad and Congo were France's moments in the sun during this trip. In the first, President Deby did not meet with the Council. In Congo, while President Kabila praised the Council's and International Criminal Court's work, legislators asked tougher questions, about the arrest of Kabila's main opponent Jean-Pierre Bemba and its timing. The Council's dodge of this question in Congo was telling, when contrasted with its tough ICC talk in Khartoum.

Cote d'Ivoire is a love-fest not for France but Ban's envoy Choi Young-Jin. During Ban's most recent visit to Abidjan, Gbagbo effusively praised Choi, comparing him to Kofi Annan's envoy who were essentially thrown out of the country after insisting on earlier elections and speaking on such matters of the Trafigura toxic waste scandal. Whether the praise of Choi derives from his flexibility on such matters is a question -- and one that Inner City Press asked, in another form, at the post-Gbagbo press conference held at UNOCI headquarters in an old hotel in a hill.

Inner City Press asked if it is true that Gbagbo, in his closed door meeting with the Council, specifically asked that Choi be given the power to supervise the Institut national de statistiques, INS, and the electoral contractor SAGEM. Ambassador Michel Kafando referred the question to Mr. Choi, who in an answer that must have praised the absent but monitoring Gbagbo said that all the UN does is "accompany" the Ivorians, that they have national ownership, "we cannot replace them." But will Choi check in on SAGEM and INS? The question was not answered. Nor was a question about reported sexual abuse in UNOCI, click here for that.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/unsc1gbagbo060908.html

Ban's Man Dodges ONUCI Sex Abuse Questions, Zero Said on Zero Tolerance

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press in Africa
www.innercitypress.com/unsc1onuci060908.html

IVORY COAST, June 9 -- A scandal of sexual abuse within the UN Mission in Cote d'Ivoire, ONUCI, became public on May 27, and at UN headquarters Assistant Secretary General Jane Holl Lute answered Inner City Press that the report would be taken very seriously, particularly because it alleged that the senior leadership of UNUCI was told of the abuse and did nothing.

On May 30, Burkina-Faso's Ambassador to the UN Michel Kafando, on the eve of leaving on a Security Council trip to Africa during which he would lead the Cote d'Ivoire leg, answered Inner City Press that the issue of sexual abuse would be raised in the Council's meeting in the country with all senior leadership, which includes Choi Young-Jin of UNOCI and even President Gbagbo.

On June 9 at a press conference in Abidjan after Choi, Kafando and other six other Security Council representatives met Gbagbo, Inner City Press asked about the sexual abuse report, and what was being done about it. Amb. Kafando referred the question to Mr. Choi. It seemed like, with the build-up, an answer would be forthcoming, on the less than two week old report, as well as on the earlier repatriation of an entire battalion of UN peacekeepers back to Morocco after allegations of systematic sexual abuse and exploitation of under-aged girls.

But Mr. Choi's answer was that on May 30 he had held a press conference about the May 27 report, and that he would be happy to share a copy of his opening statement. That was it. Afterwards, as the Ambassadors rushed to the airport to fly back to New York, ONUCI's spokespeople were not around. An Inner City Press source in ONUCI who was present at Choi's May 30 press conference recounted that all he'd said that is that they were "old allegations" and that they were under investigation. This does not appear to be the type of take-charge, zero-tolerance leadership that Jane Holl Lute has promised. The question, it was implied, should simply not have been asked. But of course it was going to be asked. Jane Holl Lute said the issue of ONUCI senior leadership's role is an important one that will be inquired into, and Amb. Kafando said the issue would be discussed in the meetings in Abidjan, in which Mr. Choi took part. So why no answer?

Even Mr. Choi's equivalent in the Congo, Alan Doss, publicly answered a public question in Kinshasa about allegations that peacekeepers traded guns for gold with militias. He said how it was being investigated, he discussed publicly the specifics of the allegations, and which part had already been found to be true. While Mr. Choi is to his credit said to be a very hard worker, responding to public questions about ONUCI would appear to be part of the job. Perhaps, a ONUCI source suggested, since Mr. Choi is so close with Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, and now with Ivorian leader Laurent Gbagbo, he feels no need to be politically correct. Time will tell.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/unsc1onuci060908.html

Comedy of Errors Delays UN Council in Kigali, Fuel Cash Collected, Wired Assurances

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press in Africa
www.innercitypress.com/unsc1airkigali060908.html

KIGALI AIRPORT, June 9 -- In the UN Security Council's continuing comedy of errors attempting to travel from Goma to Abidjan, Ambassadors took up an impromptu collection of cash in the Kigali Airport's VIP suite. The UN plane needed fuel, and contractor CalTex would not accept any UN promise of payment in the future. Even the traveling press corps was ask to, in essence, put up or shut up. While some speculated that this was Rwanda's response to the UN's inaction during the 1994 genocide, and spoke of telephoning president Paul Kagame, South Africa's Ambassador Dumisani Kumalo responded that this would be like blaming and calling U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney for a delay at an American airport.

Finally, the UN wired the $20,000 to CalTex, and the delegation was told it would take off in 15 minutes. Another problem loomed: had the pilot, from the UN contractor Swift, flown too many hours without a break? Swift flies two planes for the UN Mission in the Sudan, and has another plane in service from Kuwait to Iraq, cork-screwing down for landing. In the middle of the trip, one of the two back toilets went out of order, leading to odor, and the spraying of air freshener. They were asked, when will you fix it? Not until the end of the trip. And it just keeps getting better.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/unsc1airkigali060908.html

After Gunfire, UN Council Proceeds By Bus to Kigali, With B-Movie and Truck Stop Detour

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press in Africa
www.innercitypress.com/unsc1rwanda060808.html

LONELY RWANDAN TRUCK STOP, June 8 -- Following the gunfire in the UN special plane on the lava-shortened runway in Goma, the Security Council Ambassadors and accompanying press corps wiled away two hours in the airport's VIP lounge. How to proceed to Cote d'Ivoire, to meet President Gbagbo? As the sun went down, there was talk that to proceed might not be worth it. Then the solution was arrived at, to travel by UN bus to Kigali, Rwanda, and meet up the UN plane there. Calls were placed to Rwanda's Ambassador to the UN, visa cards were signed, and the delegation was once again on the move.

A touring bus with two TV screens moved gingerly over and around the deep potholes of Goma. A movie was screened, a decided B picture called Return to Bazrakistan (click here for the film, under another title). At the border, the MONUC security escort fell away, and for a time the bus continued without escort, other than a back-up bus in the rear, in case the one in front broke down as its lavatory had. This led to an unscheduled stop, at a lonely Rwandan truck stop. Inquiries were made for Internet and beer, without full satisfaction. Soon the light of Kigali appeared on the horizon, along with billboards in English and gas stations of Total.

In further still-interim reflection, that a loaded gun was taken onto a plane from of Security Council ambassadors may be of significance. It can also be reported that at the Kigali airport, entry was not as smooth as elsewhere, everyone was searched. "This is Rwanda," a security official explained. Those with diplomatic passports and privileges were not amused. But on balance the incident was not without its surreal side.

The plane arrived -- but due to lack of fuel, a request was relayed for $20,000, or to spend the night in the Kigali airport. While some were quick to connect the UN's inaction in 1994 to this seemin Rwandan intransigence, it quickly emerged that it was an American company CalTex that demanded the money. Via South African Ambasador Dumisani Kumalo, Rwanda's Ambassador to the UN relayed that CalTex has lost its contract at the Kigali airport, and will close here at the end of the month. Thus their focus on cash on the barrel. Still, the image of Security Council ambassadors pooling their cash to buy their way out of Kigali will not soon be forgotten.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/unsc1rwanda060808.html

Gunfire Grounds UN Council's Plane in Goma after IDP Camp Visit, Busses to Rwanda

Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press in Africa
www.innercitypress.com/unsc3gomagun060808.html

GOMA AIRPORT, June 8 -- The UN Security Council got stranded in Eastern Congo Sunday night, when a bullet tore through the fuselage of the jet they took from Kinshasa. While for a few chaotic moments some Ambassadors thought they'd been targeted by the FDLR militia, about whom they had been hearing all afternoon at the Mugunga I camp for internally displaced people. But it soon emerged that local Congolese security had demanded that a security officer traveling with the Ambassador prove that his gun was empty. The bullet in the chamber disabled the plane, and the Ambassadors huddles around the three computers in the UN terminal at the Goma Airport. Outside dusk fell over the volcano that towers above Goma, and spewed down the lava that still covers one-third of the airport's runway. There was talk of traveling across the lake to Rwanda for a flight, or of spending the night at the lakefront Stella Lodge, where the Ambassadors earlier on Sunday met with the Mixed Commission on disarmament of militia, of which the FDLR is not a part.

In the Mugunga camp, huts were covered with UN logo emblazened sheet plastic, stretching out to the horizon. The ground alternated between black mud and black lava. A displaced man from Bufmamu in Masisi territory, Misheku Ernest, recounted how war drove him and his four children from his village. They have too many guns there, he said. Until the guns are gone we can't go home.

French Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert waded into the crowd and said he and the Council are doing everything possible to allow the displaced to go home. There was applause, relatively spontaneous. Then a bus ride past innumerable small shops and street vendors, propane tanks being wheeled on the wooden bicycles invented, it seems, in the Great Lakes region.

As darkness fully fell over the Goma Airport, bus transport was being arranged to Kigali, to be picked up there by plane. While the UN's Alan Doss earlier on the plane, pre-shooting, said he could neither confirm nor deny that Rwanda has supplied renegade general Laurent Nkunda through this very area, or even through Uganda, the bus would head through this same route, without plan, without visa, the Council flying blind through areas it constantly discusses and votes on. The DRC Ambassador told Inner City Press it is good the Ambassadors were in the Congo, to see and mostly listen. How it will inform their voting in New York remains to be seen, as do the new travel arrangements.

And see, www.innercitypress.com/unsc3gomagun060808.html